Alt text here
89
69
59
49
48
46
45
45
44
44
43
41
41
40
37
32


YAY! Very excited to share with you all Creative Image Collecitons latest feature in The Knot New York’s Fall Winter Issue of 2011! I was elated when Carly Steier contacted me after stumbling upon my blog…in search of a CT wedding. I am honored to be published in The Knot and I hope to continue to do so in upcoming issues! My first time being published without even having to submit the wedding for consideration! Such a cool thing! 

Anyhow…all the vendors,  including  The Inn at Longshore, CR Socials Events, Vantage Point Films, Flowers by Danielle and many more talented and dedicated vendors, did such an amazing job at Natalie and Shaun’s wedding! Everything was heaven sent for me to photograph…and the cake, by CakeSuite was to die for! I kid you not! I still think about it and the ganache that went along with it! ;o)

Not only are Natalie and Shaun a beautiful couple, being the best of friends as well as husband and wife (met on Match.com…wish I had the same luck!!!), but I gained a great friend in Natalie and have enjoyed working with her on such a personal level  and am so happy to have found a new and genuine friend in her! I love my job for this very reason! Congrats to you both, Natalie and Shaun, and Thank you to Carly and all the staff at The Knot New York for the wonderful opportunity to be published in your magazine!!!! I feel blessed!
Here’s the layout from the Magazine! LOVE!!!
Enjoy the day!
xo-
MEG
TKRNY11FW_RWNatalieShaun-1 copy
9 votes
TKRNY11FW_RWNatalieShaun (dragged) copy
10 votes
TKRNY11FW_RWNatalieShaun (dragged) 1 copy
9 votes



Photography Pittsburgh - Great wedding photography, I love how you handle the contrast in your images. Shaun David
Jayme Heller - Nat- you make a great wedding planner. Can't believe you pretty much planned the entire thing, and it turned out just perfect! Meg, thanks for capturing it :)
Natalie - Meg, The Knot did a great job showcasing your beautiful work. You truly have a special gift. So glad you were there to photograph our wedding and feel even luckier that we have become good friends.
Tory - Nice work! Congrats!
 
 

Okay…I don’t often post anything on this blog in which the main purpose of the post is to brag about something (unless it has to do with my two adorable little ones), because frankly, I think bragging is annoying, unnecessary, and I just don’t like doing it. It’s just not me. However, every once in a while, I invest in a new piece of equipment that just down right deserves every ounce of bragging it can get. So this post is about me bragging that I just recently purchased the Nikon D3s, how wonderful it handles in low lighting (or almost no lighting), and how much I am in LOVE with that camera. First let me start off by saying that I have ALWAYS been a Nikon shooter since I first picked up a camera roughly 16 years ago. My first camera was a Nikkormat. My dad circled it for me in The News-Times “For Sale” advertisement section of the newspaper. It’s owner was an elderly lady, who’s husband was the family photographer and since had past. She was just down the street from my house, so I drove over with my $450 cash in hand and purchased the body, along with three lenses (a 28mm 2.8, a 60mm macro 2.8, and 135mm 2.8 to be exact) and the flash to go with it. ALL manual of course. This camera was older than I was don’t forget being built in the late 60’s. That camera literally was in my hands not 5 hours before I smudged the inside frosted mirror with my greasy finger. Duh!!! Like, who knew you weren’t supposed to touch that with a greasy finger?! So for a year I had to listen to anyone who looked into my viewfinder that I had something in there that had to be cleaned. Uggggh. The constant reminder of my own stupidity! Lovely. Well deserved I suppose. After one year, I retired that camera and made the upgrade to a Nikon F camera, mainly because a few weeks before my third semester of photography courses began, I dropped my baby onto the pavement of my driveway. It would have cost me more to fix it then I figured it was worth (dumb). So I traded it into get the Nikon F, which much to my surprise was a wise investment!!! It was introduced in ‘59 and was one of the first SLR cameras designed by Nikon geared towards professionals, used widely by photographer’s covering the Vietnam War! Stylish and luxurious all in one! I was the new cool kid on the block in Photography II at my college. On the up and up real fast!!!! I am being serious actually when I say that. It was a GREAT camera and I even started my career as a news photojournalist at The News-Times using that camera and created some really great spreads for stories with that camera and three lenses. But it came time to move on up again, and purchase something with…(drum roll please…) Autofocus. At this time was when I really began to see the importance of investing in excellent equipment, especially some really great glass. After complaining about a lens costing me nearly a grand of my hard earned cash when I purchased the F100 and a few lenses, my Dad whipped me into shape real fast by saying “if this is something that will be your livelihood, you will need to be investing in the right equipment.” This was coming from my Dad, the same man who threw a fit on a family vacation because noone but him wanted to eat at the $1 burger joint. (I wanted a salad and I decided to start a diet on the first day of vacation but that’s neither here nor there). I always think about that when I purchase something. My dad was a frugal man, and rightfully needed to be, being a self-employed father of four.  Honestly, you can’t expect to spend half the price on something and get the same results as you would have if you purchased the Big Mama Luke (as I like to call it).


