I know I am a year late to this video, but I have been dreaming of doing what you do ever since I heard you on a podcast a few years back. You are one of the biggest inspirations for me. Thank you for your dedication to the craft, Kev. My biggest hurtle is going to be finding people in the States who will go for it!
hi Kevin, thanks so much for posting this. As a beginner wedding photographer it's great hearing more experienced photographers talk about why they do what they do. your photos are beautiful and the story you provide for each really allows anyone to put themselves in the moment. Who was your biggest inspiration when you started?
Truly amazing images 👌 I believe you yourself and Damien lovegrove are the best of the best wedding photographers in the uk and if not the world and the emotions you capture in your images makes such a powerful statement in a way that it hits the heart and mind
Hi Kevin. Thank you for the amazing insights! Usually when I shoot weddings, I take thousands of shots and then cull them down to a few hundreds. I'm wondering that from your point of view, am I overshooting and should I take fewer photos? Cheers!
It's amazing how you are able to get into the positions to take some of these shots. Did that confidence come with experience? Is that something that you lay out in the initial consultation with the couple? What about wedding planners? (referencing the over the shoulder of the groom shot as the bride looked at him)
I just do my thing, to be honest. I rarely have consultations. The clients know that I shoot candidly and that's it. Wedding Planners are pretty good but occasionally they can appear in shots. It's a liberating way to work.
Hello Kevin, do you always shoot at the lowest iso even in poor lighting conditions without flash then balance the exposure in post? Or do you adjust iso depending on lighting condition and if you do, do you have a maximum iso when shooting in poor lighting conditions before editing them in raw?
Dear Kevin, thank you for this great webinar! May I please ask a technical question: how do you manage to have almost no motion blur in your pictures? I have constant trouble with this when shooting on events because people moving so fast (like when hugging each other e. g.). Even at 250 seconds this has happened. Do you have any suggestion on this you might want to share? Thanks.
Took time to write this ridiculous comment? Really? Kevin, i've been following you for a couple of years now. On the internet that is. I'm not hiding in a bush outside your house. I myself own a X-pro 1 and more recently an X-E4. Everything i watch your images i just wanna pick one of them up and document my life more. You've been a source of inspiration for many years, and you're credited to make as much as spelling mistakes as you want ;) Keep up the excellent work.
If you have any questions about the content in the webinar video, post them here and I will try and reply 🙂
Really inspiring, Kevin. Thank you for putting this together and sharing for free.
My pleasure!
I know I am a year late to this video, but I have been dreaming of doing what you do ever since I heard you on a podcast a few years back. You are one of the biggest inspirations for me. Thank you for your dedication to the craft, Kev. My biggest hurtle is going to be finding people in the States who will go for it!
Thank you for your kind words, Nate. I know of the challenges in the States - but the clients will be there. Good luck!
@@kevin_mullins that means the world to me. Thank you, Kevin!
hi Kevin, thanks so much for posting this. As a beginner wedding photographer it's great hearing more experienced photographers talk about why they do what they do. your photos are beautiful and the story you provide for each really allows anyone to put themselves in the moment. Who was your biggest inspiration when you started?
Truly amazing images 👌 I believe you yourself and Damien lovegrove are the best of the best wedding photographers in the uk and if not the world and the emotions you capture in your images makes such a powerful statement in a way that it hits the heart and mind
Thanks. Damian is ace, I agree.
Thank you for sharing your insights Kevin, great stuff and lots of information. 🙏
Thank you 🙂
Amazing video great content 😊 thank you
Hi Kevin. Thank you for the amazing insights! Usually when I shoot weddings, I take thousands of shots and then cull them down to a few hundreds. I'm wondering that from your point of view, am I overshooting and should I take fewer photos? Cheers!
Hi Kevin, great content! What are your tips to be creative in a portrait session?
THANK YOU VERY MUCH for the video😍
No problem 🙂
Is there a particular go to film simulation recipe(s) that u have:::cause the textures are so consistent
It's amazing how you are able to get into the positions to take some of these shots. Did that confidence come with experience? Is that something that you lay out in the initial consultation with the couple? What about wedding planners? (referencing the over the shoulder of the groom shot as the bride looked at him)
I just do my thing, to be honest. I rarely have consultations. The clients know that I shoot candidly and that's it. Wedding Planners are pretty good but occasionally they can appear in shots. It's a liberating way to work.
And guess I am referencing the film simulations u posted back in 2020 and any others I might have missed
Loving all of the videos! Which lenses do you usually use on a shoot with the 18mm? 18, 35, 56? Thanks :D
Right now, the 18mm and the 56mm :-)
Hello Kevin, do you always shoot at the lowest iso even in poor lighting conditions without flash then balance the exposure in post? Or do you adjust iso depending on lighting condition and if you do, do you have a maximum iso when shooting in poor lighting conditions before editing them in raw?
I do think he shoots auto iso, i remember that he spoke about this in a different Video
Dear Kevin, thank you for this great webinar! May I please ask a technical question: how do you manage to have almost no motion blur in your pictures? I have constant trouble with this when shooting on events because people moving so fast (like when hugging each other e. g.). Even at 250 seconds this has happened. Do you have any suggestion on this you might want to share? Thanks.
The obvious answer is to shoot at faster shutter speeds. Go to 1/500 and auto ISO limit of 3200 or 6400, then tweak exposure in post.
nicely done. Love your photo style
Thanks, David.
Thanks
Ah... nostalgia... it is not what it used to be
"Robert Kappa", really?
You can forgive a man a spelling mistake, surely?
Took time to write this ridiculous comment? Really?
Kevin, i've been following you for a couple of years now. On the internet that is. I'm not hiding in a bush outside your house.
I myself own a X-pro 1 and more recently an X-E4. Everything i watch your images i just wanna pick one of them up and document my life more. You've been a source of inspiration for many years, and you're credited to make as much as spelling mistakes as you want ;) Keep up the excellent work.