Here is a list of cities in Ontario we proudly serve: wedding photographer in 1000 Islands Adolphustown Almonte Alton Ameliasburg Amherstburg Ancaster wedding photo and wedding photographer toronto Arkona Arnprior Atikokan Aurora Baden Bancroft wedding photo Barrie photographer toronto Barry's Bay photography Bayfield Beachburg Belleville Blenheim Blind River Bobcaygeon Bowmanville Bracebridge Brampton Brantford Brighton Brockville Bruce Mines Burleigh Falls Burlington wedding photo Cambridge Campbellford Campbellville Carp Chalk River Chapleau Chatham Chatsworth Cobalt Cobden Cobourg wedding photographer Coburg Cochrane Colchester Coldwater Collingwood Cornwall Delhi Deseronto Dresden Dryden Dundas Earlton Eganville Elk Lake Elliot Lake Elliott Lake Elmira Elmvale Elora Emsdale Englehart Espanola Essex Fenelon Falls Fenwick Fergus wedding photographer Fonthill Foresters Falls Forrester's Falls wedding photo Fort Erie Fort Frances French River Gananoque wedding photographer Georgetown Gloucester Goderich Grafton Grand Bend Gravenhurst Greenwood Guelph wedding photographer Haileybury Haliburton Halton wedding photo Hamilton wedding photographer Harrow Hawkstone Hearst Heron Bay Hill Island Honey Harbor wedding photo Huntsville Ignace Ingersoll Ingleside Iron Bridge Iroquois Falls Jacksons Point Jordan Kakabeka Falls Kanata wedding photographer Kapuskasing Kenora Keswick Killarney Kimberley Kincardine Kingston wedding photographer Kirkland Lake Kitchener Kleinburg Lakefield Leamington Lindsay Little Current London Madoc Magnetawan Mallorytown Manitowaning Marathon Markham Massey Maxville McKellar Merrickville Midland Milford wedding photo Milton Minden Mississauga wedding photographer Monetville Mooretown Moose Mishissauga Factory Island Moosonee Morrisburg Muskoka weding photo Muskoka wedding photographer Algonquin Napanee Nepean Nestor Falls New Hamburg New Liskeard Newboro wedding photographer Newmarket wedding photo Niagara Falls wedding photographer Niagara-on-the-Lake wedding photo North Bay North York wedding photo Oakville OilSprings Orangeville wedding photo Orillia Orleans Oshawa wedding photo Ottawa Owen Sound wedding photography Parry Sound Pembroke Penetanguishene Perth Petawawa Peterborough Petrolia Picton Port Carling Port Colborne Port Hope Port Perry Port Rowan Prescott Renfrew wedding photo Richmond Hill Ridgetown Rockport Rosemont Sarnia Sault Ste. Marie by afm photo productions Scarborough Seagrave Sharon Sheguiandah Shelburne Simcoe wedding photography Smiths Falls Sombra Southampton St. Catharines St. Jacobs St. Marys St. Thomas wedding photo Stoney Creek Stratford Strathroy Sudbury Sutton Temagami Thamesville Thessalon Thunder Bay wedding photo Timmins Tiverton Tobermory wedding photographer Toronto photographer wedding photo Toronto Tottenham Township of James-Elk Lake wedding photographer Trenton Unionville wedding photographer Uxbridge Vaughan photographer Vineland Station Wasaga Beach Waterloo Wawa Welland Whitby Whitney wedding photo Windsor wedding photographer Woodstock London Montreal Ottawa
The cities we mentioned above are part of the following regions we also proudly service: Durham Greater Sudbury wedding photo Halton Hamilton photographer Niagara photo Ottawa Peel Toronto GTA Waterloo York as well as the conties listed next: Brant Bruce Chatham-Kent Dufferin Elgin Essex Frontenac Grey Haldimand Haliburton Hastings Huron Kawartha Lakes Lambton Lanark Leeds and Grenville United Counties Lennox and Addington Middlesex Muskoka District Municipality Norfolk Northumberland Oxford Perth Peterborough Prescott and Russell United Counties Prince Edward Renfrew Simcoe Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry United Counties and Wellington County
And now, here's a wedding photography story just for you - I hope you enjoy and find it useful. Whether you've been married for a couple of weeks, a few years or decades, the pictures shot on your wedding day are probably among your most prized possessions. Every time you flip through the album, or look at the wedding pictures hanging on the wall, you're reminded of how happy you were the day you said "I do." Anissa Burrell-Butler of Westchester, Ill., a suburb of Chicago, relives her wedding day every time she walks through her living room. "I consider the day Rodney and I got married (September 30, 2001) the most important day of my life, a day I'll cherish for a lifetime," she says. Because she knew the memories would be so precious, Burrell-Butler went all out on photography. She found a professional photographer through word of mouth and says he really lived up to his reputation. "He was kind of expensive, but prompt, courteous and thorough. He got all the shots I asked for and then some; it was well worth the money," she says. Among the most memorable images in her album, multiple shots of the bride and groom partying with their guests, people toasting and lots of kissing. There are very few formal shots. These days, it seems more and more brides and grooms are moving away from traditional pictures, like images of the couple with members of the wedding party, and with family members all lined up in a row, towards more candid images that capture the emotions of the day. "We wanted pictures that would show everyone who was there, and keep the day alive in our minds and hearts forever," says Burrell-Butler. Shortly after returning home from their honeymoon, Anissa and Rodney spent hours flipping back and forth through their proof book smiling. "Once we decided which images we wanted for the album came the easy part, picking out the pictures we wanted to get framed," she says. Instead of the traditional shot of the bride and groom standing next to each other, Anissa and Rodney chose to frame two kissing pictures they liked a lot. One shot inside the church, the other outside the reception hall in front of a lake. "We framed the images in a shadowbox with two mattes, one rose colored, the other tan," she says. "We also framed a shadowbox filled with keepsakes -- our invitation, reply card, unity candles and favors, along with photos of our parents, Rodney with all the girls in the wedding party and me with all the guys." When they took the pieces in to be framed, the shop they went to recommended they take the extra measure of framing them behind Museum Glass. "Because wedding pictures can never be replaced, you need to give them a little extra attention when it comes to the framing process," says Joe Maxwell, a custom framing expert who works for Tru Vue, a Chicago company that makes preservation quality glass for the framing industry. "Museum Glass is the best way to go. It has UV blocking properties, which over time protects the artwork from sun, dust and moisture in the air, and also offers anti-reflective technology so you won't have to worry about glare." Museum Glass is best for pictures with depth. For flat pieces, Maxwell recommends Tru Vue's Conservation Reflection Control glass, which has more of a matte finish. And he offers these tips to preserve the images you don't get framed: * Only use albums that are archival quality, meaning acid free. * Use storage boxes and envelopes of archival quality. * Only mount photos to acid-free pages using tape and photo corners that are also acid- free. * Do not store photos in high temperature or high humidity areas such as attics and basements. * Have your pictures scanned and put on a CD which will serve as a permanent archive in case anything happens to the originals. To find the custom framing shop nearest you that uses Tru Vue Museum Glass or Conservation Reflection Control, log on to www.tru-vue.com. Courtesy of ARA Content