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Seattle Style News

Hedi Slimane x Frances Bean Cobain

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Francesbean

One of the recently published photographs of Frances Bean Cobain by fashion icon Hedi Slimane.

If you had any sort of personal investment in the music and fashion scene in Seattle in the 90s, you’ve had at least one middle-of-the-night panicked thought for Frances Bean Cobain.

The images that just popped on up the blog of French fashion designer, photographer, and all-around icon Hedi Slimane don’t necessarily put any fears to rest, but neither will they keep you from falling asleep tonight.

You will see both Kurt and Courtney in the images of their not quite 20 year-old daughter, but moreover, you will see stark beauty and a very pinpointed approximation of the Nevermind years.

Moreover, you will find it pretty difficult to look away.

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Tags: Seattle Style, Photography, Nirvana, Seattle Style News, Grunge

UPDATED Save the Date: Bill Cunningham New York

Upcoming film about the man Anna Wintour gets dressed for is coming to Seattle…in April.

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Contrary to popular belief, the Sartorialist did not invent street style fashion photography. New York Times photographer Bill Cunningham did. More or less.

If you listen to the people who talk about fashion, you’ve heard them talking about Bill Cunningham New York. They, the ones in New York or LA, are talking about seeing this film in March. Lucky them. We here in Seattle have to wait until the week of April 29, at which point the documentary will make its way to either the Varsity or the Metro. That detail is TBD. (UPDATE 2/16/11: this film will show at the Varsity Theater.) I did just secure a DVD review copy, however, so as details emerge, I’ll be able to give you the full scoop (no spoilers) on what to expect.

For now, we have the trailer — and, of course, the Sunday Times.

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Tags: Photography, Film, Varsity Theatre, Fashion

Wedding Wednesday

Thrilled for You

The Seattle company behind Thrilled for You really is pretty thrilled for you, and they want to help you document your wedding.

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A couple things you know for sure about your wedding: You absolutely adore every single human being who’s coming to celebrate with you (whether there are 30 of them or 300), and, you’re petrified that you won’t be able to spend enough time hanging out with them all. Weighing heavily on my mind is a solution all this … how will you record, capture, document, or otherwise bottle their presence so that once you’re out of that dress and that suit and those heels and that tie, you can relive the whole thing in really meaningful way?

The Seattle company Jackson Fish Market has a solution they’d like you to try. It’s called Thrilled for You, and they designed and built it (right up the street from my office, actually) so that you can set up your own web-cam enabled computer (must run MacOS) wherever you’d like at your reception and invite guests to record an unlimited number of video messages. Think: those video confessionals first made popular by The Real World — only, presumably, not about who got so drunk that they ended up in whose room but rather how wonderful it is to see you all grown up and gorgeous next to the love of your life and who Uncle Bob danced with what they thought of the Yakima cab and the triple chocolate torte. You know, how thrilled they are for you.

You can customize the interface so that it feels personal and looks pretty; guests’ heartfelt shout-outs go straight to your hard drive so that later, you can watch them over and over on your 26-hour honeymoon flight to Fiji, upload the best ones to YouTube, or have your videographer edit them into his or her footage. Or you can host your own film festival and screen the things on a white sheet in your living room with your family and bridal party on your one-year anniversary. Just an idea. It’s up to you.

There’s a video here that shows how it all works, and if you’d like, you can download a demo from the Thrilled for You site and give it a test run — maybe record messages for each other and see if you can tug some heart strings.

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Tags: Weddings, Receptions, Locally Made, Locally Designed, Photography, Seattle Wedding Details

Events

Dress Code: Street Wise

Advice on getting Le21eme’s Adam Sinding to notice you at this week’s Pio Square First Thursday show

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Le-21eme-arrondissement-nordstrom-downtown-seattle-street-style-fashion-blog

A recent post on Le21eme; Individual, well-shod, coiffed. Let that be a lesson to us all.

Want Seattle’s premier street style photographer to notice you? The first step would be to get to his April 1st photo show at Bo Concept. But showing up only gets you so far; we asked Le21eme’s Adam Sinding to name three things that catch his eye.