Time to switch to digital now. In 2004 (I shot my first weddings in film and sometimes miss it to this day!!!) I made the switch over to digital. In doing so I decided since all my lenses purchased not t0o long ago were compatible with the digital SLR’s I figured it would be silly to not stick with Nikon.  So I bought the Nikon D100 and then before even shooting a wedding with that camera, realized it wasn’t a good investment and was EXTREMELY limiting for me being a professional. I was VERY new to the digital world and honestly, hated the fact that I was making the change to digital at all.  I knew very little about what features I needed. JPG vs RAW???? Huh????? Other than making a great file and needing to know the basics of how to take great digital images, I wasn’t interested in the techy-gizmo geeky stuff that I would hear tossed around in conversations. When those conversations started up was usually when I left the room. That stuff never interested me much at all. I much rather thumb through Time Magazine and feel the images that helped tell the stories.  I was a die-hard film fan and was a victim of long hours spent in the darkroom. The only dark room I could spend hours on end in and not come out completely depressed.


After learning I made a poor $1000 investment in the D100, and that it wouldn’t handle a wedding the way I needed it to,  I ran out and bought the D2x ringing in at about $4995. Why not just say $5400? Really.  With batteries costing about a $100 a piece, it was more like a $5400 investment, (and then some because I sprang for the 5 year extended warranty…just in case). I shot the hell out of that camera and it shows. (it’s for sale by the way for a very cheap price with the same 4 batteries I originally purchased with it… $350…215,000 and some odd actuations). This was my workhorse for five whole seasons of shooting weddings. The D100 is in pristine condition because of the dependability of the D2x. I LOVED that camera and it treated me beyond good and is still a strong camera to this day. However, with the release of the D3 I knew I needed to start planning for the upgrade soon. Notice how I highlighted…PLANNING. I can’t stress enough, to any newbies out there, how important it is to plan for your investments. Write them in your goals list. Your business plan should also include a plan of attack for purchasing new gear, as well as the fact that writing it all down on paper helps you to weed out the needs vs. the wants. The wants fizzle in time and the needs still stand strong. I am positive you will find that to be true. I am much like my dad in the sense that I am self-employed, but also I am a single parent of two beautiful but expensive children. They needs things like food, a place to live, toys, clothes, medicine, activities, etc. Not all my money I make can be re-invested back into my business, so I have to be very careful with my purchases. Making a goals list that includes the gear purchases I need to make is one way I weed out the wants. I make much wiser investments this way. Investments that are sure to only benefit my business growth. Although it seemed everywhere I went people were shooting with the D3, I honestly knew that my plan of attack just wasn’t able to include the D3 in the list of necessary purchases, ringing in at $5100. Being newly single, having two children to parent on my own, and having other business purchases to make at that time, which were more important and beneficial to me, I knew the D700 was the smarter choice for me to invest in for the time being, although I knew I would consider this camera to be a transitional piece for me. It had the same ISO capabilities as the D3 and the same full frame sensor and those two things were what was most important to me. So why spend double the price on something when I had other areas to spend on in my business and personal life. I was gaining the same image results really. And besides, it’s the artist behind the camera, not the camera itself that makes great pictures. Right?!


So…this brings me to my most recent purchase…The BEAUTIFUL D3s. And yes, it is beautiful and deserves to be called beautiful. For this camera, I am SO happy I held off on the D3 and saved up for the D3s. Notice how I highlighted saved up. I can’t begin to tell you how many times I came home from networking events, hearing other’s talk about this camera and how it is already in their hands, and hated my photography life. Seriously. HATED my photography life. Because here I am, a woman who has other responsibilities in my life. I have children. I have car payments, I had personal debt from many things like equipment purchases, a house that I gutted and redid before I got divorced, and my son’s private school education tuition to pay for,etc. etc. However, I made the wise decision at the end of last year, after going through my business and personal expenses to give to my accountant, that I would make some very wise changes in my patterns of spending for both personal and business. “How many times did I eat out last month???? OMG!!!!!!” Sound familiar? Maybe not, but to me it was a real eye-opener. I needed to make financial adjustments in my life that were good for me and forget about what other people were buying and talking about. Who cares about Joe-Shmoe and how he purchased his gear. I needed to do this my way and my way was by going all cash for EVERYTHING . I wrote down what my income was, what was going out every month and what my major bills were that had to be taken care of BEFORE I purchased the D3s. I wrote down what I had in my bag. I made note of what I wasn’t shooting with anymore in my bag, and sold it. 16mm Fisheye??? Last time I used that was way back when…so BUH-BYE!!! I think sometimes you buy stuff because you think you need it and then as your career and talent develops, you realize what tools you gravitate towards. 16mm wasn’t it for me.  It’s just not a lens that I needed and liked shooting with when I switched to the full frame sensor camera.


