Vendor Spotlight :: Joya Beauty :: Perfect Wedding Make Up Artist

Dear Blog
I have neglected you over the Winter. It's been a busy time with my family visiting from the UK, chilly engagement shoots, hot boudoir sessions, a flurry of 2012 wedding client meetings, all of my 2010 brides simultaneously reviewing outstanding album designs, revisions for said albums, save the date designs, trips to Maine with my husband, photography education events and workshops in Denver, Las Vegas and Mystic and much more.
I promise to make it up to you this Spring. And just wait until the Summer - you won't know what's hit you as I ply you with beautiful weddings at the Renaissance Hotel in Boston, the Aquarium, the Barn at Gibbet Hill, the Four Seasons, Turner Hill, the Rose Garden at Lynch Park, Renaissance Haverhill and so many others!
Love Leah xx


Anyhoo, it's time for another VENDOR SPOTLIGHT!!!! Yes, from the blog that brought you vendor spotlights on uplighting, videography, eyelash extensions, bridesmaid dress boutiques and others, we have a new interview with Joanne from Joya Beauty in Dover, NH. By the way, do let me know if there are other vendor categories you'd like me to talk about. I only feature people/companies I know and trust and have worked with; coming up is a wonderful Calligrapher and Florist....

I've been lucky enough to work with a number of fabulous make up artists over the last four years and it's time to introduce you to Joya Beauty. Joya is located in Dover, NH (although on any given weekend Joanne is usually found traveling to Boston or somewhere else in New England) and I headed up there last week:


And just for you, my wonderful readers, before I drove up to meet with Joanne I took a picture with....wait for it...no make up on! I must confess although I love buying make up, give me an hour in Sephora and I'm a happy bunny I don't actually really wear a lot. I'm more of a quick slick of cherry chapstick and bit of powder kind of girl - can you tell how much I dislike being in front of the camera ;)


One of the main reasons I wanted to write this post was to share with you my own wedding make up story. We got married in Las Vegas and after searching the internet I found Barbra-Jo. With no time for a trial, I still vividly remember Barbra-Jo showing up at our hotel room on the afternoon of our wedding with what seemed like 6 giant suitcases of make up, a director's chair, lights but most of all I remember how she made me feel. I was terrified of looking overdone and Barbra-Jo was so understanding, kind, compassionate and absolutely hilarious! She made me, my Mom, my Mother-in-law and my friend Judy look AWESOME!!! It was a little weird to see the airbrushed/individual false eye-lash version of me but our wedding pictures looked amazing!!!

Fast forward a month to our post-wedding reception at the phenomenal Atkinson Country Club, I figured so much money had already been spent that I'd just do my own make up. I carefully applied foundation, concealer, eyeshadow, mascara, lipstain etc and I looked fine. But when I compare the photographs from both events with professional make up I look flawless and radiant, with my own make up, I look like I'm wearing make up....

I know it can feel like your wedding budget is spiraling out of control but believe me, having professional make up on your wedding day is worth every single penny as you'll look - but most importantly - you'll feel beautiful :)

And back to our vendor spotlight interview...I asked Joanne about the meaning of the name Joya and I loved her explanation that as a child growing up in an Italian family everyone would exclaim "Joya! Joya! Joya!" when guests came to visit. It officially means joy but also translates as "Welcome!" and when you arrive at Joya to a warm hug by Joanne you can't help but feel welcome:


I'm fond of the Q&A style of interview so here we go:

Leah: OK, Joanne. Let's say I'm a bride about to get married. I'm thinking of professional make up but I'm also thinking I could save money by doing it myself or maybe I have a friend who's really into make up...what would your advice be?
Joanne: [smiles] I hear that all the time. My advice would be yes! Of course you need professional make up!! For the following reasons:
1. It's your wedding day! You might be a little nervous, you're definitely excited and there's always so much going on. Having your make up done by a professional is an hour just for you to sit quietly, relax and feel special. Airbrush make up also feels like a cool breeze on your skin as it's applied so it's very calming.
2. You've probably invested a lot of money in your wedding, your wedding pictures will last forever and so you want to look amazing.
3. I'll often hear make-up horror stories - the well-meaning friend, the over-enthusiastic department store counter - when you hire a professional make up artist they'll be able to provide references and schedule a trial so you know exactly what to expect.
4. Having a professional make up artist will ensure a consistent look. If just one bridesmaid out of six does her own make up you could end up with having a group with beautiful natural peachy make up and one girl with a smoky-eye, blush and hot red lips and it can look a little different...

