Posts Tagged ‘Finished Product’

Don’t Feel Distressed With These Tips When Doing Groom Wedding Speech

Monday, February 1st, 2010

Are you about to marry the woman of your dreams? So, you are to make that groom wedding speech? Perhaps, your nervousness increases at the thought. If you are not an experienced speaker, feeling distressed due to that speech before the wedding is to be expected.

As you are faced with this dilemma, you do the thing most men will do when in the same boat, which is to conduct lots of research over the internet. It is quite the normal thing to do since you will find a myriad of information about wedding speeches. Endless amount of information can be unearthed, however, it can be too much that it gives you confusion where or how to pick the right one for you.

To solve your problem, narrow down your search by only acquiring helpful tips on how to make an effective groom wedding speech. Even though you were never a good writer, you can produce a good speech once you have the right tips. So what tips should you follow? Is there a step by step strategy that will guide you in effortlessly producing that wedding speech?

Start the project with a proper planning. In this stage, involved steps are brainstorming and drafting. Anything that is produced by your brainstorming must be taken down on your notes. Needless to say, these things must be significant to the wedding celebration.

After which, you draft the speech by organizing notes you earlied had done. Remember that you are using this as a guide and not the finished product. And then, the actual writing of the speech comes next.

In this stage, the steps that you are going to follow are choosing the theme, identifying the goal, learning the audience, and using stories or anecdotes. Be sure that you stick to the theme you selected to produce a short, cohesive, and effective speech. In identifying your goal, you are looking after something that you want to accomplish after delivering it.

In knowing the audience, this is done so you don’t overlap with the message of your speech. In delivering your wedding speech, you are talking with the audience and not beneath or over them. Therefore, it is important that you know the kind of crowd who will be attending the big day.

And finally, when using stories or anecdotes you doing it like you are painting a picture for the audience to see. This strategy is proven effective in making any speech a lot better that is why it has been used over and over by the people. It leads to audience staying interested to the speaker. Just remember not to overdo it or only use stories and anecdotes in your groom wedding speech significant to the event .

Wedding Photography Advice

Sunday, November 8th, 2009

There’s nothing worse than terrible shots or no shots of one of the most momentous events in a person’s life. A wedding may be made in heaven but disaster is in the details. Skip some important points and you can wish you were in the trashcan with the rubber chicken and leathery lettuce.

Here are some tips to help you negotiate this photographic minefield.

Hire a professional.
No? Don’t want to do that? You think Uncle George can do it fine on the cheap? Save a few bucks and spread the joy around? Then read on, reckless fool…

Be prepared.
Emotionally, spiritually, intellectually and photographically. You will need more than just a strong heart and nerves of steel. You’ll need extra memory sticks, extra batteries, a flash outfit, a tripod and a zoom/wide-angle lens. You’ll also need decent image editing software to produce the finished product in an acceptable form.

Have an assistant or a helper.
You should have lots of stuff to carry around, and you need someone who will watch your gear when you’re busy. Get someone to help you out. It’s also good to have someone relatively sane to talk to.

ALWAYS shoot for the bride.
Men don’t really care about photos of themselves. Well, that’s a generality. 99.9% of men don’t care. Usually the only time a man looks at a wedding photo under his own volition is just after the divorce with a drink in the other hand.

Get a list of wanted shots.
Don’t go into this blind. Find out what shots the happy couple expect and try to oblige. Weddings have about 4 phases: getting dressed, the ceremony, after the ceremony (relaxed shots with the new couple), the reception including the cake and groups of guests. Take your lead from the bride not the juiced up guests at the reception.

Shoot a lot.
This is good advice for any photography. At a wedding you’re dealing with human nature at its most confused. Who can really tell what shots will be the big sellers? Just cover everything (even the speeches) and shoot everything three times and be safe.

Get the groups.
Groups are important but watch out here because semi-inebriated guests will want to be photographed with pot-plants, the foxy waitress, each other, maybe the bride and groom, and towards the end of the evening fascinating cloud formations. Get from the bride who should be in what group. Stay with her.

Get the proofs to the bride as fast as possible.
Forget this just being good service, it’s also smart business. Happiness and the vows of matrimony can be fleeting. Get your wedding photography bill in before the first fight if possible. Definitely before the divorce.

Be a professional. Weddings can be scary things.
They’re all about love, sex, eating and drinking. Passions and confusions can be rampant. Get your shots first and party later if anyone is left to party with. If you find yourself at the end alone with your camera, at least you can console yourself that you completed your mission.

Do your own quality control before you submit the proofs.
Your reputation can be destroyed by a handful of misaimed shots of the bride or her friends. People often remember that one shot where the matron of honor looked as if she was zonked when it was just an untimely blink. If it sucks delete it. Better safe than sorry.