Kate and James MA RI Wedding Photographer



Hi everyone, we're Kate and James and we're The Feds. Welcome to our blog. Here you can get a sneak peek into our lives and our Wedding Photography. We love to meet new people so feel free to LEAVE COMMENTS we love 'em!
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Monday, December 31, 2007

Last post of the year

While I'm back to blogging. I'm sorry if you have been checking in to see what is happening with The Feds, I promise, actually I will add posting more to my Resolutions.

Yes this is the Last post of 2007 but it is POST 100. 100 Posts since I started blogging on the last day of March 2007, I didn't think I could actually do that or ever thought about it. I promise there will be more than 100 next year.

We have big plans for 2008 and I will share them all over this week. I will also post some photos from Christmas, Some photos of the kids through the year and a visit to Bean Town(made out of Beans)

January is busy but I'll keep you up to date. Hanging with Mellisa Jill, Snowboarding and hanging with my Brother and nephews woh are coming up from VA and much more.



Happy New Year

Monday, December 17, 2007

Members of SPA


Over the summer we started shooting Senior Pictures and had a great time working with some awesome High School Seniors. We started doing some marketing through Myspace and came across an awesome couple out of Arizona (Tammie and Chris from Largo Photography) that told us to get into SPA, not only once, but they must have asked if we joined, like 5 times :) While we took their advise and are now officially members of SPA (Senior Portrait Artists)

I wish I could make it out the the Spa Event this year but it looks like hotel is pretty full and the price is up there, so it looks like we'll be out there next year.

LOL you have to check this out, it is a link to an audio clip done by Scott Crosby for the event.

Friday, December 14, 2007

Xmas Tree Decorating at nanny's 2007

I'm posting a little out of order but I'm over my mother's house and the kids just finished decorating their nanny's. I'll post a few photos from our tree decorating later but here is a little video from nanny's.
If you look close you can see a photo of me on an ornament I made in Kindergarten from when I was 5yrs. The Angel topper I carved when I was 10(cause me and my bothers broke the star a few years before)

I also break out a saw :) to trim the top of the tree to make the angle fit.


Thursday, December 13, 2007

Winter Warning

So this morning I got a call from Kate about the weather saying there was gonna be some snow and schools are already cutting the day short. I can't stand when you don't watch the news for a day and all of a sudden there is a BIG Snow storm starting. Weather changes so fast around here.

Layla says stay away from the yellow snow :)

Wednesday, December 05, 2007

Picking the Tree

Tonight the whole family piled into the Kia and headed over to Stanney's, a small breakfast place and ice cream shoppe in my home town of Holbrook, MA . Stanney's was one of my first jobs while growing up. I did everything over there, started out washing dishes, serving ice cream and even cooking. During the Holiday season trees and wreathes were sold out in the parking lot which I also helped out with. That's why we headed over to Stanney's, to get our Christmas tree. We got the tree back to the house and will be decorating it this weekend so we will have some pictures of all of us decorating.

Here are a few images of the girls getting their tree.

Annabelle is excited to get the tree.
Annabelle is excite to get a Xmas Tree

The girls had fun running through the trees
The sisters running throught the trees

The two girls decided they have it under control.
Sisters go looking for a tree


Layla found our tree!
Layla found her tree

Sunday, December 02, 2007

Let it Snow

SUNDAY
MONDAY

That's right, the snow is starting. It's 11pm Sunday and the road is covered with only about 1/2 inch but they say we will get 1-3 inches. I love watching the news and flipping through the channels just to see how different the predictions are. I swear some of the Meteorologists make this stuff up and try to out do the guys on the other stations. I'll see your 1-3 inches and raise you 2 inches. They all needed to be one uppers. I swear that's what goes on. When I was a kid I would always root for the channel with the higher accumulation prediction, who didn't love a snow day :)

Went I wake up in the morning it will probably be a nasty mix of snow sleet and rain, which is so fun to shovel :( At least they are getting 1+ feet in New Hampshire(Can't wait to go Snowboarding)

Thursday, November 29, 2007

Fun Nite At The Feds

This is what happens when you leave The Feds at home... bored.

Sunday, November 25, 2007

Jon and Maggie's E-Session

A couple weeks ago Kate and I had the pleasure of meeting Jon and Maggie in Harvard Square for an Engagement Photo shoot. Both Kate and I enjoyed their company as we walked around the Square and took a trip down to the Harvard Foot Bridge.

It's unfortunate we will not be there for Jon and Maggie's wedding up in Maine next year but we would like to congratulate the both of them and wish them the perfect day. It was great meeting the two of you here is a slide show of their E-Session




Thursday, November 22, 2007

Full of Thanks

I'm full of Thanks :)

Topping the list, Family and Friends
and of coarse, life itself.


What are you Thankful for?
Think about something you might take for granted, and be full of thanks.



Happy Thanksgiving!

Friday, November 16, 2007

Jason and Katie's E-Session

A few weeks ago I got to shoot Jason and Katie's E-Session along with one for her sons out on Castle Island in Boston. It was so cool cause I haven't see Katie since we were in High School (10yr reunion next year)
I can't wait for their wedding on leap day (That's right only an anniversary once every 4yrs, lol) It looks like we maybe shooting the wedding outside at Saphire Manor, how sweet would that be if there is snow on the ground.

Here is there slideshow


To sign up to see there wedding photos after the wedding go to www.pictage.com and enter Katie's last name for the password

Monday, November 12, 2007

Home for the Holidays

The start of holiday season is just around the corner and soon Thanksgiving will be upon us. Of coarse I'll be posting about the day with The Feds but as of right now I want everyone to start thinking about others. This season and every season families go without a house to put a Christmas tree up in, how sad.
This is why I want to tell you about a wonderful project that two photographers out of CT Justin and Mary of Justin Marantz Photography have been working on for a while and are ready to get it going. The Project is called The Portrait House and is on a worldwide fund raising mission to raise money and awareness for Habitat for Humanity. Go check out the site http://www.traciedesigns.net/clients/portraithouse/

If you are on Facebook head over to http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=7264861845&ref=nf and join the group.

Thursday, November 08, 2007

Keith and Emily's E-Session

A few weeks ago I had the pleasure of meeting Keith and Emily for the first time to shoot their E-Session. They brought along their new little puppy who made it into a few shots, sorry he didn't have a name as of the shoot, but will see maybe he will make an appearance at the wedding.
Keith and Emily's wedding is going to be awesome, they are having both the ceremony and reception up in Plymouth NH at the Common Man Inn. The ceremony is going to be held in the green house looking out at the mountains, how cool! Can't wait. Here are the shots from the E-Session.