From Seattle’s Sartorialist:

1. Most importantly, personal style. Expressing who you are through your outfits. Not just buying for the sake of buying.

2. Shoes. Shoes are the window to your sole (heehee). Seriously. Shoes make or break an outfit!

3. Hair. Do it. We’re all lazy at times, but your hair speaks to your potential. Anyone can have great hair…ANYONE!

The Bo Concept photo exhibit is part of Pioneer Square’s First Thursday festivities; stop in between 7p to 10p on April 1st and enjoy sips from Sixth Avenue Wine Seller as you browse the photos in hopes of being included in the next show.

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Tags: Design, Seattle Street Style, Photography, Dress Code

Wedding Wednesday

Keep it Real

Because you oughtta be in pictures

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Winter

The winter/spring issue of Seattle Met Bride & Groom

In case you didn’t know to look for it, the latest and greatest issue of Seattle Met Bride & Groom hit stands on January 1.

Because we get so darn many queries about our Real Weddings section, and because the new Real Weddings from the new issue are online now, I wanted to take a few minutes on this Wedding Wednesday to let you know how to submit images for consideration for our spring/summer issue, due out on July 1.

-Anyone can submit images from the event; cake bakers, floral designers, grandmothers, nosy neighbors, especially mature flower girls. So long as you have permission from the starring players, we’re not picky about who takes charge of nominating the big day.

-Submit between 10 and 20 (not five and certainly not 45) low res images, making sure that you’ve selected the types of shots that we tend to print. Cruise through our online galleries and note the prevalence of detail shots over formal portraits and put on your most discerning, astute photo-editing hat.

-Keep the mission of Real Weddings in mind: It’s there to inspire readers to create their own totally amazing days. While many think of it as a brag book or photo gallery – and certainly, it’s a place to scout out great photographers and yes, the bragging rights are pretty sweet – the section is all about sharing ideas and enticing couples to be true to their vision and take the day wherever they want it to go.

-We also want to share vendor referrals (a list accompanies each wedding) — or, on the other hand, show off weddings by especially enterprising couples who were good at enlisting talented friends and family.

-We look for the best and the brightest; the most romantically elegant and smashingly fun. Novel but not necessarily kooky. Personal but not so specific that others wouldn’t relate. Commitment ceremonies are every bit as welcome as weddings. A union is a union.

-We are game to print weddings that took place in the Seattle-area, even if the couple is from out of town, and we are happy to print the destination weddings of those who call this area home. We like city weddings, country weddings, and everything in between.

-We print weddings that took place in the year prior to the issue date. So, for the issue due out in July ‘10, we’ll consider weddings from July ’09 forward. You can submit at any time. What are you doing later this afternoon?

-Don’t forget contact information for the bride and groom (you’d be surprised how often that happens) and the photographer (we’ll request a full set of high res images if we decide we want to take the submission to Round Two), and please keep in mind that we cannot confirm receipt or reply to individual submissions. There just aren’t enough hours in the day.

I hope that helps.

For more inspiration, please visit our friends at Junebug Weddings where they’ve got a new and stunning Best from the Best wedding photo gallery up, featuring images from around the world.

And for more on Seattle shooters and the business of capturing your most beautiful moments, check out this recent Wedding Wednesday post.

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Tags: Weddings, Photography, Seattle Real Weddings

Wedding Wednesday

Trouble Shooting

Your photo opportunity to learn a little more about the business of wedding photography

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For today’s Wedding Wednesday I’m asking you to first take a minute to ponder how little we really know about how others spend their usually-way-more-than-40 hour work week. What does it mean that your dad manages a warehouse? How exactly does your sister deal with eight hours a day in a research lab? Your neighbor the Stay at Home Dad? Dude. And then think about the wedding professionals you’re interviewing and hiring for your big event. What is that they actually do? What are you paying them for?

Earlier this week, Florida-by-way-of-Seattle wedding pro Michelle Loretta of Mmm… Paper and Sage Wedding Pros sent out a link via Twitter to an article called “The Secret Life of Wedding Photographers” on the International Society of Professional Wedding Photographers website. You can read the piece here.