Leah: What should a bride do to prepare for her trial?
Joanne: I always recommend bringing pictures. Lots of pictures! Pictures where you love how you look. Pictures where you don't like how you look. Pictures from wedding magazines of make up that you like. You can then have a discussion with your make up artist about how you'd like to look on your wedding day. Remember, although you need to trust your make up artist, it's not about them, it's about YOU! So you can use your trial to perfect your look.

Leah: When a bride is looking for a make up artist what should she look for?
Joanne: Well, I've been doing this for 10 years and I think it's important that your make up artist loves what they do. I love make up. I truly love it! [Leah's note: at this point Joanne actually said "I looooooooooooove make up!" it was awesome!], I love everything about it - how you can touch people, make them feel beautiful, I adore the energy of the wedding day! I just came back from a workshop and many of the make up artists would say that they loved fashion or event make up and they were all kind of surprised when I said I loved bridal make up. I do make up for around 55 weddings each year and each bride is so different, each wedding is so unique and I only wish that New England wasn't so seasonal so I could do weddings every single weekend of the year!

It's important to find a licensed aesthetician/skin care therapist - make sure they have their license which means they've passed state boards, state tests, understand allergies etc etc. They should be able to show their board certification and provide references.

I've also had a few brides contact me after they've entered into a contract with a salon/spa for their make up only to find the make up artist they did their trial with has left by the time their wedding happens. My brides don't have to worry about that as I own my own business.

Leah: What are some of the mistakes that brides might make?
Joanne: Occasionally I'll have a bride visit armed with a picture of say Kim Kardashian with her smoky-eye make up but the bride is super pale with blue eyes and red hair. So I think you need to have realistic expectations. I love working with a bride on her vision but it needs to be workable!
- I like to work with brides to give them a timeless and elegant make up, if you have a lot of color or overly dark eye make up I find the pictures will date more quickly.
- It's important to pick a look that will last as it's going to be captured forever in your pictures!
- You're probably going to cry! So I work with waterproof make up that is used by aquatic ballet dancers but if you go for a heavy eyeliner then it might run!
- You can do a very subtle shimmer to make you look fresh in front of the camera but you want to avoid frost or glitter!
- If you're planning on a lot of black and white pictures then you need to consider that darker lip colors like deep reds can show up as black on camera
- It's critical to have a timeline. I like to ask brides when the photographer wants them dressed and ready to go as that gives me a deadline. I also don't have the bride go last for make up.
- And lastly consider the time of day. You might want a dramatic make up look with a deep red lip and smoky eye but if you're getting married at noon on the beach then this might not always be the most flattering!

Leah: Let's talk about airbrush make up vs. traditional liquid foundation...
Joanne: Oh, airbrushing! I adore airbrushing but it's so important that it's done right! I just taught a class on airbrushing technique and I was horrified to see some people waving the airbrush around all over the place - the foundation was going in hair, eyebrows - crazy! Airbrushing should be done with finesse! Airbrush make up will really refine your skin and if it's done well you'll still look natural with your skin showing through. The beauty of airbrush make up is that you can PERFECTLY match your skin. It's not like you have just 24 bottles of foundation in the department store and you have to pick the one that's closest, I can blend different colors and tones and literally match your skin. I match foundation color to a bride's neck which is usually the palest area of skin and then subtly add color with blush and/or bronzer. This avoids that terrible tell-tale line of demarcation on the jaw that screams "my make up is the wrong color!!!"

For Mothers of the Bride/Groom, airbrushing is awesome because it doesn't settle into any fine lines and helps with a flawless look. Powder can be the enemy as when you cry the tears can form little rivulets down your face!

Here's Joanne's airbrush in action. She used ten tiny drops of foundation to perfectly cover my whole face and I really felt like there was nothing on me:


Leah: What kind of products do you use? Do brides want to know if you use certain brands?
Joanne: Well, I use professional products that are often only made available to make up artists so they often won't recognize the names. I use a silicon based foundation in the airbrush because it'll repel water which is perfect for the New England wedding season - it can deal with hot, humid, rainy, misty environments and still look flawless. Sometimes a cheaper product just won't last as well. In the case of eyeshadow, cheaper products won't have as much pigment and can fade through the day. If you think about it, with airbrushing you're applying the make up almost in pixel sized dots so it works in harmony with the camera.

