The importance of experience. As mentioned before a good wedding photographer must be able to act and think fast, and without proper experience it is hard - almost impossible. Wedding photographer doesn't have the luxury of plenty of time for experiments, on contrary he always must know what to do in given circumstances. As I have tons of experience, I have developed intuition which helps me to be one step ahed of ongoing events, so that I am always prepared for that best shot.
I take my time when choosing the best photos of all the thousands I’ve taken during the day. This selection usually results in about 500-800 really good photos that represent the whole wedding. I spend about 1 week of retouch and adjustments to make sure these photos look really good. I do not use any presets - I perfect each image separately.
Following a recent interview with one of Canon’s senior executives, we’re getting more of an insight into what the Japanese giant has in mind for its vast range of cameras: EOS M is the most likely future of APS-C mirrorless, with no suggestion that there will ever be mirrorless versions of the large array of crop-sensor DSLRs.
During a fascinating interview given by one of the company's senior executives, Canon dropped a few bombshells, including the plan for a full frame mirrorless camera that is even cheaper than the recently launched EOS RP. When you consider how affordable (and limited) the RP is, you have to wonder what Canon has in mind.