Friday, November 02, 2007

Halloween 2007

Halloween 2007 @ The Feds was a little different then years past. We are all creatures of habit and everyone that knows me knows I don't always take well to change(I'm learning to embrace it all now)

This year we've been so busy, I never got to carved my pumpkin :( Sorry if I've disappointed anyone.

Halloween has also been a little incomplete without our nephews, my two little buddies and the other Federico family who moved down to Virginia earlier this year(send some pictures) The last few years we have been going out and doing the Trick or Treat thing with them. This year we ended up out on the streets alone, but still had a great time.

Annabelle was pulling me along to each house(I can't believe she just turned 2yrs) she was loving it and the CANDY. Layla was eating up all the attention she received from the people answering their doors. Check out some of the photos below.

PS. We got to head over to my mother's house for some Beef Stew at least one thing hasn't changed in all these years, Thanks Mom.

The girls doing some pre trick or treat coloring
7 Layla Halloween07
6 Belle Halloween07

5 Belle Halloween 07

4 The kids Halloween 07

3 Layla Halloween07

1 Layla Halloween07

Here's Kate's brother's dog dressed up like a Pumpkin, lol
2 Pumpkin Dog

Monday, October 29, 2007

World Champs!!!!!!!

Sox won! Second time in my life how awesome is that!!!
Mike Lowell MVP and now a free agent. Let's keep him.

Time for another parade :)

Sunday, October 28, 2007

Some more photos from Revolution

Here is a few more shots from The Revolution

bgglassbuilding

brideonscooter

groomsitting

Bridegroomclose

Bridewithguys

Monday, October 22, 2007

Andy and Debbie's E-Session

Here come the Engagements, The past few weeks have been very busy and I've had quite a few E-Sessions so I'll be posting the shows as soon as I can.

Here is Andy and Debbie's E-Session I shot before heading out to NY. We took a sweet walk in the norris reservation in Norwell , MA This is where Andy proposed to Debbie by carving "Marry Me" into a tree. Of coarse we had to go out there and get some photos of the tree with the newly engaged couple. Check out the slideshow below.

Saturday, October 20, 2007

GO SOX!!!!!

Friday, October 19, 2007

Where did all the moments go?

While out in NY I was talking to another photographer Fred Egan out of Texas about Senior photography and how everyone wants to live the life of no worries, unlimited money, do what they want when they want(like jumping off the end of a dock at sunset with all their clothes on,
now that is a Kodak Moment) I miss my darkroom :(

Both Studio Foto and The Stobist posted this on their blogs and I thought of all the fluff Kodak did in the "Kodak Moment" campaign this is pretty funny how they poke fun of it themselves.


Thursday, October 18, 2007

Just a Teaser

Here is a photo I shot in NYC this week at The Revolution Workshop. I'll post some more later but I just got back and I'm not feeling well, plus I have an E-Session with Debbie and Andy I'll be putting up soon. Let me know what you think.

Bride on Loading dock

Saturday, October 13, 2007

Backup, Backup

In todays world there are so many now using digital cameras to capture moments of their friends and family. With digital photography come digital files, today it seems more photos are being taken but less people are printing the pictures. This leave mass amounts of files stored on hard drives. For myself, being a photographer plus having two little kids, I take a lot of photos. Since I backup all of my original files and have a minimum of 2 copies.

I'm telling you this because a hard drive I just purchased in August fail :( This was my main working hard drive and knocked us back a little but all of our original files are back so no worries, we will be back on track as soon as I'm back from NY.

I just want to make sure everyone else out there is backing up there files, because if a hard drive I had for only about two months can crash, I know it can happen to any drive.

All drives and computers will die sometime so plan for it.


FYI: I'll be in NYC for The Revolution all of next week.

Monday, October 08, 2007

New Look, Big PHOTOS

Here is the new look for the blog I'm still working out some of the bugs(like not being able to see the controls for the slide shows, you can still click them to watch) If you find anything else let me know by posting a comment below. The Blog looks good at 1024X768 and best if you can go larger.

So I've been super busy and I'll be catching up on email in the next day.
This past weekend I had an awesome time shooting a wedding up in Salem, MA at the Peabody Essex Museum with Jason Groupp. It was kinda funny, we were like prisoners in the Museum, every time we left a room we needed a guard with us and our bags checked 1 to many times, but it was all good. Jason will probably have a slide show up soon so keep checking his blog out to see them. If you look up in the new header there is a shot of the flowers and the guys feet from the wedding.

Next week I'm heading out to Jason's Studio in NY for the Revolution with TJ Cameron and Chris+Linn.

I'll be posting some nice BIG PHOTOS soon after changing my actions for blog sizes and uploading them to flickr.

Thursday, October 04, 2007

Linnea and Gary

Last weekend we had the pleasure of photographing the wedding of Gary and Linnea. The ceremony was held at the UU Area Church in Sherborn, MA and the reception at the Royal Sonesta in Cambridge. There was an open mic at the reception during dinner, quite a few family and friends decided to speak some great words about the both of them. While here is the slideshow if you would like to see it larger goto
http://www.thefedsstudio.com/slide_shows/linneaandgary2007




Sign up to see the rest of the photos at http://www.pictage.com/375099


Thanks to my wonderful wife Kate for the great makeup and picking out the photos for the slide show at the reception. Also thanks to Jenny for the second shooting keep on shooting.

Wednesday, October 03, 2007

Winning, Shooting, Picking, Eating, Kicking and more shooting. FUN!

Angles were shut down tonight :) Beckett pitch great! GO SOX!! Just a little support.

I've been sooooooo busy this week but had a great time. Saturday I shot a wedding with Jenny and Kate did makeup for the Bride and her girls. I'll have the show up tomorrow, after Belle goes to the docs for a checkup.

Sunday we did the family thing and went apple picking I'll post some pictures from that too, the point and shoot is in the car.

Tuesday I went to the Pug Shoot Out in Boston. We did some night shooting and then got a little to eat. I was great getting out and meeting Matt Grazier, Lori Desantis and Mark Thomas.

Today I did some editing of coarse but spent sometime on the new website which is coming along. I did have a few fights with the Windows computer(Gates won that round) I'm glad I use Mac now, but all my web software is on the Windows box :(

The weeks not over yet, this Saturday I'm second shooting a wedding for Jason Groupp who is coming up from NY to shoot a wedding in Salem at the Peabody Essex Museum.

Sorry no photos but I'm tired, I probably didn't even make any sense.

Tuesday, October 02, 2007

Mike and Kristen's Slide Show

Here is Mike and Kristen's Slide Show that I promised check it out

Click the link to see it BIG.
http://www.jamesfederico.com/slide_shows/MikeKristenEsession/





I'll have the slide show from this weekend's wedding up tomorrow.