So, I worked like a dog, and EVERYTHING I earned paid something off. I purchased a new (used) car so I didn’t get slapped with the depreciation factor of driving off the lot and poof, it’s now worth $4,000 less. I paid off 2 of my 3 credit cards and closed them. Then I paid off, entirely, my last and final credit card, which I will keep for business purchases. I am not a HUGE fan of debit cards. I don’t like the power they posses over me in malls, so I cut mine up and I use…get this…CHECKS. If I don’t have cash on me and a store doesn’t accept checks, I don’t buy it. I wait. By doing this I find out how bad I REALLY wanted whatever it was. Sometimes I go back and sometimes I forget about what it even was I was going to buy. In a nutshell, I told myself that I wasn’t buying this camera unless I changed. Changed my bank account to a certain number (to a positive number ;o) and started a second savings for business stuff like album purchases, quarterly taxes, etc. I paid off my final credit card COMPLETELY. I am at a whopping ZERO balance on my credit card and it feels wonderful. I made sure everything was a wise choice for me, my business, and my kids. I didn’t sell some gear for my business that I thought I would because I didn’t want to be too fast with selling and not have lens backups at weddings. I take that VERY seriously, so I withdrew from some offers on my gear.


So FINALLY, months later, the day has come for me to purchase this new D3s. I purchased it on a Sunday for $5600 and it was paid off this past Monday. I value it even more for this very reason. I am in love with this camera and it’s capabilities, but also because I earned every dollar spent on it, before I even purchased it. It ’s a great feeling! Now, please don’t fret. I am NOT going to start carrying this to all the PUG and CLASS meetings I go to and any other networking event I attend, flashing it around in people’s faces looking all cheesy and braggy ( I know ‘braggy ‘ isn’t a word mom…so please don’t call me from work telling me that word should be changed…this is how I talk at home, so this is how I am writing).  I will cherish every shutter click I make in the time I have to spend with this camera. I value it dearly….now, let’s move onto what it can do…


It is not as heavy as I remember my D2x to be, but maybe that is in my head. It’s ISO sensitivity is just phenomenal. I do like the dual card slot feature, which I thought before I could take or leave, but I now realize, I will take it!

I love the quiet feature for shooting inside the church. Sometimes shutter’s can be so loud in certain churches and I will do anything not to stand out like a sore thumb during the ceremony. However, all the little fun features that are great on this camera, aren’t what sold me. I bought the D3s, like many other wedding photographer’s, for one main reason, which is it’s low light capability and ISO sensitivity. Below is a shot from a wedding I helped my friend Tania Sones shoot at The Hartford Society Room on Saturday. As many of you know, the upstairs is usually where they hold the cocktail hour, and it’s dark. The lighting there provides a nice cozy feel, warm and golden, but still very dark, with dark ceilings, and below on the dance floor you have not much to bounce off of, so off camera lighting is a definite must have (in my book). So I shot this with the settings listed below using no flash, with very little LR adjustments, and a minor levels adjustment and sharpening in Photoshop CS4.

Camera: d3s on Manual mode

Lens: Nikon 70-200 VR 2.8 @ 180mm

1/80th sec @ f 2.8

ISO: 8,000

example-1 copy
6 votes

Happy Monday!

MEG

ALI - Dearest Meg, I have very rarely read whole blogs, word by word, and yours was a PLEASURE to read!! For once, I wished it never ended!! Your story brought tears to my eyes, as I go through the same torment and anguish of looking and staring at the camera(s) with wishful eyes and empty hands! Reading your post taught me important lessons and gave me advice which is so invaluable!! I hope you wouldn't mind corresponding with me... I want to learn how to break the ice in the wedding photography buss. and feel you can teach me best!! As far as the camera goes, the only thing I am "upset" about it is the MP size... but then I guess it was inevitable due to the large pixel size?! P.S. Superb shot by the way!!
Chris - Wow, Meg. The resolution (lack of grain) in the focal point is excellent at... ISO 8000???????????? As a very grateful audience for your poor investment in the D100 (wink, wink), I'm having a blast learning on the fly. "Lucky" for me that my 70-300 is only 4.5 or something crappy like that, and overshadows the limitation of the camera.
Abbey - Thanks for putting things into perspective. Awesome story Meg!!! It's soo easy to get caught up in what everyone else is doing and get into debt. That is one hot image!!!
Tania - Meg! Loved reading your story.. truly an inspiration for many of us. PS. That camera of yours is sexy!!! Amazing!!
 
