Our Services
Wedding Photography
Couples getting married hire wedding photographers to capture the moments of their special day on film. They depend on these professionals to be punctual, attentive, and thorough – there are no second chances! While pre-wedding meetings and post-wedding work take place in an office environment, the events themselves take photographers to indoor and outdoor venues such as homes, churches, hotels, parks, and other ceremony and reception sites. Likewise, the time of each wedding sets the work schedule, with weekend and evenings being common. The number of weddings occurring in spring and summer months make those seasons especially busy for photographers. While many photography companies exist to provide services, a significant number of wedding photographers are self-employed.
Fashion Photography
Fashion photography has been in existence since the earliest days of photography. Fashion photography has now become such a popular thing in society, especially with new fashion icons and fashion trends going around. In 1856, Adolphe Braun published a book containing 288 photographs of Virginia Oldoini, Countess di Castiglione, a Tuscan noblewoman at the court of Napoleon III. The photos depict her in her official court garb, making her the first fashion model.
Industrial Photography
Industrial photographers take photos of products, machinery, equipment and staff. These photos are then used on websites and in marketing collateral like magazines, brochures, advertisements and social media posts. Industrial photography is common in various industries, including construction, mining, manufacturing, energy and transportation. Often, industrial photographs show people building and making things – the aim is to capture the manufacturing process and the laborious jobs that are performed by workers.
Every major industrial company needs photographs of their operations, and as technology and automation continue to develop, the need for these images will only increase.
Forensic Photography
Forensic photography includes methods of photographing the scenes of crimes, searches, investigatory experimentation, living persons, corpses, documents, weapons used in crimes, traces of substances, and similar evidence. It makes use of both recording and investigative techniques. The first group includes photogram-metry (scale photography and stereophotogrammetry), photo-macrography of small objects and traces of substances, panoramic photography to establish the position of long stretches of ground, identification photography of faces in full face and profile, and photoreproduction of documents.