Boise Family Photographer | The E Family

One of the joys of photographing families is watching them grow. The first year of a child’s life is especially profound with the amount that they change, a zero month old is so very different than a one year old. I’ve been honored to be taking photos of the E family throughout 2020. We hung out in their yard on a beautiful Boise spring morning, and if you go through the photos you’ll see that the shoot finished with a great grand finale.

E Family, thank you so much for taking the time with me to photograph your sweet little family, can’t wait for our next shoot!

Bryan

Essential Wedding Photography Gear | Top 10 List

After more than 14 years as a professional photographer and photographing over 400 weddings (it might be more than 500 now, honestly I stopped keeping count), I’ve compiled a list of my top ten essentials that any photographer needs to photograph a wedding. Some of the things are really obvious, but there’s some that you might not think of that I’ve found to be crucial from taking literally hundreds of thousands of pictures over the last 14 years of my professional life.

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A quick note, these items correlate with my shooting style, I’m a prime lens only, natural light loving photographer. Here’s my top ten list:

10. Speedlight

I’m a natural light photographer through and through, and if I can shoot with natural light, then I will (high ISO’s, fast apertures and slow shutter speeds don’t scare me), BUT at the same time, if you’re photographing weddings, you will find yourself in some crazy dark situations, so a speedlight is a must. I’m a Canon shooter so I have a 600ex-rt, a 580ex II and a 430e ex-II. I use these both on and off camera, if you’re looking for budget options for flashes, I’ve heard great things about these, Yongnuo YN600-EX-RT II. My Canon 600ex-rt is powerful enough that I can use a shoot through or bounce umbrella and use it for an off camera light source for family photos as well.s

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9. Wireless Flash Triggers

Speedlights are powerful little beacons of light, but to get the most out of them, you need to be able to get them off your camera. Moving a speedlight off of your camera gives you unlimited options for lighting angles and directions. I typically keep a flash off-camera during every reception on a lightstand that I can move around easily and to fit whatever lighting situation I find myself in. Industry-standard wireless flash triggers are PocketWizards, but they’ve had some unreliable products, and their triggers are also pricey. I use these cheap Yongnuo triggers, and they’ve been incredible, highly reliable (I KNOW my flash is going to fire EVERY TIME), and they’re very affordable too. It should be noted that I do not use ETTL with these triggers, I use them solely as manual triggers (where I’m controlling my flash manually). A side bonus, is that when I’m doing professional headshots or on a commercial shoot where I need lights, I use these same triggers to control my Alien Bee 800’s.

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8. Light Stand

Following on the theme of speedlights and using them to their maximum potential, a light stand is an essential piece of equipment for getting your flash off your camera and positioned wherever your heart and artistic vision desire. You can certainly purchase cheap light stands, but I LOVE these Manfrotto stands. You can get by with cheap lightstands for sure, but if you’re ever walked around with lightstands slipping out of your arms, falling onto the ground, you’ll understand why I love the linked Manfrotto stands. Those stands hook together easily so carrying three stands takes up as much space as carrying one cheap stand. Also keep in mind that you might have a $500+ light on top of your stand, stability matters. Also keep in mind that if you want to mount your speedlight on any lightstand, you’ll need an umbrella adapter, this is the best one I’ve found, and a cold shoe mount (quick note, I’ve always heard that you can ruin speedlights by putting them on a metal cold shoe and firing them, I have no idea if that’s actually true, but I’m not risking it, I wrap electrical tape around my metal cold shoes to make sure the flash contacts never touch metal).

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7. Memory Card Case

At first I thought to myself, “is a memory card case really essential?”. But for me, yes, yes it is. The images that you create at a wedding are everything, without those you’re going to be in big trouble. I’m a big believer in systems, so I create systems for everything I do, including how I manage memory cards with important data on them. When I get done with a shoot I pull my memory cards from my camera and put them into my memory card case that I then put into my pocket. If I go into a store, my memory cards come too. I’ve had camera gear stolen before, and insurance covered it, but if the memory cards would’ve been stolen with the clients images on them, I would’ve been in big trouble. They no longer make the memory card cases I have, and I really love them, but sd card cases look similar, great, and affordable.

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6. Capable Camera Body

The thing about weddings is that, especially if you do enough of them, you are going to find yourself in EVERY POSSIBLE lighting situation. I’ve photographed a wedding on the top of a hill in the Coastal Range of the Oregon Coast where the sun was literally RIGHT BEHIND the couple during the early evening. It was HOT and the sun was BRIGHT, I can’t believe how sweaty I was crouched in the aisle of that ceremony. At the same time I’ve taken photos at a reception in an extremely dark pub in the Netherlands, outdoor receptions in the wilderness after dark (this is actually the darkest, hardest lighting situation, nothing to bounce artificial light off of). All of this to say, you need a camera body that can handle low light and high ISO’s really well. I began my career as a professional photographer in 2006, went full time in 2009 and I started with a Canon 5D, then upgraded to a Canon 5D Mk III and I’m currently using a Canon EOS-R. Every one of these cameras has been incredibly capable. I make jokes about making out with my cameras, but really, I do love them deeply, because of what they allow me to do. Moving to a mirrorless camera has been really fun, the smaller body is a relief and inspiring to hold for a long period of time, and the function of the EOS-R is outstanding. It’s an incredible camera, and previously I’ve always spent $3500 on camera bodies, so spending a mere $2000 on the EOS R was wonderful.