 

It is always so much fun and such a pleasure to have been featured on Style Me Pretty’s blog, where you can find loads and loads of great DIY inspiration for all your wedding details. Last September, I photographed Amanda and Kyle’s vineyard wedding up in Stonington, Connecticut at the Saltwater Farm Vineyard. What a beautiful venue and I am happy to say I will be back there again very soon to photograph another wedding! It was a beautiful and fun day working with the industries leading vendors and I it was such a pleasure working with not only Amanda and Kyle, but also the lovely ladies from Sixpence For Your Shoe, Talia and Lindsay, dd Nickel for make up and hair and of course The White Dress by the Shore, where Amanda got all her bridesmaids dresses and wedding gown.

More weddings to come!

Happy Tuesday!

Meg



 
 

Last night I attended the Grace Ormonde Book Signing for Connecticut’s swankiest vendors in the wedding industry and chatted with Beth Chapman, who is the owner of The White Dress By The Shore in Clinton Connecticut! I have always recommended The White Dress to my clients who have not yet found the perfect wedding gown for themselves, mainly because I knew the dresses offered there were top of the line gowns, and the boutique itself brings on a whole new level of experience! I now can say even more good things about The White Dress after meeting Beth, which was such a pleasure! In talking with Beth I found out that one of my 2009 couples, Lauran and Carlos, are the Featured Wedding at The White Dress right now. You should take the time to check it out as well as browse their website! I am positive you won’t be disappointed!


Hope all is well with everyone! Have LOTS to share coming up on the blog including another newborn session, a handful of BEAUTIFUL weddings, and much more! ;o) Stay tuned!

Happy Tuesday!

Meg

Show More: BusinessEventsPressstudio news
 
 

Hey All! This is just a little announcement for my clients, to give you a heads up on what to expect very soon showing up in your mailbox! I don’t know about you but I LOVE getting something in the mail! I think it almost a thing of the past. Who uses snail mail anymore right? I think it is old fashioned and I love it and I hope it sticks around for a very long time!


If you have booked with Creative Image Collections and are either going to be ordering a custom bound wedding album or it is included in your collection you will be receiving a little note from me in the mail VERY soon! I have been working extra hard behind the scenes here to make sure you are very well taken care of, and in a sort-of pretty kind of way! I think of myself much like that of an Oompa Loompa. I often work when others think I am not! I stay hidden behind my little (big) computers most of the time working on keeping up with emails, album designs, and preparing for the next adventure. Often society doesn’t even know where I am! Heck, often I don’t know where myself is! It reminds me very much like working in a secret chocolate factory with secret orange elf helpers. It is very exciting except I really don’t have little elves helping me other then my 2 kids, and most times they are more work then help!


In a nutshell (I am addicted to that phrase lately) I have decided that the album process is most times overwhelming for my clients and at times mis-understood. Since all of the products I offer at the studio are custom designed products, these often take time and energy to create, from both myself as well as you! However, this is the very reason as to why I LOVE them so much. The albums are fun AND they are unique. Every single one of the albums I have designed with my clients is different from the other. Not one the same! I think that is the way it should be since you yourselves are very much unique. Not one of my clients are the same, so why should their albums be?


Well, often I am asked many of the same questions about the album design process. The major ones are answered on my website under the FAQ but I thought it would be convenient for you if I was to go the extra mile and put the information right into your fingertips so you have something tangible to revert back to when starting the book design. I know it can be overwhelming, much like a part-time job on top of your normal everyday priorities. I never once want you to feel as if it is homework. So because I care very much about my clients and their stress levels, I have given you a cheat sheet, or Cliff Notes so to speak, on what to expect from the process as well as giving you tips! I think the process should be a fun one, one maybe that you enjoy over a glass of wine (or two). The books that we create together will become a family heirloom in your lives and that in itself is pretty nifty I think. I want only the best of the best for you and so I have decided to make this a new thing for the studio and for you! Of course in addition to the information I send out to you I welcome ALL calls to the studio or emails about ANYTHING at ANYTIME! I seriously can’t stress that enough…so many times I have had email chats with my brides about their flowers or if the girl’s dresses have pockets or not. I seriously dig this kind of stuff!


On another note…I am so happy to have a wonderful wedding season coming up this year. Technically it has already started for me, but soon it will be in VERY full swing, including two destination weddings in the books! I am very excited to be creating everlasting memories for you that will become an heirloom in your family in the years to come! Such an honor. In other words…Wooohooo!


album (7 of 1) copy
1 vote


Have a happy Wednesday!

I am off to see a beautiful new baby girl and hoping to steal a few pics of her!

MEG

Show More: Businessstudio news
 
 

BLOG ARCHIVE