2013年1月17日星期四

The trend of “trash the dress” photography



“It’s an interesting thing here in Toledo because you have a really, really sentimental, traditionally minded people and yet you have daughters who want to do something different. So that’s been my compromise,” Koluch said. “Buy dresses so we can get as crazy as they want, be as dramatic as they want, and I don’t care if they totally trash http://www.dressesforpromcheap.com. If I use it again, I do. If I don’t, I don’t.”

Koluch said she approaches a “trash the dress” session the same way she approaches any other session.“We photograph relationships, not just people,” Koluch said. “So to just put somebody in http://www.dressesforpromcheap.com/la-femme-c-1.html and put them in a crazy spot is not going to be a great picture. What’s going to be a great picture is when they get playful and they have that real emotion going. It’s still about the people no matter what.”

The trend of “trash the dress” photography is often attributed to Las Vegas photographer John Michael Cooper, Koluch said.“He’s done things like pose a bride and then light a dress on fire and then superimpose the picture so it looks like the bride is on http://www.dressesforpromcheap.com/kate-spade-new-york-c-3.html,” Koluch said.One of Koluch’s favorite “trash the dress” sessions took place the day before a destination wedding in Rhode Island, with the bride wearing one of Koluch’s spare dresses.


“It just so happened the day we flew in, Hurricane Earl was making its way in to New England,” Koluch said. “It was the Friday night before their wedding and we went out on the beach. The photos are very dramatic. The sky just got worse and worse. Of course, the wedding the next day was gorgeous sunshine, but it was crazy fun.”Koluch stressed she would never put couples in unsafe situations.

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