Sunday, September 30, 2007

Monday Rally and Monday Night Football





Here is an early post for "Rally Monday"/"Monday Night Football" since I'll be busy most of the day tomorrow editing photos from a wedding this weekend, the slide show will be up soon.

I just wanted to show some support for the Sox and tell the Angels' fans to start praying.


GO SOX!!!!
GO PATS!!!!

Tuesday, September 25, 2007

Engaged Mike and Kristen

This past weekend I shot Mike and Kristen's E-Session over at the Public Gardens in Boston. Mike proposed to Kristen on the bridge in the Gardens, if you ask each of them tell you it was on different side of the bridge. Both of them have been great friends over the past few years, and we have had some good laughs. I met Mike back in 2000 while I was working as the Security Supervisor up in Cambridge, glad I took the job(I wasn't going too) cause I met a good group of friends including Mike. Now he is working as a Firefighter in Chelsea and in the Air Force Reserve. Kristen is over at Brigham and Women's Hospital working in the Burn and Trauma unit. The both of them are helping people everyday, that's just awesome!
They are made for one another and love each other some much. I've seen this first hand for the past few years and could see this so much as I was edited through their photos.

Here are a few of the shots I got. Thanks Kate, Jubb(for shooting some video, I'll post soon) and Shannon for hanging out with us.

I know there is a lot of kissing photos but they were so cute =)






Motivate Yourself!

"You see things; and you say 'Why?' But I dream things that never were; and I say 'Why not?'"

- George Bernard Shaw

This quote is awesome! After reading those few littles sentences, I want to conquer the world! I am now determined to make my 101 things to accomplish in 1,001 Days list and attack them! It's great fun and I recommend everyone set a few goals for themselves and go for it! You are an amazing person! Let the world see what you can do!

Monday, September 17, 2007

Crosslighting

I was just messing around a little with some lighting stuff on the Strobist blog I really like how it makes the subject look 3D. I can't wait to do some of these with some better landscapes then the side yard. No Photoshop done, just basic contrast and WB. If you want to check out how to do this see this post about cross lighting on the Stobist blog. Just pick an easier subject then a 2yr little girl =)


Unicorn and Fairies <=D

It was party time at the Fed's house this weekend. The girls dressed up as fairies, got a few rides on a real live unicorn and spent some time with a few of their little friends. The two of them had so much fun, that they slept good last night :)
Little Belle was so funny, she wanted to wear her sunglasses most of the day, check her out on the unicorn she looks like she should be riding a motorcycle. Layla was so happy she got a fairy in a flower on her cake and Belle got a mushroom cake. I spent about 5hrs making them the night or should I say the wee hours of the morning so my girls can get the cakes they want.

Here are a few pictures of the party, there will be a little video later I just need to find the cord for the cam. So come back an check it out it's funny (hint Uncle TJ got a 2 and 4 year old a rocket launcher)

Kids Party Slide Show


Monday, September 10, 2007

OMG Growing so fast

I can not believe it, last week was Layla's B-day and today was her first day back at Preschool, she is growing so fast. She has had a camera snapping away for four years of her life now, so today while mommy was getting ready to take Layla to school I didn't need to ask twice if she wanted to go outside to have a few first day photos taken of her. Layla is such a little model she helps me so much when I want to try out something new.

Here's my little model. She poses everytime :)




Now off to school

Friday, September 07, 2007

Survey Time

Surveys are fun :) sometime. It only takes a moment, please fill it out. We've been having a lot of visits all over the country and the world and is sooooooo cool seeing that there is so many out there reading my butchering of the English language (not a favorite of mine in school) Kate usually breaks out the red pen when ever I write anything.

Heres the survey Thanks everyone.

Click Here to take survey

Monday, September 03, 2007

Princess Layla

Today is my Princess' B-Day, 4yrs WOW she's growing up fast. Layla is one of my favorite little models(Annabelle's great too, she just doesn't stop) Layla loves to pose, with the dog, little rocks or even a little frog she finds. She always asking to have her picture taken. Today we went out early and took a hike at Blue Hills(only a little ways up the mountain) Layla's party is in a few more weeks since we are just doing the girls parties together so I'll have photos of both of them in their party gear.

Heres a photo of Layla playing @ Blue Hills.

Why?

The following story was taking from the Washington Post written by Matt Mendelsohn. I would like to thank the New School of Photography for sharing this.
I'm telling you the truth when I say this story brought tears to my eyes. It made me think about my grandmother who pasted just a few years ago and the love she shared with my grandfather. That love obliviously still exists, love like that never dies. Right now, somewhere, maybe even my grandfather is looking over at a photo or pulling out their wedding album and reliving every moment they have felt upon seeing just one picture. That is why I love photography, that is why I love weddings.






Getting The Picture

By Matt Mendelsohn
Sunday, September 2, 2007; W20

When he was a photo-journalist, "wedding photographer" sounded like the punch line of a joke. Then he went soft and discovered that taking photographs of the most important moment in people's lives actually is funny. Also moving, sad, scary and profound.

IT WAS 10:15 P.M., AND THE BAND WAS HALFWAY THROUGH GLORIA GAYNOR'S "I WILL SURVIVE," a song I've heard so many hundreds of times in the past nine years that I think I should start earning some sort of secret ASCAP royalty, when the tiny phone in my pocket began to vibrate.

My cellphone, like any good wedding photographer will tell you, is always on vibrate, even when I'm not at a wedding. Just one of those silly things, really, but I don't take any chances. I never trust traffic on the Beltway, even on a weekend. I don't eat strange foods on Friday, lest I become sick on Saturday. And I absolutely cringe at the thought of my phone going off during a wedding.

I cringe because it's my job as the photographer to document the nuptial events unfolding in front of me -- from the hushed nave of St. Matthew's Cathedral downtown to the Potomac overlook at George Washington's River Farm -- not become part of them. I'm hired, of course, to chronicle, but after nine years and some 400 weddings -- think Bill Murray in "Groundhog Day," but with a lot more salmon -- one can't help just plain observing. And so, here is observation Number One: On average these days, one and a half guests will receive a phone call during a wedding, often smack during the vows, the inevitable tinny strains of Beethoven's Ninth emanating, just as I'm sure Beethoven himself would have wanted, from the circuit board of a Motorola RAZR.

