kshapero said:
So Roger if you don't use a flash, and I am happy to hear this, then what speed film do you use? Or if digital what ISO do you shot at?
ISO 400 and fast lenses (HP5 in DD-X, true ISO 650+, rated 500, and Kodak Portras 400NC rated 320). Some shots (formal groups, 'bride kissing groom, etc.) are doubled up in colour and mono but the vast majority of the 'serious' shots are in mono.
As I said earlier, I shoot ONLY weddings I can't get out of, and the bride and groom know what they're getting: a wedding shot my way, as a wedding present, with the pics ready when they come back from honeymoon. If they want something else, they can hire someone or find someone else to do it as a present. A couple of them tried to hire me but I told them no, it's a present, because I don't do pro weddings. They have all professed themselves delighted so far.
I have tried using other cameras than my Leicas, but only alongside the Leicas, and I see no advantage in SLRs; in fact, I can't really imagine what those advantages are unless you use MF (which I have done, but gave up).
Flash, I have wanted once or twice for contre-jour shots as fill, but otherwise, I've never felt the need. The contre-jour shots just didn't work. So? That's a couple of shots out of hundreds.
I completely agree with other posters that weddings are too important to screw up, which is one reason I hate doing them, but I haven't screwed up any yet.
There's also a BIG difference between shooting professionally, at the beck and call of everyone, and shooting as a friend. I would never do the former; I try to avoid the latter as much as possible.
From memory, the weddings I shot were:
Ian (we were all broke students): Leica IIIa
Victoria (who borrowed my spare room when she split up with her first husband): Forgotten
Linda (ex-girlfriend from when I was 16-17 and she was 14-15; like a sister for the last 40+ years, widowed and remarried -- second wedding, I couldn't stand her first husband): M2, M4-P, Linhof Tech 70
Neil (whom I've known as long as Linda, and who finally got married in his 50s): M2, M4-P, some sort of MF SLR. My wife Frances Schultz also shot with a Nikkormat.
Louise (daughter of Hayes, whom again I've known since I was 16 and he was 15): M2, M4-P. Frances used Voigtländer RFs.
I have a feeling there may have been one other, but if there was, I've forgotten it, and I can't ask my wife because she's asleep.
The one remaining wedding I know I'm at risk of shooting is the daughter of one of Frances's closest friends -- but there are always surprises like Neil.
It's not many weddings, and as I say, they know I'm doing it my way. IF I had been doing it professionally, I'd have advised the couple that film (especially B+W film) has much better proven longevity than digital and I'd probably supplement the Leicas with an MF RF for some of the group shots.
Hope this clarifies matters,
Cheers,
R.