Thinking about the way fees and rates and hourly overtime – the numbers associated with the talent and vision – can become so overwhelming, I sent out a quick email to some Seattle-based wedding shooters, asking for their two cents, because I think we’re all a little better with a little more information. Here are a few replies. I only regret that there aren’t more to share, but you know, many of the photographers I polled were too busy partying like rock stars to respond.

To kick it off, Barbie Hull That’s her above, with the blonde hair.

BH: I have so many crazy things happen to me at weddings. I know if the day goes well they will love their photos for sure, so I’m happy to help out however I am needed but one crazy wedding, I helped to cut the cake! At every wedding someone comes up and wants to know what kind of camera I use – and why choose Nikon over Cannon? At every wedding someone tells me that their uncle/cousin/son is a photographer (only once was it someone famous!).

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Jenny Jimenez (above)

JJ: A few years back a mother of the bride requested I make her waist smaller and boobs bigger in all the photos. I regret not charging for it at the time (I was naive).

A lot has changed since I started shooting weddings in 2001. Mainly, what used to cost me a ton of money now costs me a ton of time. I used to spend hundreds of dollars purchasing, developing, and scanning film (I’d hand cut my negs, which now that I think about it, was also time consuming). Now I spend 30-40 hours in post production making every image print ready and perfect. Hmmm. Maybe it’s time to switch back.

The time it takes to meet with couples, the back and forth over email, the phone calls, the travel time – people often forget to take that into consideration when weighing the amount of work that goes into a wedding. Also forgotten is the cost of running a business: maintaining a website, equipment purchase and maintenance, cost of insurance, packaging and postage, data backup & storage, continuing education, etc.

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Eliza Truitt (above)

ET: Wedding photography is so different than I imagined. And not just in terms of the basics like the overwhelming amount of post-production required after each wedding. The thing that surprised me the most was how much of the job is about talking and listening. When you’re shooting portraits of the bride and groom, that’s how you get people to warm up so they look loose and at ease in photos. Talking, asking questions, and making people forget about the stresses of the wedding day are such crucial skills, but nobody ever talks about it in photography classes. Knowing how to make someone open up with a genuine smile without resorting to the kind of dumb jokes the guy who shot your elementary school picture used? That’s a real skill. Although having a few dumb jokes for when you’re desperate doesn’t hurt either…

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[Not Pictured: Sean Flanigan]

SF: This job is a lot harder than I expected it to be. I love it, and, some clients make it an amazing experience for me, some make it all worth while. I am really surprised at some clients that expect me to have their images finished for them a week or two after their nuptials, even when I let them know the time-frame, I guess I can’t blame them, who wouldn’t be excited? Another surprise is social networking. My Twitter presence has been good for business; networking with other professionals for referrals and even communicating with brides.

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Laurel McConnell (above)

LM: We wear lots of hats, including one that says “I’m the family-psychologist-slash-body-guard.” I’ve been told: “My dad didn’t come with my mom. He came with the gal he left her for. Last week.”

I got a call from one of my clients, she needed to change her wedding date. She said, “I changed my groom. What other days are you available next summer?”

Sometimes you gotta know when to stop shooting. Like when the maid of honor jumps for the bouquet. And her dress falls down. And up. She’s not wearing any panties. Or a bra. One shot is definitely enough coverage of a moment like that.

5 years ago: We complained that putting stickers on the back of proofs while tossing out the bad ones as we were watching a movie for two hours was soooo tedious and boring. Today: We complain that clicking over and over while editing for 10 hours straight in front of a glowing computer screen is soooo tedious and boring.

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April


April Greer (above)

AG: Once, I was given 12 minutes of alone time with the bride and groom to get the formal portraits. You have to get the shot, no matter what. It was completely insane AND the sun was setting!!!

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For more great wedding photographers, see the online directory at Seattle Met Bride & Groom

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More Wedding Wednesday posts here:

Donuts: A piece of cake

A floral designer with a crush on orchids

Always a bridesmaid? At least now you’ve got Bella Bridesmaid in Belltown

The wedding favor I flipped for

Counting down til the Big Day

Need a gift for your groom? Watch this, ladies.

And -——— join us on Facebook

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Tags: Weddings, Photography, Seattle Real Weddings, vendors

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