Leah: What else should brides know about the Joya experience?
Joanne: I just love what I do. So many of my brides become friends and lifelong clients. Just last week I had a bride from 2006 call me from NYC to ask if there was any way I could recreate the lipstick I made for her on her wedding day!

I also custom blend make up so I can create the perfect color rather than the best available match. [Leah's note - here I was absolutely wowed and understood the various bottles and jars of color on Joanne's shelves as Joanne made me a custom lip gloss] I use all natural plant ingredients, vitamin E, shea butter and a customized color pigment and subtle shimmer. Here are some of the magic colors:


And Joanne's magic in action, check out my custom lip color. I feel like I need to name it...maybe "in the pink!" or "way better than chapstick" or......suggestions welcome!


You probably want to see what I looked like after Joanne had airbrushed me...pretty flawless right?


And here's a step-by-step image that shows how Joanne blends color with the moisturizing lip balm base, adds in shimmer, heats and then pours into the lip gloss tube. Perfect!
Joanne at Joya's contact information:
Website: www.JoyaBeauty.com
Phone: 603.534.3412
Email: joanne@joyabeauty.com

Comments? Was this useful? Did you use a professional make up artist on your wedding day? Do your own make up? Are there other vendors you'd like me to interview? Plans for the weekend? Scared about the snow storm? :D

Happy :)

I have the best wedding clients ever. It's official.

I had an awesome client meeting via skype on Sunday with George & Cheryl - even though we were talking through the interwebs it felt super relaxed and fun. So I was super happy when George emailed me the next day to say they'd like to book me for their August 2012 wedding. And being a photographer himself, he'd taken a picture of the note that Cheryl had written whilst we were skyping. Makes me smile. George & Cheryl - I like you too ;)

Photo: George Welch. Check out George's blog **here**, I just clicked on the link to check I posted it correctly and George has just blogged about our "meeting" - yay!

I was catching up on email yesterday and got a super funny email from one of my lovely 2011 brides. I think she's trying to challenge me for the most smiley faces and exclamation marks. And then the email finished with this. Awesome!
THHHANNKKKKKKKKKKK YOUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU!!! We seriously have the BESTESTESTEST photog EVER!!!
Talk to you soon!! :-)


And then my mail arrived and one of my clients from a boudoir session last week had sent me this little thank you card:


Sometimes I wonder how I even get to call it work when it's this much fun :) Happy Friday!

Winter Engagement Pictures :: Mine Falls Forest & Park in Nashua, NH :: Cathy + Brian

I'm writing this blog post whilst in Florida for a couple of days of sunshine with my parents. Much as I love the images you're about to see, can I just mention that I can't WAIT for Spring in New England. I miss the blue skies with fluffy white clouds, the sidewalks free of dirty snow, the late afternoon golden sunshine...

Anyhoo, meet Brian and Cathy. On their first date Brian took Cathy out for ice cream. They talked and laughed and ended up watching a movie together:


Brian said within hours of meeting Cathy he knew that they were kindred spirits:


Cathy was a little nervous about the picture taking stuff, don't know why...


After just 20 minutes with Brian and Cathy I was struck by how much fun they have together, their little in-jokes, how comfortable they are with each other and how much they just seem to belong together:


I think the next image might be my favorite. It seems very peaceful and safe:


One last one just to say "yah boo" to Cathy's feeling of not liking her picture being taken. I LOVE these two!

You'll see more of Cathy and Brian when we do a regular shoot in the spring but I like these little winter preview pictures and can't wait for their November wedding!

Escaping the dirty snow of New England...



I have a few more weeks before the official New England wedding season starts so I thought I'd sneak out to Florida for some sunshine with my parents who are visiting from the UK. The above picture was taken with my cell phone so excuse the quality ;)

Check out my pedicure - 3 weeks and still counting from my trip to Las Vegas. I am also now an official Gelish manicure addict. I've never been one for manicures; my nails always chip in a day or two so it's always seems like a waste of time/money, but after my Gelish manicure lasted for 3 weeks with perfect red nails I was pretty impressed. I got back to NH and found that there's a salon in Newburyport offering Gelish http://thepolishednail.net/

I imagine it'd be awesome on your honeymoon. Call and make an appointment with Debbi who just did my manicure and was awesome 978 465 0400

Thinking about Japan



A few years ago I had the opportunity to visit Japan. It's a fascinating country, so different from anywhere else in the world that I have been to. I took the image of the cherry blossom above whilst I was there. It was the most amazing experience, in most part because of the Japanese people who were so incredibly welcoming, kind and generous. From the complete stranger on the train to Kyoto who insisted on sharing her chocolate with us to the old lady in the park who noticed me patiently waiting to take a pictures of a wall and shooed away the teenagers sitting on it to the young man in a store who kindly helped me figure out which coins I needed to use to pay for my soda. Reading the reports and seeing the horrendous video footage on television about the earthquake and tsunami my heart goes out to the people of Japan right now.

