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wedding couple first dance confetti cannon photo

Your wedding day is full of peak experiences – for the photographers too!

By Barnet Wedding Photographers, London Wedding PhotographerNo Comments

A widely held belief in our modern society is that your wedding day is one of, if not the best day of your life. Well, from our extensive experience of couples during their special day and the feedback we get, sometimes years later, this common wisdom is pretty accurate. The day is absolutely packed with memorable moments. In fact we would say to quote the title of this post, that your wedding day is full of peak experiences and not just for yourselves but the photographers too!

All Saints Blackheath confetti shot

What does that mean? Well when we were looking back at some of the images we captured in the last year, we began to remember some of what we felt at the time. That’s when we thought it would be a good idea to write about how the photographer feels working alongside you.

Brocket Hall Wedding ceremony image

It was  almost as if the images themselves were re triggering these moments again inside ourselves. So we decided to showcase some of those wedding photos that made us feel great ourselves while we were taking them. In fact we believe if you are not feeling the excitement and specialness of the day as a photographer, then documenting what happens will not be fully expressed with your images either.

Jewish wedding Dorchester Hotel photographers

The best wedding photographers know when a moment is special and choose their angle, framing, camera and lens settings in a flash to  reflect that. Anyone of course can take a few great pictures if they press the shutter button a thousand times. The mark of a professional is being able to make nine hundred and fifty or more of those images relevant, emotive and beautifully captured. Anything less is luck not technique. Semi rant over!

wedding kiss in lift central London

So where do peak moments come in a wedding? Well often right from the beginning. For example, the first time the bride’s father sees her in that fantastic wedding dress she spent so long searching for. The moment a groom sees his bride walking down the aisle. The looks of love and euphoria when a bride and groom are officially proclaimed “husband and wife.”

Groom cries at East Finchley wedding

Your entire wedding party cheering and throwing confetti over you. The fantastic time you spend alone at some point in the day with your fantastic wedding photographers David and Joanna! The moment you enter your wedding breakfast to a standing ovation. Hearing those heart felt words directed towards you during the wedding speeches. Your first dance surrounded by friends and family, to name just a few peak moments.

Hugging during wedding ceremony at London's Asia House

In fact the featured image in the post is that exact moment in Rachel and Chris’s wedding where John Legend’s All of Me as the first dance literally exploded into the Tiesto remix. As I got covered in confetti myself I felt a peak of euphoria as I was taking the shots. It was literally wedding magic.

Bride and groom cry at Islington wedding ceremony

Shoreditch wedding photographers photo full crop version

wedding couple Borough Market shot

See many more of those peak wedding moments in our three dedicated galleries here: Wedding Galleries

Check out wedding after wedding through page after page on our Blog right here on the website.

By David Green

Alexandra Palace engagement photography

Engagement Shoot at London’s Alexandra Palace in Muswell Hill

By Barnet Wedding Photographers, London Wedding Photographer, Wedding Venues2 Comments

It is no secret to those that know us that Joanna and I love Muswell Hill. After all this is where we first met, and where we lived in the imposing shadow of Alexandra Palace. Yickyin and Leo in planning their future wedding found us when searching for a London wedding photographer for their Christmas wedding at The Goring Hotel in Belgravia.

Engagement photography at Alexandra Palace Muswell Hill shoot

They are a couple from Hong Kong and wanted to relax themselves in front of the camera and create some imagery they could use for their invitation cards and general wedding stationery. One or two of the many bonuses of a pre wedding shoot.

Muscle Hill wedding couple in woods

As they also lived in the north of the capital I suggested an engagement shoot at London’s Alexandra Palace in Muswell Hill. We love the mixture of urban and classic architecture mixed with natural greenery and trees and a lovely little boating lake. All places that we had taken the children to many times, and as far as a venue goes for engagement photography I don’t think you could ask for much more.

Couple jump in front of London's Alexandra Palace image

You have to know what you are doing though obviously, pictures and emotion don’t creates themselves out of nothing! Another thing we had to bear in mind was the timing of the shoot too as Alexandra Palace can become very busy very quickly. Shooting wedding days in the centre of London that is the norm, so we are very adept at dealing with crowds and crowded places, but it is nice when doing some pre wedding photography to have a little more privacy. This Chinese engagement shoot (that’s how I saw it) was on a Saturday afternoon, however it was so windy, almost gale force, and overcast that crowds were not a problem!

