The leading source of high-quality stock photography
and images in southern California with an extensive
stock photography collection of over 30,000 images.
Wedding Photography in South California


Wedding Photography in South California

Izand.com creates images that portray a mixture of photojournalism, traditional,and candid photography.

From the bride getting ready to the final goodbyes, the top priority is capturing images with careful detail, composition, and expression which tells the story of your beautiful day.

Packages:

Package A $850
4 hour coverage of your wedding / Event day. DVD of all original hi-resolution photos.

10 DVDs of all your photos with hi-quality Flash slide show. Up to 300, 4" x 6" color-corrected wedding photos
Package B $1850
10 hour coverage of your wedding / Event day. DVD of all original hi-resolution photos. 15 DVDs

of all your photos with hi-quality Flash slide show. online viewing under our website for 6 month. Up to 450, 4" x 6"

color-corrected wedding photos

Package C $2250
Complete coverage of your rehearsal dinner and wedding/ Event day
Website with domain name of your choice for one year including all your rehearsal dinner and wedding day.

DVD of all original hi-resolution photos. 25 CDs of all your photos with hi-quality Flash slide show
Up to 600, 4" x 6" color-corrected wedding photos

Orange County Cities: Aliso Viejo, Brea, Buena Park, Anaheim, Costa Mesa, Cypress, Dana Point, Fountain Valley, Fullerton, Garden Grove, Huntington Beach, Irvine, La Habra, La Palma, Laguna Beach, Laguna Hills, Laguna Niguel, Laguna Woods, Lake Forest, Los Alamitos, Mission Viejo, Newport Beach, Orange, Placentia, Rancho Santa Margarita, San Clemente, San Juan Capistrano, Santa Ana, Seal Beach, Stanton, Tustin, Villa Park, Westminster, Yorba Linda.

* Travel fee may apply outside of Orange County & Los Angeles County

For more information or consultaion please contact us!

* Alabama Photographers * Alaska Photographers * Arizona Photographers * Arkansas Photographers * California Photographers * Colorado Photographers * Connecticut Photographers Delaware Photographers * District of Columbia Photographers * Florida Photographers * Georgia Photographers * Hawaii Photographers * Idaho Photographers * Illinois Photographers * Indiana Photographers * Iowa Photographers * Kansas Photographers * Kentucky Photographers * Louisiana Photographers * Maine Photographers * Maryland Photographers * Massachusetts Photographers * Michigan Photographers * Minnesota Photographers * Mississippi Photographers * Missouri Photographers * Montana Photographers * Nebraska Photographers * Nevada Photographers * New Hampshire Photographers * New Jersey Photographers * New Mexico Photographers * New York Photographers * North Carolina Photographers * North Dakota Photographers * Ohio Photographers * Oklahoma Photographers * Oregon Photographers * Pennsylvania Photographers * Rhode Island Photographers * South Carolina Photographers * South Dakota Photographers * Tennessee Photographers * Texas Photographers * Utah Photographers * Virginia Photographers * Vermont Photographers * Washington Photographers * West Virginia Photographers * Wisconsin Photographers * Wyoming PhotographersSAMPLE WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY ARTICLES:HIRING A CREATIVE PROFESSIONAL Like many brides and grooms, your wedding could be the first time you’ll be hiring a creative professional. You might think the ins and outs of working with a wedding photographer are as simple as writing a check. What could be so difficult, right? But just ask any talented pro, and you’ll get a grateful explanation of why it’s so important to truly understand their creative process. How you manage your relationship with a wedding photojournalist can have just as profound an impact on the photographs as the day unfolding before the camera. Luckily, you and your photographer both want the same outcome: amazing photos that capture the feeling of the wd that disrespects the venerable traditions of the classic posed shot. They point out that tradition, and true photographic quality, is often sacrificed "art."...Go to: Is Wedding Photojournalism a Fad?THE ART OF WORKING WITH ON CAMERA FLASH Most people equate wedding photojournalism with ambient light, but the reality is that you can’t always get what you want at a wedding. The light you need is often absent, is the wrong kind, or is in the wrong place. That’s why judicious use of on-camera flash plays a central role in assuring great shots and happy clients. “It’s all about complementing the light that is there,” says Wedding Photojournalist Association award-winner Chris Prinos, who with his wife MaryJo shoots weddings with a 1DS Mark II, a Canon 5D and a pair of 10Ds, along with 550EX and 580EX Speedlites. “When you have a flash mounted at all times, you can pretty much address any kind of lighting situation.”...Go to: The Art of Working With On-Camera FlashTHE EVOLUTION OF WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHY Five generations of Americans have revisited special moments in their lives by looking through photographs, most especially of their wedding day. But early to mid-20th-century brides and grooms have only memories of their weddings because their photographers simply weren't there. Early cameras were large and bulky and portable lighting equipment non-existent, tethering photographers -- and bridal portraits -- to studios. All that changed by World War II when the 35mm camera, roll film and on-camera flash hit the scene, transforming first war photography, then photojournalism and eventually wedding photography. After the war, military-trained photographers and amateurs trolled wedding parties snapping candid photos they'd sell to delig

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edding day...Go to: Hiring A Creative ProfessionalIS WEDDING PHOTOJOURNALISM A FAD? We’ve all flipped through well-worn wedding albums of parents, aunts and uncles, and even grandparents, chuckling at dated hairstyles, handlebar mustaches, peach taffeta bridesmaids dresses, and powder blue tuxes. Wedding photojournalists might contend that these photos wouldn’t seem so out of style (hideous wedding gowns and bad male perms aside) if more emphasis had been placed on the un-styled, un-planned moments of the wedding day, rather than the prescribed agenda of highly organized groups of people staring at the camera.On the contrary, naysayers insist wedding photojournalism is merely a trendy, passing fahted bridal couples. That flushed wedding photographers out of the studio and onto the wedding day scene. But still, wedding pictures were posed and moments like cake slicing carefully staged... Go to: The Evolution of Wedding Photography