I found this post on msnbc on how to help, click **here** to read more. And if you've been thinking about ordering any prints from your wedding or engagement or family pictures go to your online gallery and use the code JAPAN (all capital letters) at checkout to get 20% off your print order. The code is valid for 2 weeks and during this time ALL PRINT PROFITS will be donated to the relief efforts to help Japan. If you can't remember the link for your online gallery or you were a guest at a recent wedding and you'd like to order prints, shoot me an email leah@leahhaydock.com telling me whose wedding you were at and I'll send you the link to the gallery.

Musings on wedding albums. Part I

Yup - part one because if you're a regular blog reader (are you? say hello!) you know I'm not so good at keeping it concise and I have SO much to say about wedding albums :)

Are you sitting comfortably? Then we'll begin...

"We're spending so much on the wedding, maybe we'll skip a wedding album?"...."My friend makes these great albums on shutterfly or blurb"..... "I'm really into scrapbooking"...."We really just need a disc"...

All things I often hear and I totally understand. When you're planning your wedding it can sometimes feel like your budget is spiraling out of control. You think well, maybe we can skip the wedding album for now, we can always do it later. Here's a little confession for you - I actually did the same thing myself. 4 years later we still don't have a professional wedding album. And it sucks. I need to stop procrastinating and just put it on my to-do list! Here's what I have when people ask to see our wedding pictures:

Let's be honest, if someone asks to see your wedding pictures they probably don't want to sit and wait whilst you find the discs, load them up and try to find some favorites in the thumbnails.

My other concern about just having your pictures on disc? Media storage can corrupt - who even knows if discs or USB memory sticks will exist in a thirty years? Remember the floppy disc? And the VHS video? I back up everything like a fiend on hard drives and with online storage but I wonder if there'll be a whole generation of couples who won't be able to share their wedding pictures with their grandchildren one day because they don't have a wedding album and they've lost their USB flash drive :(

After we got married in Las Vegas and had our reception party at Atkinson Country Club I was totally happy that I had the discs of pictures. I had major plans (after all, unlike most brides I have access to the most amazing albums only available to professional photographers) but album design takes time. A lot of time. I spend hours and hours each custom design and subtly retouching the images in the album until they're perfect and there was always a client album in front of mine in the line.

So here's another confession - we were going back to the UK for another post-wedding party and I wanted to be able to share my pictures - I went online and made two consumer photo books. I won't say which companies I used, there are a ton of them out there offering consumer albums - shutterfly, snapfish, blurb. You upload your pictures, hit autofill or use the templates they have and voila! Instant wedding album for less than $100.

I made those photo books in 2007. Let's take a look at them today in 2011:


Consumer photo books don't have lay-flat or hinged pages so you have to push down hard on the pages to try to see the part of the image in the gutter. The printer calibration can also lead to strange color casts on the page which isn't even a photograph. And some of the templates offered are so busy like this image-on-image:


Each time you open and close your album you put pressure on the spine - especially if you're pushing on the pages to hold the book flat. And eventually this tends to happen, which makes for sad panda face:


I love including black and white images in the wedding album - so elegant and timeless. I use a specific technique for black and white conversions to get flattering skin tones and keep the contrast of the image just right. The image below is beautiful in real life but came out really muddy-looking and dull in the consumer book.


And even worse than the orange/pink skin tones, the thin paper and the spine breaking is that the thin pages have started to stick together. I pulled them apart super carefully but you can see the damage :(


So that's my test experience with do-it-yourself consumer photo books for wedding albums. Not spectacular! You probably wouldn't think about designing and sewing your wedding dress yourself or contemplate baking all of the hors d'oeuvres for cocktail hour so why design your own wedding album...?

If you think about it, your album is kind of like the final piece of your wedding puzzle. It documents the details, records your friends and families and most important it holds your memories. It should be designed, printed and bound with this in mind so that it will last generations.