Another engagement photo sat on steps by Alexandra Palace London

In fact only twenty four hours before I had been at Alexandra Palace with the lovely Ashley and Paul who are getting married in London too at the Hampton Court Hotel next to surprise surprise Hampton Court Palace. Their day was typified by strong sunshine which dictated where I could place them, but also added a bonus effect of depth and texture that I could create in the imagery.

Couple pose and smile under Alexandra Palace Arch photo

For Yickyin and Leo we had a dull sky and extreme wind to deal with, but we made this part of the fun and also went for a little more quirkiness to compensate.

Wedding couple laugh by Italian fountains at Alexandra Palace

One thing I have noticed with Chinese couples is that they are very open minded to slightly off the wall ideas, especially if they are from Hong Kong, must be something in the air there! I used quite a bit of creative flash as well to give their photos a little lift in dull conditions.

Highgate Woods engagement photographer image

Alexandra Palace itself has a very interesting history. It was built in 1873, but according to some accounts a roof worker’s unextinguished cigarette started a fire that destroyed the entire structure. Good old Victorian builders didn’t hang around though, and by 1875 they had rebuilt it to a slightly different design.

Engagement photo in middle of Muswell Hill stone sculpture

Nicknamed affectionately “Ally Pally” it is probably most famous for the fact that the British Broadcasting Corporation know to us all here in Great Britain as the BBC, started the world’s first regular high definition television broadcasts in 1936. I wanted to incorporate a little of this history into the engagement photos as you can see from some of the selection here.

Couple cuddle under arches at Alexandra Palace

Wedding couple by Alexandra Palace skate park

To read more on our blog about weddings at The Goring Hotel the destination for these two lovebirds take a look here: Goring Hotel Wedding Photographer and also here: Fuji X100 for your London wedding, and wedding? Yes at the Goring Hotel

Chinese engagement couple under London railway  bridge

Also notice we got lucky for the featured image of these Chinese love birds, as two local winged creatures flew by at just the right time, although I was waiting for something like this to occur anyway as I kept clapping my hands to try and make it happen!

Couple pose for engagement photos on Alexandra Palace steps

By David Green.

All Saints Blackheath confetti shot

Wedding Confetti, where did it come from, and where is it going? Throwing it out there!

By Barnet Wedding Photographers, London Wedding PhotographerNo Comments

When anyone thinks about a wedding day invariably thoughts of confetti throwing probably figure somewhere in their imagination. Confetti is so iconic that it has become traditionally woven into the fabric of a wedding day. No wedding album or these days a collection of images on DVD or USB, is complete without a photo of a wedding couple exiting a church, registry office or specially licensed venue being showered in confetti by their friends and family. For a wedding photographer it is one of those images that they must under all circumstances get right and deliver.

confetti shower wedding couple Royal Chace hotel Enfield

But where does this ritual come from? Why does a newly married husband and wife walk through a corridor of excited people, and get large amounts of coloured paper or dried petals thrown all over them? I’m sure if aliens came down to earth for a quick peek at the customs of humanity this particular one may well confuse them! And take it from us they will be pulling bits out of their hair and clothing for hours afterwards.

Confetti shot at Hendon Hall London

confetti_at_night_Hackney_Town_Hall - Copy

Generally speaking we should blame the Italians, though the genesis of confetti throwing has several strands, and for a more detailed explanation we would recommend the excellent Wikipedia article on the subject: Confetti article on Wikipedia

Bubbles confetti Dryham Park country club wedding

Bubblesand confetti at Asia House London wedding shot

Blackheath wedding photographers image

The word itself comes from the Italian “confetto” which basically means small sweet. Why throw small sweets at newly weds? Well through the centuries in Europe it became something of a ritual to throw objects at parades, gatherings and celebrations generally. Unfortunately what was thrown wasn’t always very palatable or celebratory! For example mud balls and eggs were often lobbed, as well as more palatable examples such as small candles and sugar sweets. In Italy confetti (almond based sweets) are often given at weddings as a good luck gesture for the fertility and enhanced family producing chances of the newly wedded man and wife.

London wedding confetti shot

In 1875 Enrico Mangili from Milan invented a paper version for throwing at the yearly Carnevale di Milano. The British towards the end of the nineteenth century adopted the paper idea, along with a variant in rice, as a symbolic celebration gesture at the end of wedding formalities. Hence the now almost universal confetti throw.

