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All responses Most smiled responses
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We're actually mainly using the Nikon right now. The colours are somewhat different and our Sigma 50 is a bit soft wide open, so it mostly sits in the camera bag right now.
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We have the Nikon 50mm/1.4 and the Sigma 50mm/1.4.
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Concerned may not be the word, but the bodies we use have all been around for a while and will need an upgrade eventually, so it would have been nice to see the D800 a bit more optimized for our needs.
There's always the D3S though. Or the D4. We'll see. -
From what we've seen this far, not so much. Sure, a few more megapixels would be nice, but 36MP is a bit overkill for our style of shooting.
What we need is awesome performance in low-light situations, and the D800 doesn't appear to be any better than the D700 in that area.
The D800 is probably an amazing camera, and we don't wanna judge it too much before trying one, but it appears to be more suited for studio/commercial photography. -
We do full day coverage because we want to tell the story of the day, from morning to night. We couldn't do that if we only covered parts of the day.
There's nothing wrong with hourly coverage, but it's just not what we do.
We've done weddings that lasted 18-19 hours, and we've done 9-10 hour weddings. It all depends on what the wedding day is like. And no, we don't charge differently since we don't offer time based packages. -
Never happened. The people we've dealt with have been normal, good people, so we don't worry too much about it.
But if a wedding does get started at 6am, we have no problem being there at that time.
Unlimited is unlimited. -
asked by bentinmarcs
You're welcome. :)
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We offer four different packages, starting with coverage and a disk, and adding Document You sessions, albums and such in the higher packages.
We don't create custom packages for all our clients, but if they want something specific, we're of course open to discussion. -
asked by bentinmarcs
Makes total sense.
That's one of the reasons why we try to avoid looking at too much other wedding photography. We want to keep our stuff fresh, and not do anything we've seen elsewhere or follow any "rules" about how weddings should be shot.
We try to go in with an empty, open, almost naive mind and just shoot whatever we see.
It's not always easy, but for our creative process it's so, so important. -
asked by timcoulson
First-come, first-served. We can't hold any dates without a deposits, it's really as simple as that.
We tell that to everyone who inquires. If they take too long to book, then they also take the risk of someone else booking their date. -
We'd give them a quote based on the prices as they were when they booked us.
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asked by laura
Because everything is more interesting after 2 am.
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We've never had a couple's mom contacting us for a wedding, but if that was the case and she wanted to tag along for a meeting, we don't see a problem with that.
Whatever the couple wants works for us. The main thing for us is that we get a chance to chat and get to know them. -
Yeah, but we rarely use off-camera flash. Which one you need depends on what you're gonna use it for.
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The Jetpack by WordPress.com plugin and Google Analytics.
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asked by GregSamborski
We design the albums to tell the story as we saw it unfold, but the clients always have the last say.
We use Album Exposure for online album proofing. Works like a charm.
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Nordica Photography’s Bio
We're wedding photographers based out of Vancouver, BC, Canada. Our business is called Nordica Photography.


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