One and a half guests. Welcome to my world. This is what I've become after all these years, a deranged comic book character: mild-mannered wedding photographer by night, captive observer of the human condition by day. Who could pretend not to notice, after all, when a mother's very first words upon seeing her daughter in a wedding dress are: "Your earring is crooked." And who could look the other way when a priest tosses the couple he's married only three minutes earlier out of a warm and dry church and into the pouring rain because he has a confessional schedule to maintain? (Though not Christian myself, I've heard Paul's letter to the Corinthians about charity -- the one with the noisy gongs and clanging cymbals -- enough to appreciate the rich irony.) Or when an orthopedic surgeon, minutes away from his own marriage, takes time to treat the leg of one of the waitstaff who, while setting up tables, has slipped on a wet floor and happens to speak not a word of English.

I witness acts of incredible tenderness -- a bride quietly pinning a photo of her mother who died of breast cancer into her dress; acts of incredible joy -- just about any father dancing with his daughter; and acts of questionable sanity -- a group of adult groomsmen allowing an 8-year-old to pilot a golf cart into a lake comes to mind. And each Sunday morning around 2 o'clock, as I collapse into bed after another wedding, I'm convinced that I must be part of some kind of clinical trial, with no end date in sight.

And so, on this particular June night, it wasn't until a few more songs had whizzed by -- I can't be sure if it was "Mustang Sally," "Shout" and then "Love Shack" or, more likely, "Love Shack," "Shout" and, finally, "Mustang Sally" -- that I had a chance to look at the flashing display on my phone, a strange number with a strange area code. I put down my cameras, walked outside to the patio of Vienna's Meadowlark Botanical Gardens and dialed in the dark.

"Hi, this is Matt Mendelsohn. Did someone call this number?"

WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHER.

What is it about those two words together that seems to evoke so much pity? No one thinks twice if you say that you're an architectural photographer, or a photographer who shoots nudes, or a globe-trotting photojournalist. Friends will feign interest, at least, on the architectural front; be really excited about the nudes; and ask you again and again if you've ever been shot at as a news photographer. In fact, for years when I was a photojournalist, I went to parties where I was the only non-attorney out of 30 guests -- attorneys making a jillion dollars a year more than I -- only to be told that I had the coolest job. You've shot Michael Jordan?!?!

What was Nicole Kidman like?

How long were you in the Gulf War? Have you ever been shot at?

Wedding photographers, needless to say, have never inspired such levels of envy. Instead, they reside in a category usually reserved for car salesmen and stamp enthusiasts, a little bit of Willy Loman with a pinch of Charlie Brown. Adam Sandler already made the movie about the wedding singer. Is there any doubt that the movie about the wedding photographer would star anyone but Albert Brooks? It's the reason that, even today, when the guy sitting next to me on the Delta Shuttle asks what kind of photography I do, I have a tendency to say, "Well, I worked for USA Today for 10 years, and now I have my own business." Move along; nothing to see here.

Then again, maybe I'm just missing something. In the past few years, a whole new breed of wedding photographers has emerged, particularly on the West Coast, determined to give the musty reputation a makeover. They share ideas on message boards ("Show us your cake pictures!!"), pat one another on the back ("You're a rock star of photography!!") and spend much of their time hawking seminars as if they're selling Herbalife products. They also conveniently sidestep the fact that shooting a wedding is a bit like taking an SAT in which you've been given all the answers in advance. I feel certain James Nachtwey, the legendary war photographer, would find life much easier if he knew where the bad guys were going to start shooting week in and week out.

This is why none of this was supposed to happen. Like all good young photojournalists, I was raised to mock wedding photography and all that it represented. I wanted to be a photojournalist, not some dork schmoozing up Aunt Alice. "I don't shoot weddings," the standard response of any self-respecting White House news photographer, was always more mantra than simple statement of fact. And in the late 1980s, when I was establishing myself here in Washington as a photographer, first at United Press International, with its constant going-out-of-business sales ("No, Pat Robertson was last week's buyer; this week it's the Saudis"), and then at USA Today, it was a badge of honor not to shoot weddings, and, by golly, I wasn't about to let the side down.

All of this was understood those many years ago. My photographic dreams lay in the desert, as in Kuwait, not in dessert, as in chocolate-covered strawberries. And I was well on my way to fulfilling them. I was five feet from Rodney King when he stammered, "Can't we all get along?"; 150 feet from President Bill Clinton as Yasser Arafat and Yitzhak Rabin shook hands; and 27,000 feet above Earth, lying on my belly in a flying gas tank, photographing one stealth fighter after another as they refueled en route to the Persian Gulf. I was shooting cool things and loving every minute of it.

By the mid-'90s, I had crawled around newly discovered tombs in Egypt, photographed huge celebrities in tiny hotel rooms and been splattered with blood -- curiously, something that is a badge of honor in photojournalistic circles -- while covering boxing title fights in Las Vegas. Everything seemed to be going according to plan, though as the years went by, little by little, I began to feel pangs of ambivalence.

Where you once asked a band for permission to photograph a concert, now you navigated a phalanx of lawyers. A one-on-one shoot with Jennifer Aniston in a hotel room had become a one-on-eight shoot, if I were to include all the publicists, with their little black dresses and walkie-talkies, breathing down my neck (and repeating the words "Three minutes, three minutes!" within the first 33 seconds). And, lastly, and perhaps most important, I began to grow tired of chasing people.

Chasing people is a staple of a news photographer's diet -- you can't claim conscientious objector status and elect to shoot the pet of the week instead. I spent a lot time chasing people (though "chase" is a misnomer because the actual act involves mostly walking backward, throwing elbows and focusing at the same time) at courthouses around the country: U.S. District Court (Marion Barry, Ollie North); the U.S. Supreme Court (pick an abortion case); Simi Valley (the LAPD/Rodney King trial); Los Angeles (O.J. Simpson); and, though she had no court to call her own, the chase of all chases, Monica Lewinsky.

For weeks and weeks in 1998, as that scandal broke, I chased Lewinsky for USA Today, with limited success, if one can even use that word. Though tame by Hollywood paparazzi standards, my Lewinsky chases became increasingly fraught with doubt and regret. Then, one Sunday morning, while walking with my wife and my dog in Georgetown, I found myself, sans camera, holding the door for Lewinsky at Starbucks on M Street -- like a hunter accidentally bumping into the stag he's been stalking for days. As she brushed by me, balancing a couple of lattes, she smiled and said, "Thanks so much!" and I said, "Soy-tinly!" -- for some odd reason playfully playing up my New York accent. And I thought to myself, What am I doing chasing this poor woman?

Perhaps it was coincidence, or maybe kismet, but the more the journalism ennui began to set in, the more it seemed people were asking me to shoot their weddings. Like a parent who is asked by his 9-year-old "Are we there yet?" 900 times, I couldn't seem to shake this damn question. And none of these people were looking for a dork in a tux: They wanted me to cover their weddings no differently than if I were covering a White House event or a rally on the Mall. With each wedding I photographed, I realized that there actually existed events in which people wanted you to take their pictures, where there was no yellow police tape and where the only lawyers present were the ones getting married.