As London wedding photographers we have seen confetti thrown inside and outside of buildings, day times and evenings, and even as a couple emerged from a hotel lift, as there were restrictions on throwing anything outside of the premises. In fact many churches in the United Kingdom now ask that couples either do not throw confetti at all, or do so on council controlled land just past their boundaries. The reason being, quite simply they want the borough council to clean it up and not themselves. Smart! Many establishments also require that if confetti is to be thrown that it be in a biodegradable form, the most usual of these being freeze dried flower petals.

Another way to celebrate a couples new marriage, using the spirit of confetti, but not the associated clean up or restrictions, is for the wedding party to blow bubbles. And as with other mentions of the many variations that confetti takes within a wedding day, we have included some photographic examples shot by ourselves. For the blowing of these soap bubbles the official wedding party will hand out small tubes filled with detergent filed water and a plastic ring to blow through.

wedding_confetti_inside_London_Hotel

Confetti these days doesn’t have to make an appearance only as a couple exit their marriage venue. Now in the spirit of seeing a wedding day as an ALL day celebration, confetti can be released through special “confetti” canons at any time. For example as a bride and groom enter a reception venue to begin their wedding breakfast. Usually a master of ceremonies would, like a town crier of old, announce them into the room with a dialogue such as the following: “Everybody please be upstanding for the new Mr and Mrs..”

confetti canon at London wedding party

Another very popular time to release the confetti canons or bubble machines are at the point where the newly “hitched” bride and groom first dance on the evening of their reception. This usually takes place in front of all their friends and family gathered around them to either a DJ spun piece or a live band. First dance itself of course is another enduring wedding tradition that deserves an article in it’s own right.

wedding couple first dance confetti cannon photo

wedding confetti photo at Pembroke lodge

As a footnote, as the uses of confetti become ever more varied, we will keep this article updated with new examples. Of course we don’t even need to throw confetti anymore, we can even lay it on the ground and create a pathway to love as is shown in the image below of an outdoor wedding we photographed in St Tropez Southern France.

wedding petals at La Tartane photo

For the original blog posts that featured some of these images of confetti throwing, blowing bubbles and celebratory confetti canon explosions take a look here:

Blackheath Canary Wharf London wedding photographers

Enfield Wedding at Royal Chace hotel

Down Hall Country House wedding photography

Hackney and Hoxton wedding for Carly and Jim

St Tropez Wedding Photographer

By David Green

wedding couple by chandelier Hendon Hall London

Hendon Hall Hotel Wedding North London

By Barnet Wedding Photographers, London Wedding Photographer, Wedding VenuesNo Comments

To photograph a Hendon Hall wedding is also a chance to immerse yourself in one of England’s greatest sporting achievements. By that I mean the World Cup win of 1966, led by Captain Bobby Moore and his team of now household names. It was the Hendon Hall hotel that Alf Ramsey and the England camp decided to use as a base to stay for the team, and also a training ground between matches. Conveniently placed it was just a short skip and a jump to the old twin towers of Wembley Stadium. That training ground is now tarmaced over as the car park that your wedding guests will leave their vehicles on to be a part of your big day! It’s a fantastic bit of history that acts as a nice backdrop to any wedding day celebrated at this popular venue.

Confetti shot at Hendon Hall London

Personally we have photographed at Hendon Hall many times. You have a choice of venues for your wedding ceremony from one of the Georgian rooms in the main house itself, to their dedicated function room the Pembroke Suite, adjoining the Hall for a larger gathering. There is also an extra bar attached to this where your guests can chat and drink between courses or when the room is being turned around. Of course in the main house there is a restauarant, bar, terrace and gardens for socialising and photography. Featured here on the blog post image is a shot from Laura and Colin’s special day at Hendon Hall, and this image is taken in the Georgian part of the hotel at the top of the main stairs using one of our specialist spotlights. The image above is one from their confetti shower on the back lawns of the house. I love this moment shown below in the Pembroke where Colin full of emotion on seeing Laura walk down the aisle, has a reassuring hand suddenly placed on his shoulder by his best man.

Wedding ceremony at Hendon Hall Hotel

Also featured is one of my favourite images from past weddings here in the Pembroke Suite, as the bride and groom made their grand entrance for the wedding breakfast dressed in a gangsta style throwing money around personalised with their faces on the dollar bills. I never dared ask the groom what he really did for a living!

