The wedding dinner was held in the garden of a beautiful little castle in Emporda (Girona). The wedding dance was planned in the courtyard of the castle passing through the laser t
Wedding Photographer Alicante and Murcia, Spain. Alberto Sagrado shares a wedding photography technique.
At Wedding Photography Select, we don't just want to show you the best images from the best wedding photographers around the world. We want to tell you a little story behind them as well. The idea, the execution, the result. As this section grows, we want to give you an in depth description of each of the shots taken by some of the very best wedding photographers. We hope it proves to be inspiring and insightful.
Alberto Sagrado
We are Spanish Wedding Photographers based in Alicante and Murcia. We love our work!
Cristina & Julio were one of those couples that let me boost all my creativity as a wedding photographer.
They chose an abandoned factory for their session 'Trash The Dress' which, for sure, was going to give us lots of possibilities.
The sky was a beautiful blue and the interior walls had a great warm tone. I immediately thought there was a great image by making a double exposure with the help of a flash off the camera, which I always carry to my sessions.
The picture is made up of two exposures in one single photo. For the first photo, I shot the flash to the wall leaving the couple in shadow. Then, I went outside the factory to get the beautiful blue sky and sunset clouds which overlapped in the area of the previous picture - which was still unexposed, that is, the couples silhouettes.
Camera settings:
Nikon Df (2 shots in one image)
Nikon 35 1.4
1st exposure Iso 100 f1.4 1/640 Flash with Pocket Wizards
2nd exposure Iso 100 f5.6 1/640 No Flash
Cristina & Julio were one of those couples that let me boost all my creativity as a wedding photographer.
They chose an abandoned factory for their session 'Trash The Dress' which, for sure, was going to give us lots of possibilities.
The sky was a beautiful blue and the interior walls had a great warm tone. I immediately thought there was a great image by making a double exposure with the help of a flash off the camera, which I always carry to my sessions.
The picture is made up of two exposures in one single photo. For the first photo, I shot the flash to the wall leaving the couple in shadow. Then, I went outside the factory to get the beautiful blue sky and sunset clouds which overlapped in the area of the previous picture - which was still unexposed, that is, the couples silhouettes.
Camera settings:
Nikon Df (2 shots in one image)
Nikon 35 1.4
1st exposure Iso 100 f1.4 1/640 Flash with Pocket Wizards
2nd exposure Iso 100 f5.6 1/640 No Flash
I was born in 1981 between flashlights and cameras in my parents old photo-study. I grew up and played between photo sessions and film rolls, developed pictures and camera-lenses.
I've been chasing the light with my camera for as long as I can remember. I bought my first camera in junior high school, following a chance encounter with a dark room and a roll o