And that's when I did it. There came a day several years back when, with reckless abandon, I decided to leave the noble pursuit of journalism, with its Page One budget meetings filled with smart people discussing Saddam Hussein or the latest North Korean standoff, not to mention the not-so-noble pursuit of, well, pursuits. I was ready to throw myself down a most unusual rabbit hole, reemerging into the bizarro world of Weddings, where family relationships can often be broken into the in-laws and the outlaws, where self-absorption can be raised to an art form, where a Jewish guy can recite the entire Catholic Mass by heart, as well as reel off, like an idiot savant, the date of every Saturday for the next year and a half.

"MATT, IT'S MISSY LANGERT, YOUR NEIGHBOR JOEL'S DAUGHTER, CALLING FROM DALLAS. Mom's had a massive heart attack while attending a wedding here, and Dad is home all alone. He didn't come out for the wedding. Is there any way you can go over and sit with him? He's all by himself."

Taken by surprise, I tried to process all of this information in a room filled with happy people having a wonderful time. She was at a wedding in Texas. I was at a wedding in Virginia. And Joel was all by himself.

My 85-year-old neighbor Joel Langert is one of my favorite people, a curmudgeon's curmudgeon with a soft spot he guards fiercely. One minute he's grumbling about how movies used to be two for a nickel, and the next he's leaving a beautiful orchid -- a phalaenopsis or perhaps a paphiopedilum, a lady-slipper, grown lovingly in his backyard greenhouse -- on my kitchen counter. He just walks in, puts down the flower and berates me later for leaving the front door of my house unlocked. Without asking, he once planted a fig tree on my front lawn, a tree that now yields succulent fruit by the hundreds and a tree that I adore. And he'll often ask me to buy him packs -- he doesn't drive anymore -- of his favorite Dutch cigarillos, Schimmelpenninck, even though he knows he shouldn't be smoking them. When I took him to his first Nationals game, Joel didn't stop complaining about the noise -- the constant stream of musical snippets aimed at inciting the crowd -- for the first eight innings (we didn't make it to the ninth). I asked him when was the last time he was at a baseball game, and he replied, "Lou Gehrig was playing at Yankee Stadium."

Joel and his wife, Eileen, had been married for 55 years, 11 longer than I've been alive, and enjoyed a beautiful relationship. "It was love at first sight," he remembered of their meeting at the Gertz department store on Long Island where they both worked. "I wrote up a petition that she should marry me, and I took it to everyone in the store to sign." After their wedding in New York, on January 29, 1950 -- "I remember the church was candlelit" -- the newlyweds drove with another couple down to Fort Lauderdale. Joel laughed as he recalled the two songs that played on the car radio nonstop that trip: "Ghost Riders in the Sky," a cowboy's lament, and "Sixteen Tons," a depressing number about the perils of coal mining. Not exactly the most romantic driving music. (I laughed, of course, because Gloria Gaynor was only 4 months old at the time, and it could have been much worse.)

But it was a fitting start, as driving and travel would play a huge part in their lives, on trips over the years from Finland to Singapore, and in cars such as their 1956 pink T-Bird, the 1957 Jaguar Mark VII Saloon ("It looked like a Bentley," Joel says), the 1972 E-Type Jaguar ("Eileen was never into the shifting thing") and, finally, the S-Type he bought Eileen for Christmas in 2002, parked in the driveway with a big red bow tied to the front.

After decades in advertising with the Hecht Co., Joel now spends much of his retirement tending to his beloved plants. Eileen, on the other hand, was always abuzz with activity, always off, it seemed, on one of the many trips for senior citizens she organized and chaperoned for Arlington County. When a mutual neighbor on our block gave birth to triplets, several of us chipped in for a night nurse for a couple of evenings. We felt rather proud of our gift, not realizing that, for months and months, Eileen was baking the family fully prepared dinners with no fanfare.

Despite Joel's faux crankiness, his most endearing trait, it was easy to see how much he loved Eileen, and how proud he was of her. I asked him recently what made his love for Eileen so special, and without even a second to ponder, he replied, "She was two-thirds of me." Two-thirds of me. I tried to soak that one up. "We never once said no to each other," and then, reverting back to prime Joel form, "except the time I wanted to pull up the grass and replace it with those small paving pebbles."

So now, as I stood in the darkness, the band's music coming through the windows in that muffled way, where you only hear the bass, I knew I had to act quickly. I collected my cameras, two Canon EOS1 Mark IIs, my bag filled with lenses and my very sweaty suit coat, and headed for the parking lot. I would have left in half an hour anyway, and I had already taken more than 1,500 images that day, starting with the "getting ready," as it's referred to in wedding speak -- the ceremony, the family pictures, the dancing, the cake-cutting. I tucked my little pouch filled with identical, neatly stacked 2-gigabyte memory cards -- memory cards, how apt, I always think -- into the bag and headed back to Arlington.

MY OWN BEST MAN DIDN'T SHOW UP FOR MY WEDDING.

Nine years ago, my younger brother, Eric, was directing his best friend and unknown actress, Edie Falco, in a tiny independent film he wrote specifically for her. Filming was scheduled for the day of my wedding, and Eric bowed out. I was devastated, having shared a room with him for 16 years while growing up on Long

Island. My older brother Daniel, an esteemed critic and classics scholar, came to the rescue, with a lengthy toast about the differences between ancient Greek -- my wife, Maya, is Greek -- and ancient Jewish traditions. Given that I had rarely been inside a synagogue, except for weddings, since I was 13 and am decidedly non-religious, the toast struck me as wonderfully intellectual and, not surprisingly, impersonal.

Eric went on to win best director at Sundance the next year, and Edie went on to become the most famous mob wife in television history as Carmela Soprano, and all was long forgotten years ago. Truth be told, we don't really discuss it very much, and that seems to work pretty well. We all serve some kind of penance, and maybe mine is having to listen to touching best man speeches every week of my life. Ironically, it would be Daniel, with whom I was never close growing up -- he, spending much of our childhood reading about pharaohs and Greek gods; me, worrying how the Mets could possibly survive without Tom Seaver -- with whom I would, years later, travel all over the world, tracking down Holocaust survivors for a memoir he was writing. The emptiness that I felt during his stand-in toast -- I kept hoping for some funny little anecdote about me, until I realized that my own brother didn't know me well enough to have any funny little anecdotes -- would be replaced by the camaraderie of many, many long trips together, from Australia to Ukraine, just me and Daniel on very long plane rides.