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5. Prime Lenses

I’m a prime lens shooter, I sold my last zoom lens in the early 2010’s and I’ve never looked back. I became a “professional photographer” with literally no training, I mean zero, I didn’t know what aperture was, I still to this day have never taken a photography class. The question I asked myself from the beginning of my career has been, “how can I make my work better than uncle Bob.” If you’ve shot many weddings, you know uncle Bob, and you know he may even have the same, or worse, nicer gear than you. I’ve always loved the shallow depth of field look, and prime lenses give me the opportunity to use super fast apertures and even though uncle Bob might have a 70-200F2.8L, he doesn’t ever have a Canon 85mm F1.2L. It also takes skill to shoot moving subjects at F2 or F1.2, and uncle Bob hasn’t put in the time to learn that. These are the lenses that I keep in my quiver: Canon 24mm F1.4L, Canon 35mm F1.4L, Canon 50mm 1.2L, Canon 85mm 1.2L and the Canon 135mm F2L. I would like a longer lens, so I’m considering a Canon 200mm F2L or a Canon 70-200mm 2.8L, one of these will be my next buy.

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4. A Comfortable Camera Strap

Spend 8+ hours with a heavy camera and lens hanging from your neck, and you’ll understand why a comfortable strap is on my essential wedding photography gear list. For weddings my favorite strap is the Holdfast MoneyMaker Solo. It’s the most comfortable strap I’ve found and my neck is the least sore at the end of a long day. People also always comment on what a beautiful strap it is. For commercial work I use the Peak Design Slide Lite Strap, which I love also, but I’d still take the MoneyMaker Solo for weddings any day.

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3. Lens Bag

Since I shoot prime lenses exclusively, I change lenses A LOT. Like 50-100 times per shoot I’d guess. So I need my lenses on my hip, and I haven’t found any better bag than the Shootsac. It’s expensive for sure, but I’ve used mine for the better part of a decade, and even wore a hole in the back, and I absolutely love it. It’s also great for holding snacks, your memory card case, and extra batteries.

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2. Backup Gear

It’s easy to see wedding photography as a low investment, high return opportunity, but if you’re thinking that, you’re probably not realizing that you need backup gear of everything. If ANY piece of equipment fails, you must be able to replace it and carry on shooting at a moments notice and produce the same high quality imagery you’ve promised your clients. Cameras are extremely reliable, but you never know when something will break, I take great care of my gear, but things still break from time to time, and I tend to especially break shutter buttons.

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1. Reliable Memory Cards

If you’re photographing weddings, your images are your product. Like I said, I’ve had gear stolen, but it doesn’t matter, what matters is that I’ve never lost a single image from a shoot. I recently changed memory card companies when I switched to the EOS R, and it was because I wanted to find the most reliable card company, and I landed on Prograde SD Cards. If you’re just shooting stills you don’t need super fast cards (although it’s still nice), but if you’re shooting video you NEED fast cards to be able to shoot in 4k. These are the cards that I’m currently using and they’re not only extremely fast, but have had perfect reliability. I feel confident relying on these little pieces of plastic and metal from Prograde to hold and protect my images until I get them home loaded onto my external hard drive.

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Boise Maternity Photographer | Hillary + Kyle

Story time, Kyle is one of three people that I have slept with, overnight in a tarp, “taco style”, during a rainstorm on the Pacific Crest Trail. Our buddy who was a pilot misread the weather forecast, and a night under the stars changed into a night with three doods folded into a blue tarp on Mt Hood. Certainly not my best night of sleep, but such a fun memory for me. I met Kyle during college in western Oregon, and I loved him instantly, he is just himself and such a caring and awesome person. Fast forward some years, and when we moved to Boise, I knew I already had one great friend here, and it was Kyle, which if you’re only going to have one for sure friend, he is an excellent start.

Given this background, I was so excited when I found out that Kyle and his wife Hillary (I photographed their wedding in California too, you can see it here) were expecting. Kyle and I meet up for coffee every other week, like old guys from a time long passed, and I always look forward to our time together, actually I look forward to it so much that I planned it to be every other Friday, so I can finish my week up looking forward to meeting up over a cup of coffee with Kyle.

Being a dad myself now, of kids that are a little bit older (Wellington is 9 and Pearl is 7), I’m so excited for our friends to have babies and to be able to help out and love on and have my kids love on their kids. I’m still a little bit scared of kids, but I’m more comfortable with them than ever before in my life, so I’m really excited to have relationships with kids where I’m not the parent.

Anyways, that was probably way more than you wanted to know, but I’m so excited for Kyle and Hillary, and I was really grateful that they asked me to take some maternity photos. Being that it was during Coronavirus, we kept our space, but downtown Boise was basically empty, look at the photo of them standing in the middle of the street in downtown. I could count all the people we saw during our time together on one hand. It was eerie in a way, but also a cool and unique perspective.

Alright now for the photos, I loved the rainbow bike background, I had wanted to use that for a photo for a long time, and we got some really beautiful and cool light. And I’m looking forward to coffee Friday morning with Kyle, unfortunately we can’t hit up our usual coffee shop, but we’ll wander down the road near his home and catch up.

Thanks so much for hiring me to do this Hillary and Kyle! Cannot wait to meet baby Buster!

Bryan