The Brenizers

  • Blog
  • Weddings
  • Families
  • Albums
  • About Us/Pricing
  • Contact
  • Patreon
  • Blog
  • Weddings
  • Families
  • Albums
  • About Us/Pricing
  • Contact
  • Patreon
The Brenizers
318 Warren Street #C7
Brooklyn, NY, 11201
United States
9172874058
 
 
Home9.jpg
Recipe: A9 + 50mm @ f/1.2 + high-speed-sync + magbox + little area of grass that with careful composition we can make look like we’re deep in nature instead of on a Weehawken rooftop + an awesome couple. When a photographer comes in from out-of-town, they see everything with new eyes. I good-naturedly joke that every out-of-town photographer shooting their first wedding in NYC, no matter what the venue, posts at least one random photo of the Empire S For a very long time I’ve had a mild obsession with digital cameras’ ability to see in low-light better than the human eye, perhaps because with the cameras I started with you had to know every trick in the book to achieve it. With a stan Sharing a quiet moment at the end of an amazing wedding.

It doesn’t take 300 images to get some fun effects with the #brenizermethod. Sometimes the simplest way is to try to extend the frame you’re already shooting with one or two more. Sometimes the best shot isn’t the action but the reaction, those moments that remind you that after all the planning, work and long nights making a wedding happen, you absolutely had the time of your life. Our secret weapon is that after well over 1,000 weddings, we are still thrilled and excited every time. There are a lot of factors for this, but one of them is learning to be thrilled and energized by all of the different challenges of a wedding day. This was a lovely little moment from Heather and Peter’s wedding shot at 50mm f/1.2 with Canon’s brand new camera … the 5D Mark III.

OK, it was a little while ago. Often I like to go back into the archives just because it makes me Our central effort in our jobs is to create images that people will enjoy for years to come, especially ones that our clients jut enjoy more and more over time. This also means that it’s a heck of a lot of fun for us to look back at weddings th You can go very deep down the rabbit hole of photo geekery when it comes to depth of field. The most important level is also the simplest: Does the depth of field make the photo better or worse? But then very quickly it gets into math. Start with fig Do you remember a time before smartphones were ubiquitous and people just enjoyed and experienced weddings in person?

I don’t.

This one is from 2011, time of the not-low-light-friendly iPhone 4. So if you wanted a photo from a wedding, you br