This is why we all love weddings so much -- decades of family history rushing to the surface, like a submarine after nine months under the ocean. Of course, it's usually just minutes after that spectacular arrival that you want to run for cover yelling, "Dive! Dive! Dive!" A tug of war between a bride and her mom over something as simple as where to place the headpiece can get to Defcon 1 remarkably quickly, as this exchange I recall hearing at a Georgetown church illustrates:

"Mom, it should go here."

"Well, I just think it should be back a bit."

"Mom, please let the hairdresser do her job. She knows best."

"I know. It's just that I think it should it go back a little."

"Mom, please! You're making me really stressed out. Please don't say another word, and let the hairdresser do her job!"

(Dead silence in the room. Now, count to 10.)

"Fine. It's just that I thought it should go back a little."

These are the things I witness weekly. No catastrophes, no disasters, just little glimpses into family life, 2007. Without a doubt, the question I'm asked most often is, "What's the worst thing that ever happened at a wedding?" It's also the one that always makes me laugh, because it precludes the obvious converse, that is, what's the best thing that's ever happened at a wedding? In all these years, no one ever has asked me that one, despite the fact that, last I checked, and with the possible exception of a handful of dour church ladies I've come across, weddings are tremendously happy events. But let's face it: We watch NASCAR for the crashes, despite our protestations to the contrary, and we follow celebrity romances so that we can get to the celebrity breakups.

And, of course, it would be overly simplistic to single out mothers and daughters as the source of all wedding drama, my favorite fake Freud quotation notwithstanding: "If it's not one thing, it's your mother." More often than not, the drama that we all expect to see played out at weddings is just a byproduct of the bridal-industrial complex, a perfectly evocative moniker bequeathed to me by a bride many years ago.

Weddings long ago migrated from traditional daytime affairs -- where the men looked dashing in their morning coats, the women had dresses with (gasp!) straps, and the nonstop giggling of flower girls could be heard wafting though the air -- into lavish evening extravaganzas, where children are not even invited. They've gone from the simplicity (and, to be fair, dullness) of the "chicken or the beef?" into menus that boast medallions of veal with a port peppercorn reduction. Today's weddings have price tags the size of a small mortgage (something for which I clearly share responsibility), time schedules that would make a railroad proud, golf outings, spa retreats and 19-seat minibuses taking bridal parties on magical mystery tours around Washington. Things have gotten so bloated that I was actually taken aback when a bride once said to me, "I'm so excited to be marrying Derek today."

Between the countless reality shows with names such as "The Real Wedding Crashers" and "Bridezillas," (Episode 10: When Kristina's sisters show up late for a nail appointment, the bride is furious!), it's no wonder people focus on the negative -- or bizarre, or just irritating -- aspects of weddings. The myriad wedding magazines on the newsstands, and the thousands of wedding blogs, don't help much. Consider this easy-to-follow advice from aboutWeddings.com: "Transition of color in the wedding is 'hot.' The color and theme of a wedding is first seen with the save-the-date card. At the ceremony, the colors are different than what was seen in the save-the-date card/invitation. At the cocktail reception, the colors are different from the ceremony. At the dinner reception, the colors are a combination of all colors previously seen. More than just two colors and no matchy-matchy!"

See? Simple.

Luckily, that kind of silliness isn't ever enough to trump the genuine moments of love and the celebrations of great happiness I'm often privileged to witness: I cried like a baby when a 5-year-old flower girl, blinded by the brain tumor growing inside her head, was led down the aisle by the little ring bearer at St. Aloysius years ago. But I must admit that the moment is annoyingly linked in my memory with the posting, around that same time, on theknot.com, a wedding message board ("Driving Brides Crazy Since 1996!"), by a bride who sought advice on what to do about one of her bridesmaids who, as a result of a worsening muscular disease, was now in a wheelchair, something that would potentially ruin her wedding photos.

(The Knot can be a great source of amusement. My sister, Jennifer, a "Knottie" herself, once related to me an e-mail exchange she had with a woman who had been told, as a Jew, not to use Mendelssohn's "Wedding March," because the composer had famously converted from Judaism. She had instead settled on Bach's "Jesu, Joy of Man's Desiring." When Jennifer, with tongue in cheek, suggested that perhaps -- just perhaps -- that one wasn't exactly kosher either, the woman responded, "Why? It's about Jesu, not Jesus!")

At first I was afraid I was petrified/

Kept thinkin' I could never live without

you by my side.

As I sat across from Joel on that June night, I realized the song I had come to hate so much, the song that, perhaps more than any other, constantly reminds me that I have become a wedding photographer, shooting the same thing week in and week out, was now racing through my groggy brain. This time, though, it was reminding me of why I am a wedding photographer. My years of downplaying what I did for a living seemed silly as I sat on Joel's sofa. How bad could it be to be around people who are desperately in love, all the while surrounded by friends and family who love them desperately. Yeah, big deal, they all go crazy when "I Will Survive" or "YMCA" starts playing, but they haven't heard those songs thousands of times; I have. And when I think that I could be tallying billable hours, or working in a cubicle in E Ring, or selling widgets, I think my life is pretty darn okay.

Just the other day, I received an e-mail from a photographer looking for an internship. His short note almost brought me to tears: "I come from Sarajevo, Bosnia, and my life has put me though many challenges. I am saying this because I have had the chance to see the worst in humans and was lucky enough to survive it. Since then, I have made it my goal to help people record their happiest moments, because those moments are rare and precious, and one never has too many of them."

I kept Joel company for hours, long into the next morning, information coming in very slowly, and me, still in my sweaty wedding clothes, nodding off occasionally. Around 4:30 a.m., the phone rang, and I could hear the voice through the receiver telling my neighbor and friend that the woman he had been married to for 55 years didn't make it.

I felt so out of place, so not the person who should have been there at that terrible moment. But looking back, two years later, it almost seems as if Eileen was just being her usual giving self, not just allowing me to see how much she was adored, but allowing me to see marriage in its barest and most naked form. For nine hours that day -- nine years, really -- I had watched a marriage begin, and, now, for nine hours, I would watch one end. I wanted to turn away as Joel shook uncontrollably. I tried so hard to soothe him, but I knew there was nothing I could really say. Though I was in the presence of profound loss, all I could feel was love. This wasn't about linens and party favors, or caviar stations and big bands. There were no toasts and no blessings, no Bible readings, no clanging gongs or blaring trumpets. At long last, I was seeing the embodiment of marriage itself, the very reason man and woman have been wed from the beginning of time. True love.