So now I've shared with you my experience of not really having a wedding album, let's take a look at one of the professional wedding albums I just made for one of my couples!

Here's a spectacular 12x12 leather bound flushmount panoramic professional wedding album upgraded with a crystal clear image cover. The cover photograph is bonded to a thick layer of acrylic which looks just like glass (but without the risk of shattering), it also makes for a very heavy album!


You can see how thick the acrylic is in the image below. The pages can also be gilded on the outside - for this album I went with a gorgeous silver gilding for a very subtle sparkle. Most couples choose 20 or 30 page albums with their initial collection but we inevitably have so many beautiful pictures to include that they'll end up adding pages. It's a great problem to have! This album ended up at around 40 pages:


Each page is an actual photograph. The photographic paper used is archival quality and lasts for hundreds of years if stored and treated correctly (albums don't belong in damp basements or humid attics!). Photographic pages gives you accurate colors, realistic saturation, excellent neutral skin tones and great intensity. Each print is then flush mounted (i.e. all the way to the edge) to a substrate for wonderfully thick pages of around 1.5mm.


In terms of design I love a clean and modern approach. I have another post coming up about the process of album design...


Wedding albums are "panoramic" which means photographs can spread right across two pages with no break at the spine, I love taking a beautiful couples portrait or a wide-angle shot in the church and running it right across two pages:


Here's another design from the album:


Here's cocktail hour, it's great to have a record of your guests and family (another good reason to not cram family pictures into cocktail hour):


One more design:


I love series of pictures, here we have some reception fun and then a sweet kiss on the dance floor:


There's a good chance your proud parents will want to share the day with their friends too so I offer exact duplicates of your wedding album in affordable press-print books. The pages are regular paper vs. super thick photographic pages and they're hinged to lie flat. The image below right shows the wedding album next to a hinged press-print parent album. These make wonderful thank you or holiday gifts for your parents.


Your wedding album will be opened and closed and opened and closed and opened and closed. And you don't want to be the sad panda with a broken album so the binding is super sturdy. Here are some shots of another album so you can see how the pages lie completely flat:

OK, you're probably all albumed out now! Too much info? Not enough? Useful? Do you want part two? Oh - and make sure you come by on Sunday as I'll be posting the info about my annual boudoir marathon which will take place on April 16/17 in Boston. Perfect groom's gift before the wedding, awesome idea for your first year "paper" anniversary or just to document how awesome you look right now!

Winter Engagement Pictures in Boston :: Liz + Tim

Good morning all! Before I share preview images from a mini engagement shoot I just did with Liz and Tim I thought I'd share some FAQ, useful info and tips on engagement shoots. The clocks go forward next week, April is usually my popular month for engagement pictures and I hope this helps!

Question: Do we really need to do an engagement session?
Answer: Yes. I won't shoot your wedding unless you do :)

Kidding.

Not really.

Well, not unless you live in like Australia and won't be in New England until your wedding day. Trust me - it's fun, you get comfortable in front of the camera, you see your pictures and go "oooh - we look good" and then you totally relax on your wedding day because it's just little old me. Oh - and you get some great images for save the dates, wedding websites, newspaper announcements, holiday cards...

Useful tip - don't obsess about the location!
I'm all for shooting in a location with significant meaning to you both but it's really all about the two of you (and the light!). I'd suggest thinking about the kind of feel you'd like for your pictures and letting that guide us. So if you want to have pictures in a cute dress and heels/sharp suit then it's probably not a great idea for us to meet at the beach or in a forest ;) If you're stuck for ideas then just let me know. Mini-engagement shoots take place within 20 miles of my house (otherwise a mini shoot turns into 4 hours with travel time!) and there's lots of choice - quiet little parks, downtown urban areas, the beach, the harbor, even a historic castle...

Question: When should we do engagement pictures?
Answer: In terms of scheduling it's good to do them anytime 6-12 months before your wedding. It really depends if you'd like to have them with a specific seasonal feel. Time wise - the light is always most beautiful (and flattering) first thing in the morning or in the hour or two before sunset.

I do at least one engagement shoot for each wedding I photograph and even engagement shoots for couples just visiting New England! That equals around 25 weddings and around 40 engagement shoots each year (plus some family and boudoir shots). As my weekends are so busy with weddings, engagement shoots always take place on weekdays unless you live outside of MA, NH, ME, RI. If we're shooting in Spring/Summer we'll probably start around 5pm so perhaps you have a "doctor" or "dentist" appointment so you can leave work a little early.

