16th Aug 2007
The Perfect Exit
Recently, I ran into an image shot by some friends of mine, a husband and wife duo in Atlanta, Chris and Katie Torres of 6 of Four Creations. This image is a must see! How many times have you been at a wedding for 7,8, or 9+ hours, and at the end, you are totally dead tired and ready to give up…. Chris & Katie’s story about this image will WAKE YOU UP at the end of your gig! I really wish I had this one in my portfolio!!!
Katie writes:
Rome, Georgia, is one of our favorite places to photograph weddings. The stunning architecture of the historic buildings in this little Southern town has always inspired us. This image was made on the campus of Berry College, at the Ford Buildings. Couples who have their reception at Ford Hall usually exit through this archway. Earlier this year we photographed a couple whose exit was during the daytime. The exit photo we got from that wedding, shot from behind the couple under the tall, beautiful arches, became our signature image on our website. Then, on August 4th, we had a couple who had an evening wedding at the same location.
Chris and I knew we needed to think of something to showcase the architecture and the dramatic exit of this wonderful couple. We are really focusing on our exits. We feel that it encompasses the whole wedding.
Chris says it best: “…to me it depicts what marriage is about. Your friends and family around you, the newly married couple, cheering you on, encouraging you forward into the unknown as a life together, as one, new family.”
With this goal, I started to think how we could make it work. We had a lighting set up at the reception. Three Calumet lights and one SB800 on a stand by the dance floor. We took the SB800 out to the exit area. Chris put it on the other side of the car, so it would not block the bride’s ability to get to the car and also to create a way to get light in the archway. We both had pocket wizards to trigger the flash. He set it to 1/2 power. I stood on the other side of the arch and tested the light for a few shots. I shot the image with a Nikon D200 with the 17-55mm 2.8. As usual, I was in manual mode and exposed it at 1/30th at F/5, ISO 800. In the settings process, I knew I wanted certain aspects. I wanted the ambient light of the sconces, and I needed the light from the flash to be dramatic, but not over take them.
I then saw the couple walking toward me to go through the archway. I asked them to take their time and not run through it. They did just as asked. I kept placing myself so that the flash would keep on the other side of the bride’s head. I did not want a large flare.

Some of our favorite aspects for the image: the blue feel the flash gave to the black night in the back ground, the golden feel from the ambient light in the archway, and the fact that they used rose petals and bubbles.
Bubbles filled the archway on the left and petals on the right. The bubbles on the left actually come right out to the camera and give good depth to pull you into the shot.
To once again quote Chris, to us, this image captures their “timeless beauty, wrapped in the mystery of marriage.”
Great stuff Chris & Katie….I respect your ability to balance ambient in this photo, beautiful! I love your desire to keep your creativity all the way to the end! This type of dedication will result in imagery that will define your portfolio!
Be sure to check out their blog for recent updates, 6 of Four BLOG.
Cheers!
mateo
PS. I’m in Riviera Maya Mexico for the next 10 days with 2 weddings, tell that hurricane Dean to GO AWAY!

Simply stunning. Thank you for sharing this!
Absolutely incredible. Thanks for sharing the insight as to how you planned it.
Inspiring!
This image is simply amazing!! I am so thrilled for the two of them! It is such a wonderful representation of their style. I cannot wait to see all the diferent recognition the 2 of them receive for this (like this site!!!).
That is an amazing shot.
This image is breathtaking!! I hope it is hanging in the couple’s home somewhere…in fact it should be hanging in a museum somewhere! Awesome shot and thank you for sharing this technique!
What an awesome image! Thanks for sharing. Way to kick it up to the next level!
this is just outstanding.
Thanks guys! We love this image too. It’s always a great to share knowledge.
Our best to you.
Katie and Chris
As if we needed any more inspiration to practice off camera flash–I echo the earlier comments, this should be hanging in a museum! May we ALL end up with something this good someday.
Phenomenal. This is worthy of LIFE magazine. A real stunner.
Fabulous!
A very very inspiring picture. Thank you for posting the how-to.
I hope the happy couple recognizes how lucky they are to get such an incredible wedding photo.
“Carol Anne! Listen to me…do NOT go into the light…”
wonderful image. What great forethought and perfect execution.
thks guys for sharing a WONDERFUL SHOT.
its really great to see a beautiful shot and then , find out how it was done….Fantastic
one question though, was the flash firing directly at their faces ? ( from afar, but aimed at their face ?)
Hi guys. Thanks for all of the wonderful comments! I can say that the couple definitely loves this image and is extremely happy about it! I couldn’t have picked a better couple for the image to go to. They are just wonderful.
As far as the question about where the light was placed. I should really draw a diagram. : ) It’s hard to describe the situation. The were running toward their car in the image - just past the arch. On the other side of the car is a light stand with a SB800 placed on it. The flash is facing the couple and I kept moving to keep it on the other side of the bride’s head. I wanted her to be the main focus and have her glowing.
I hope that explains it. Let me know if you have any other questions about the set up.
Thanks to everyone for taking the time to read the write up and enjoying this image.
Katie
WOW! The image was certainly worth all the work. Your interpretation of the moment certainly exudes a fairy tale. Bravo!