Something else floated through my brain, this time decidedly more literary than Gloria Gaynor. In my days as an English major, some 20 years ago, the book that had the most profound effect on me was Thomas Wolfe's Look Homeward, Angel, a tattered paperback edition of which is never far from my grasp. Now I could hear my favorite line, the book's second sentence, coming through: "Each of us is all the sums he has not counted. Subtract us into nakedness and night again, and you shall see begin in Crete four thousand years ago the love that ended yesterday in Texas."

It was 8 a.m. when the little cellphone in my pocket began to vibrate. My wife was calling, and I told her the news. I gave Joel a hug, grabbed my jacket and my cameras, and walked across the street and into my house, where, unable to sleep, I went downstairs and began to download, with newfound respect, memory cards from the previous night's wedding.

Matt Mendelsohn is a photographer based in Arlington. He can be reached at matt@mattmendelsohn.com.

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Yet another Thiller dance Video

OK, I Know I've posted a thriller video before from a wedding(I think)but this is so funny! This is a group of prisoners from the Philippines doing the thriller dance. I got this from Liana's Blog and I just needed to repost. The one playing MJ's girlfriend cracks me up.


Saturday, August 25, 2007

Dog Whisperer

Ok you are probably like, What! Dog Whisperer. While it all started a few weeks ago when a very sweet person by the Jen somehow became one of our friends on our Myspace. She tried so hard to help Kate out in getting a Bagpiper for my grandfather's B-day with out even knowing us. While Jen is really into photography and has a good eye for it. She was freaking about a gig she has coming up in the near future and has just changed over to digital. Jen has shoot weddings as a second shooter for other photographers but they refused to teach her. I messaged her and invited her along to a small wedding I was shooting last week, I gave her a crash course on her top LCD and explained the buttons(I hope I didn't hurt your head). While Jen came along and did great job. The day after the wedding I showed her how to import into Lightroom. While we were doing this Kate and I learned Jen knows her stuff about dogs (that's where the Dog Whisperer thing came in) and she said she will help us out with training. How cool!

Here is a self portrait of us at the wedding

Lissa and Jason "Into the Woods"

Last week we shot a wedding at Camp Kiwanee in Hanson, MA. The camp was a girls camp were Lissa went when she was a kid. Now the camp has been turned into a function hall, how cool is that, Lissa got married where she had so many memories as a kid and now made a new memory as she starts her life with her husband Jason.
If you would like to see the rest of the photos head over to Pictage and sign up to see them when they are released.

Sorry I had to remove the slide show

Thursday, August 23, 2007

News from the Darkside

While, the Rumors were true. Nikon released the D3 with a full frame senor and the d300 at a press conference earlier today. All the info is up on Nikon's site. The D3 is going to have a full frame 12.1 CMOS sensor and it has a normal ISO range of 200-6400 in 1/3 step increments, and an extended ISO range of ISO 100 - 25,600. I know alot of people are like WHAT? while this camera rocks and can shoot in low light(Church light and dark reception halls with little to no flash) There is so much more but you don't want to hear me go on about this so check out the specs below it you want more info go to.

Check back tomorrow I'll have some photos from last weeks wedding.

http://www.e-fotografija.si/templates/?a=1090&z=93

D3: http://www.robgalbraith.com/bins/content_p...cid=7-8742-9083

D300: http://www.robgalbraith.com/bins/content_p...cid=7-8742-9084




* A Nikon-original 12.1-megapixel FX-format (23.9 x 36mm) CMOS sensor, in concert with Nikon’s exclusive Expeed digital image processing technologies, delivers breathtakingly rich image quality and greater handling speed, while also reducing noise to unprecedented levels, even high ISOs.
* Continuous shooting at up to 9 frames-per-second at full FX resolution eliminates the image quality issues that face so many low-light sports shooters.
* The 3.0-inch Super Density 920,000-dot VGA Color Monitor with 170-degree wide-angle viewing makes possible even more critical image review.
* Nikon’s exclusive Scene Recognition System, with an enhanced 1,005-pixel 3D Color Matrix Metering II, provides even more intelligent light metering capabilities, along with smarter white balance detection and faster and more accurate AF performance.
* Nikon's self-diagnostic shutter system, tested to 300,000 cycles, is a clear indicator of advanced engineering and durable construction.
* 2 LiveView Shooting Modes are just one of the D3’s features that support unmatched versatility.
* Available November 2007






They Also have a D300

* A new 12.3-megapixel DX-Format CMOS Sensor, in concert with Nikon’s exclusive EXPEED digital image processing technologies, advances handling speed while making possible even greater DX-format image quality.
* Continuous shooting at up to 6 frames-per-second, and up to 8 frames-per-second with the new MB-D10 High-Speed battery grip, makes the D300 a powerful performer in a variety of shooting disciplines.
* The 3.0-inch Super Density 920,000-dot VGA Color Monitor with 170-degree wide-angle viewing makes possible even more critical image review.
* Nikon’s exclusive Scene Recognition System, with an improved 1,005-pixel 3D Color Matrix Metering II, provides even more intelligent light metering capabilities, along with smarter white balance detection and faster and more accurate AF performance.
* A new Dynamic Integrated Dust Reduction System stands guard against dust-born image degradation.
* 2 LiveView Shooting Modes are just one of the D300’s features that support unmatched versatility.
* Available November 2007

Monday, August 13, 2007

John and Brinda's Highlight Video

Here is a highlight video from a wedding Chris shot a few weeks ago. Luis edited the final project seen below. I can't wait to see the final DVD.

Erin and Chris August 11th 2007

Kate and I shot a great wedding this past weekend at The Auburn Audubon Center in Auburn NH. Thank you sooooo much Erin and Chris for letting us be part of your day, people like you make us love what we do even more, I hope you like your photos.

If anyone would like to register to see all the photos online go to http://www.pictage.com/349394 If you register you will receive a coupon and an email when they are up.

Sunday, August 12, 2007

Awesome!!!!!!!!

This is an awesome weekend, I'm so excited. I shot an amazing wedding on Saturday and had so much fun as always. I will have a few photos in a slide show tomorrow night so check back.

Not only did I shoot a great wedding but take a look at these numbers below. 1,923 visits that's
awesome! I know it's no million but I've only been blogging since the last week in March and started tracking the numbers on March 31st, that's only 4 months. I'm hoping everyone visiting to see the slide show from this weekend puts us over 2000 visits and we will definitely be over 4000 pageviews. So, to all of you past the word along, the show will be up soon.

Thanks so much everyone.