Useful tip: Forget your purse!
Unless you want your purse to have a starring role in the pictures, leave it in the car (safely out of site of course!). It's nice to have your hands free for hugging and holding hands. Just pop your lip gloss in his pocket :)

Question: What should we wear?
Answer: You want to feel cute and be comfortable. These pictures should show you as you usually are. You don't need to match each other but it's good if the color/feel of your outfits compliment each other. It's worth every penny to get your hair and make up done professionally (great time to schedule your hair and make up trial) and worst case you can even stop by the Mac/Bobbi Brown/Nars counter at a department store. I know it's sometimes hard to justify the additional cost of pro hair and make up but you're investing a lot for your photography and you want to look perfectly polished! If I'm taking your engagement pictures you'll be receiving my mammoth engagement tip document with all sorts of useful info and suggestions on clothing.

And on to the pictures! I'll be doing a full shoot with Liz & Tim in the Spring but in the meantime they needed just one picture for a save the date card (hence the negative space in most of these pictures for me to add text!).

We started out in Post Office Square in Boston with some giggling:


Then we went for a little walk. It was a kind of dull and chilly morning so I used the safety lights on some construction work to warm up the image!


If I know that I'm designing save the date cards then I'll take some images with negative space so that I can easily use this area for the text:

There's something about this picture that I really like. I think Liz looks so cute :)


Keeping warm on the harborfront:


I'll give you the full story when I post their full engagement shoot but Liz and Tim first met in ninth grade when they sat next to one another in French class. Je pense que cela est tres adorable!


Happy Tuesday!

Good news and....good news

Hello! Sergio is that you reading my blog??? A short while ago I got a lovely email from www.weddingwire.com letting me know that I've won a Bride's Choice Award which is rather nice. Here's the official blurb from Wedding Wire:
The WeddingWire Bride's Choice Awards ™ recognizes the top local wedding professionals that demonstrate excellence in quality, service, responsiveness and professionalism. Unlike other awards in which winners are selected by the organization, the WeddingWire Bride's Choice Awards™ are determined by recent reviews and extensive surveys from over 750,000 WeddingWire newlyweds. The 2011 award recipients represent the top five percent of WeddingWire's vendor community, which consists of over 200,000 local wedding professionals throughout the US and Canada


I've been super lucky and I've never had to advertise my wedding photography business, I have lovely clients who tell all of their engaged friends about me and I'm almost completely booked for 2011 (just 2 available dates left in the fall...) and 2012 is looking like it will go the same way - so this kind of award is pretty cool as it's not some kind of paid-for thing (you'd be surprised how many "awards" are).

Wedding Wire is actually a pretty cool resource of reviews and referrals on wedding vendors - in fact, if I've photographed your wedding and you have a few moments to leave a review of me that would be splendid! You can click **here** for the review page. I think if you leave 5 reviews (you can review your venue, stationary, florist, planner, make up, dress store, DJ, band) they send you some kind of gift...

And then the OTHER good news...a while ago the talented writer Christine Lewis contacted me to see if she could use some of my images from weddings I have photographed at Maudslay State Park and Zorvino Vineyard for an article in Merrimack Valley Magazine. I was in Butcher Boy yesterday afternoon and I saw the bridal edition for sales as I stood at the checkout:


I flipped through the useful articles and sure enough, on page 46 are two of my pictures. How fun!

First a cute picture of Corey & Isaiah's feet at their wedding at Maudslay State Park:


And then an image of Tracey & Kyle's wedding rings in Zorvino Vineyard:


Christine sent me a scan of the article which you can just about read but I'd recommend picking up a copy too!


Thanks for checking back after a week of blog silence (this is kind of my summer vacation time as wedding season doesn't really get going until April in New England) - I ended up taking a last minute trip to WPPI in Las Vegas (the most amazing annual Wedding & Portrait Photography Conference). After Mystic6 in CT and the Jerry Ghionis Workshop in CO I was feeling like my brain couldn't take any more education so I decided to mostly explore the tradeshow for some wonderful new products (coming soon...). I also caught up with 7 of the 11 photographers I was in Denver with.

5 photographers who've attended the same workshop discussing posing of hands and arms + a little champagne = this kind of nonsense:
Hello Tess, Kate, Regas and Garrett!

Coming up tomorrow - a spectacular wedding album for you to see and then I have some lovely winter engagement pictures for you next week. Happy Thursday!