I think the most important aspect is the country where you are shooting. For example in my case, weddings in Romania are at least 14h. Most are more likely 15-18h, it is incredible hard to shoot 3 weddings in a row, that's why I don't do that anymore.
12:46 Just out of interest, do all three of you rely solely in Imagen AI to do edits that are exported for client... or do you do further manual fine tune of WB, exposure, NR and brush and gradient retouching? I find for my event work, Imagen AI provides a good first draft, but there is always more work to do to images to have them ready for client
I use it for colour correction and straightening, and the only thing I really need to do is further cropping and retouching (teeth whitening and skin smoothing using Lightroom AI presets) and distraction removal!
Props to all of you to undertake 3 weddings in a weekend!! I would only ever do 1 🤯🤯. I think it does all depend on hours working. If I do a 10 hour day (preperation, ceremony, formal photos, reception), for 1 wedding, thats it for me. I am not doing anything the day after... thats for rest and recovery. Also, my shoulder issues have got worse since using mirrorless cameras, since we hold them further out from the body viewing LCD screen. I dont get anywhere near the fatigue when using viewfinder.
@@angelicavis makes sense... I tend to default to composing scene by using LCD, as I don't like looking through EVF, find it gives me a headache when using for long periods 🤷♂️
@@photo2000 ah that sucks! I personally love the EVF although I do have trouble making straight compositions. But I believe I use my mirrorless more like a DSLR which apparently is not how it should be used 😅
@@TaylorJacksonPhoto Its in some cases a lighter system... but if holding it away from body to view LCD screen, its going to put more strain on arms, and especially shoulder muscles. Might have been ok when I was working in my 20's... not anymore 😂
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Tips for triple wedding weekends. Don’t. Thank you for coming to my ted talk.
😂
I think the most important aspect is the country where you are shooting. For example in my case, weddings in Romania are at least 14h. Most are more likely 15-18h, it is incredible hard to shoot 3 weddings in a row, that's why I don't do that anymore.
3 wedding in 1 weekend,, you love the money hehe. i love these videos
Another fantastic video Taylor. So helpful. Thank you! Quick question: how many photos do you typically deliver to the client after a wedding?
What do you think of the new Aftershoot?
Curious, how is he backing up onsite? That would be helpful, thanks for any help!
It's amazing shooting weddings! ♥️
12:46 Just out of interest, do all three of you rely solely in Imagen AI to do edits that are exported for client... or do you do further manual fine tune of WB, exposure, NR and brush and gradient retouching? I find for my event work, Imagen AI provides a good first draft, but there is always more work to do to images to have them ready for client
I use it for colour correction and straightening, and the only thing I really need to do is further cropping and retouching (teeth whitening and skin smoothing using Lightroom AI presets) and distraction removal!
Just like Lindsay, I use Imagen for like an 80% edit and then the rest is manual :)
12:55 Tamron 28-75mm F2? is that a new lens that just dropped!!! we could only hope!! 🙏🙏... think you meant 2.8 😉
Hah hah the 2.8
@@TaylorJacksonPhoto 😂😂👍👍
Great work
13:38 Taylor, what are you using to record from point of view of camera??
GoPro
Or atomos ninja star if it’s the screen record
@@TaylorJacksonPhoto 👍👍 is it mounted to camera? presume it is
Props to all of you to undertake 3 weddings in a weekend!! I would only ever do 1 🤯🤯. I think it does all depend on hours working. If I do a 10 hour day (preperation, ceremony, formal photos, reception), for 1 wedding, thats it for me. I am not doing anything the day after... thats for rest and recovery.
Also, my shoulder issues have got worse since using mirrorless cameras, since we hold them further out from the body viewing LCD screen. I dont get anywhere near the fatigue when using viewfinder.
I never thought about mirrorless being harder on your back but this makes sense
Well, this might sound ignorant but why not use the viewfinder? I still always use my viewfinder on my mirrorless cameras...
@@angelicavis makes sense... I tend to default to composing scene by using LCD, as I don't like looking through EVF, find it gives me a headache when using for long periods 🤷♂️
@@photo2000 ah that sucks! I personally love the EVF although I do have trouble making straight compositions. But I believe I use my mirrorless more like a DSLR which apparently is not how it should be used 😅
@@TaylorJacksonPhoto Its in some cases a lighter system... but if holding it away from body to view LCD screen, its going to put more strain on arms, and especially shoulder muscles. Might have been ok when I was working in my 20's... not anymore 😂
I once photographed 2 wedding in a weekend . It was rough
❤❤❤