Engagement Sessions

July 20, 2008

Lara & Sean's Engagement Portrait Session in Stowe, Vermont

T'was a dark and dreary day when Lara and Sean's time came to do their engagement portrait session in Stowe. We felt bad that they had to drive nearly five hours each way on the same day to get this done. But we pulled a few tricks out of our artists' bag and made our own sunshine! Visiting the newly opened Stowe Mountain Lodge for a few photos was definitely icing on our cake! Lara and Sean are crazy in love and we are honored to be documenting their Connecticut wedding later this summer.









June 16, 2008

Jordanne & Peter's Engagement Portrait Session in Stowe, Vermont

The weatherman was calling for rain and thunderstorms, heavy at times. Jordanne and Peter had recently travelled all the way from Lanai City, Hawaii to Manchester, Vermont and were determined to drive up to Stowe today for their engagement portrait session. While hail fell at our home studio in Johnson, we were playing in sunshine (with a few passing clouds), splashing around in mountain streams, peeping out of covered bridges and climbing around on boulders in the Notch with our truly wonderful couple!

February 15, 2008

Melissa and Greg's Engagement Portrait Session at Stowehof

We met up with Melissa and Greg a couple of days before Valentine's Day at the wonderful Stowehof Inn and Resort in Stowe, Vermont. The weather was cold, with a wind that didn't help, so we took advantage of the uniquely rustic indoor settings available at the Stowehof. Eventually we found our way outside, because the views of the Stowe Mountain Resort in the distance were just too good to pass up! We managed to work through the NY Yankees Baseball Hats interlude without too much trouble! After all, the Boston Red Sox still are the World Champions, the last time I checked ;-)... Hey, there's always next year, right Greg?!

July 28, 2007

Jen & Noah's Engagement Portrait Session

We get asked whether we shoot digital or film, less and less, but it still happens from time to time. We even had a specific request recently for us to shoot film. But why would we ever shoot film again?!?! Shooting digitally allows us to change ISO on the fly, avoid missing key moments due to changing rolls, and most importantly, to bring our work directly into our digital darkroom.

We pride ourselves on the post-processing that we apply to every image that we print or place in an album, often spending hours enhancing our images, much the way a lapidary cuts and polishes a gemstone to produce a finished diamond suitable for a wedding ring. The things we do range from cosmetic retouching, to vignetting, dodging and burning, color toning and conversions to b&w, sepia and duotones, and more.

We do this work full-time and view ourselves as storytellers and artists foremost, and we view our photography as a tool we employ toward that goal. We are looking for only a few dozen commissions per year, and we yearn to produce big, fat, magazine-style contemporary albums which artistically evoke the spirit of our clients' wedding celebrations.

Check out the following image from Jen & Noah's Engagement Portrait Session, presented first as it was shot SOOTC and then below, as a  fully-worked, finished art print. One of the things that post-processing did was to bring out the blurred tiger lily that our wide-open 85mm lens had captured directly in front of their faces, which created a warm, orange glow reminiscent of a lens flare.