Hendon Hall wedding photo

For convenience here’s some of the capacities of Hendon Hall Hotel for weddings: Pembroke Suite, Ceremony: 300 Dining: 180, Reception: 250. Hogarth,  Ceremony: 40 Dining: 40 Reception: 50. Sheridan,   Ceremony: 40 Dining: 30 Reception: 40.  Johnson, Ceremony: 25  Dining: 20 Reception: 20. As you can see a room and space pretty much for every size of occasion.

By David Green

 

wedding couple celebrate in rain Leez Priory

Leez Priory Wedding Photographers. The French Connection.

By Barnet Wedding Photographers, London Wedding Photographer, Wedding VenuesNo Comments

The question is quite simply, who wouldn’t love a wedding at Leez Priory? It has everything, from a rich history, stellar good looks, and a proven track record as a very very popular venue.

wedding_disguises_at_Leez_Priory_essex

As previous Leez Priory wedding photographers we knew what we were talking about when we first met Marie and Xavier to hear about their plans for their special day. The difference with these lovebirds compared to previous couples we had photographed at this premier Essex venue, was  that they were both French, and basically everyone attending the wedding day would be French too. Sacré bleu!

Outside wedding at Leez Priory bride approaching photo

Not a problem as we regularly photograph weddings across the channel in France, and it was interesting to experience our Gallic neighbours and friends here in the UK. The whole idea was to have a very English celebration as a great experience for their friends and family.

confetti throw at Leez Priory wedding ceremony

aerial confetti shot taken at Leez Priory in Essex

Weather permitting the wedding ceremony would be outside in front of the Priory’s Great Tower followed by English high tea, croquet and other games.

London wedding photographers Big Day Weddings image

Well although the weather forecast threatened to put a damper on the days plans I’m happy to report apart from a couple of quick showers everything went ahead as planned. That’s also a point I always make to potential wedding couples, that it is not worth worrying about the weather as one, it probably won’t rain ALL day, and two, shots with umbrellas can look fantastic anyway.

wedding couple kiss under arch at Leez Priory

The day began with both Marie and Xavier getting ready separately at Leez Priory, and naturally we documented the fun and the frolics of that essential part of their story. Check out the shot later in the post of the boys multi tasking with their shirts and cuffs in one of the dedicated outbuildings. The weather was holding so the guests gathered outside in the shadow of the Great Tower for Marie’s grand entrance. And what an entrance is was, across the majestic lawns to her husband in waiting. We took some images of this and the ceremony and confetti from an upstairs bedroom window too, for a more birds eye view and memory of the day.

sunset wedding couple shot at Leez Priory

Interestingly the Great Tower and other areas at Leez were the first in England to be granted a civil licence, including underneath it’s arch, which is where Marie and Xavier chose to wed.

groomsmen get ready before the wedding

While the guests drank champagne and enjoyed their complimentary nibbles we went off with the couple for a while around the grounds. For our shots we had an interesting mix of weather in a short time. It rained, it stopped and then the sun came out too, which meant we could have even more variety to our shots. We love an umbrella wedding photo!

Bride gets ready at Leez Priory

Family and friends photos on the lawn followed along with some impromptu croquet playing. It felt all day long that we were a great fit for this particular English and French wedding day fusion. The couple’s friends and family were exuberant fun loving people, and it was great to see so much love and laughter on display.

The wedding breakfast was hosted in the Great Hall, with as usual fantastic fayre from the Leez Priory catering and events team. Special mention to these guys, as they really are very good at what they do and make the day run so smoothly, not just for the wedding party, but folks like us behind the scenes too. Thank you, it’s appreciated!

Wedding couple photo in the grounds of Leez Priory

After the customary speeches and toasts it was time to go downstairs for the cake cutting and then some serious dancing the night away.

Leez Priory itself was originally founded in 1220 as an Augustinian Priory, and lasted in that incarnation for a full three hundred years. Sir Richard Rich built his own magnificent house on the grounds as Earl of Warwick, and this became much of the Leez Priory we see and know today.

Leez as previously mentioned was the first venue of its kind to be granted a license for civil wedding ceremonies, and these can be under the Carriageway or Tower arch, and also the Great Hall and Coach House. Whichever one you choose you will be guaranteed a day to remember at one of the UK’s best traditional wedding venues.

To read about some of our other Leez Priory wedding days take a look at this related post: Leez Priory Wedding Photographers

Bonjour and au revoir.

By David Green