2008 Q4 Contest
Weather
-
1st Place: Janne Miettinen from Helsinki, FinlandJudges Comments
The great depth of field, the sharpness, the motion of the snow, the tranquility in spite of it all combine perfectly.
The falling snow, the haziness of the evening adds to the texture and dreaminess to the image. Another stand alone picture that can be hung on their wall, it's more than a wedding photo, it's a romantic pictoral of a couple walking in the snow. A Christmas card-like image.
Photographer's Comment
It was the biggest snowstorm of the year, and the wedding couple had to run about 200 metres to the wedding car. Although they did get a little snowy during the way to the car, they were still laughing all the time. :) I followed them all the way to the car, and although I had to run too to be able to keep up with them, I kept taking photos all the time.
-
2nd Place: Janis Ratnieks from London, EnglandJudges Comments
Tough conditions. This would have been better tighter and sharper. Great moment.
This picture offers, besides some great snow, wind and monochromatic color, an interesting moment. Is she getting cold feet and running away from the altar? Is she walking backwards as he's trying to run to the church? Not really sure, but it is nice to wonder about.
-
3rd Place: John Zich from Illinois, United StatesJudges Comments
You can't help but to sympathize for the bride. Terrible way to get to the chapel. One can feel the miserable weather.
Chivalry is not dead. Even when the bride is wearing fuzzy boots. Nice moment captures the concentration of the bride not to get her hiked-up dress dirty; gallant groomsmen offering her support. The trolley/bus offers some nice color and even light on the bride from the headlights.
-
Judges Comments
This image was very reminiscent of Cartier-Bresson. The exposure was right on with the blown out highlights and blur of the couple walking down a sidewalk. Wonderful composition, one of my favorites of the entire contest!
-
Judges Comments
Talk about your sweet compositions. Everything comes together in this picture. Graphics. Color. And the moment. Great seeing and execution by the photographer. This definitely isn't an "in your face" weather shot, but its subtlety speaks volumes. Great shot.
-
Judges Comments
Nice country wedding, an informal moment.
I choose this image for several reasons. It had great composition and moment but what really made it stand out was the perspective. The photographer used a great angle from on top of the tractor looking down at the wedding party riding down a muddy road in the rain.
-
7th Place: Ronald Soliman from Delaware, United StatesJudges Comments
In a perfect world, a longer lens, shallower depth of field, and a higher place to shoot from would have been wonderful. Still, the mood, the color, the sharpness, and the implied motion, combined with the sense that nothing is going to stop the fun of the day, make this image work.
-
Judges Comments
Making the most of the rain. Photographer is thinking and got creative. Love the way the bride and her bridesmaids are reflected in the water, and you just see legs and feet. I just wish the image was darker so that you can see the reflection better.
-
9th Place: Nadra Edgerley from Maine, United StatesJudges Comments
This image just screams out joyous occasion... not. Cheap ponchos don't quite do the trick for these two. At least the couple in the next gondola have an umbrella.
-
10th Place: Edmund Tham from Selangor, MalaysiaJudges Comments
This old technique using the raindrops to create a pattern of the couple was used effectively demonstrating the mood and weather of the day.
-
11th Place: Amy Enderle from Missouri, United StatesJudges Comments
This was not the best composition but it was definitely the best representation of the effects of weather on a wedding day. The moment as the groom reached to keep the bride steady was priceless.
-
Judges Comments
Sloppy, sloppy wedding. Great way to show it. The mud-splattered tablecloth shows just how precarious a position the cake is in. The background adds depth and another layer to what could have become a one-dimensional image.
-
13th Place: Brett Hartwig from South Australia, AustraliaJudges Comments
It's the veil that make this photograph. The way the sun hits the veil. The position of two women adds balance to the photograph in the midst of the chaos of the veil.
-
14th Place: Heather Banks from Central Texas, United States -
15th Place: David Perkins from West Midlands, England -
16th Place: Luigi Della Morte from Potenza, Italy -
17th Place: Raymond Leung from British Columbia, Canada -
18th Place: Christian Keenan from London, England -
19th Place: Genevieve Nisly from Ohio, United States -
20th Place: Matt McGraw from North Carolina, United States