1,923 Visits (not for long)

2.08 Pages/Visit
3,995 Pageviews
00:07:13 Avg. Time on Site
47.27% % New Visits

Thursday, August 09, 2007

Learning

The one thing that everyone must do, in any industry is learn. To get anywhere you must learn and keep learning no matter what. You don't always need to go and get a formal education, you can learn by read books, surfing the net, going to seminars, or better yet watch videos.
I've followed a photographer from CA by the name of Joe Photo for a long time now and feel I need to thank him for all I have learned(both photography stuff and much more)just by checking his blog. Joe has a new video out that follows him around as he shoots weddings and he did commentary explaining what he was doing. I can't go out and get this just yet but I will be putting it on a wish list for Xmas and when I do get it I will post again and let you know what I think(I know I'll love it)

Check out the trailer







Stephanie's Slide Show











We're back

Ok, everyone I'm sorry I haven't done any posting in a while. The past week I was up in New Hampshire with the fam along with my Mother older bro, his wife and their kids. My brother and his family moved down to Virgina for a job and came up to hang out. Our 2 girls had a great time seeing their cousins and can't wait to do it again. We all spent sometime, at the beach, out moose hunting(not really hunting just looking) and a day at Santas Village.
While up in NH I had sometime to get a good amount of work done so check out the Senior Session Slide Show in my next post.

Here is a couple of photos from the point shoot from the week.

Me and the kids on the Rudolph Merry go Round

Ya those are really Reindeer

Saturday, July 28, 2007

Stephanie 2008

The other night we did a Senior Session way out on the private section of Duxbury Beach for of Stephanie along with her boyfriend. Everything went well except the minor run in with the law(Harbor Master) We were pulled over out on the dirt road along the beach cause someone waved us past them and another car told the Harbor Master we pasted the car(they were pulling over and waved us past). After that was cleared up we went out and got some great photos. Here is the multi-shot, the slideshow is coming.

Thursday, July 26, 2007

My little Mozart.

So if any of you follow Gary Fong a well know wedding photographer, inventor, blogger... You probably have seen his video posts of him playing the piano, they are great but check out my little ones they rock!

Wednesday, July 25, 2007

Shooting for a good cause

I know I've been a blog slacker, so here is what I've been up too.
Friday Kate and I went out and shot for a great cause, A fund raiser for The Doug Flutie Foundation down in Plymouth. The Flutie Foundation aids financially disadvantaged families who need assistance in caring for their children with autism. The fund raiser was put on by Brait Builds, who I have worked for before(Check out the logo below, yours truly did that a few years back) The fund raiser went great, I don't know the amount raised but I do know that they had a record year with over 300 people there for a day of golf. I got to drive a golf cart :]

Here's Flutie Kate and I in the Golf Cart :D
LOOK THE FEDS STUDIO and the Braits logo I did COOL

Mike 2008 Slideshow

Last week we did a session with Mike a Senior over at Braintree. We had a great time, except the little group of disturbance over on the wall. Mike you still did great with the girls looking on. Here is the showit.












Saturday, July 21, 2007

Trash the Dress in the news

If you haven't heard about it yet but Trashin' the Dress is one of the newest things to hit the wedding photography scene in the past few years and now it's seeing some mainstream attention. Both CNN and Good Morning America did a story on this, check them out.
There is a website by the name trashthedress.com but there is only one photographer in Massachusetts listed on their site I think The Feds Studio needs to represent. If you are interested let me know and we'll work something out and have a good time I promise ; )
You don't have to go as far as the Brides in the videos but remember there is always dry cleaning and do you really think your daughter will wear your dress? You would love to think so and I hope one of my daughter do since I spent soooooo much on my wife's dress(I don't know the exact amount, I don't want to) I've see some use their mother's dress as a tapestry on an arbor or a piece of the dress as something old, but never as their own dress.
Leave a comment and lets us know what you think about the videos or if you would like to try.





Wednesday, July 18, 2007

SO FUNNY! WHICH DO YOU OWN?



I got this from Perspective Eye. Check them out! Great pics!

Keep Up The Good Work.

Chris (one of our videographA's) taped a wedding this past weekend. It was an Indian wedding with plenty of cultural touches, including a night of Henna. Followed by a parade on the wedding day. I can't wait to see this video. I hear the reception was a PARTY! I just received a comment from the wedding planner for the wedding, Shelley. She said, "Chris was great. Very friendly, helpful and punctual." Keep up the good work Chris! Shelley specializes in Indian weddings and has a boutique in Boston. Check her out! Shelley Chhabra. Hopefully we'll be doing more work with her soon!

Tuesday, July 17, 2007

2008 Mike

Here's one of the shots from Mike's session yesterday. I'm off to work so here you go.

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

2008 Toni

So here is a slide show of our first official Senior Session and we will have many more in the future. Toni contacted us since no other photographer she spoke with would go out to the Forts in Hull. Of coarse we will go as all of our Senior Sessions are going to be on location with a style different to most Photographers in this area. Now these aren't your typical Senior photos, and we might not be for everyone but if this is what you like hit us up.

A fog was starting to roll in as Kate and I pulled up to the Forts. Toni was there waiting with her Dad and younger bother. We started off with the multi of Toni as seen in the last post. Through out the shoot we had some help from Toni's brother who was exploring the forts trying to find different place to shoot, till a piece of styrofoam moved on it's own(I had to check I out for myself) Toni rocked the camera and had a good time. check out the show and let me know what you think.



Tuesday, July 10, 2007

The Project

Here are 2 teaser links to a movie "The Project" my brother TJ 1st Assistant Director for one of our friends Ryan. They shot the movie out in NY in the early spring, I'll let you know when it's out and where you can see it so check back.

Here are the links they are alittle graphic so not for young eyes, R rated
The video on YouTube is not HiRes I'll post the link to Renart's website when it is up there.

The Project Teaser 1

The Project Teaser 2

Blogathon

David Hessemer is running a blogathon today for Through Their Eyes Africa. David Hessemer along with a group of photographers are heading to Africa next year to help the people and teaching them to take photographs(how cool) The photos they take will be formed into a traveling exhibit.

Go to www.throughtheireyesafrica.typepad.com where you can participate in the blogathon and donate.

You can read more about the project at the
Through Their Eyes Website

Monday, July 09, 2007

Senior Session

Today Kate and I had the chance to shoot Toni, a senior over at Braintree High. Toni rocked, she did awesome and had a great time(at least I hope) We got some help from both her dad and brother, I think they enjoyed hanging out too.
This is the start of seniors for us and we got some awesome shots. Here is a shot or should I say a few from this evening. Check back later I'll post the slide show soon.

Saturday, July 07, 2007

Live what you Love

This speech by Steve Jobs is great the second story is something I'm trying to start in my own life and I wish the same for everyone out there. I know the video is alittle long but if you have the time I think it's worth a look.

Wednesday, July 04, 2007

Happy 4th Of July

So, as many Americans, we went to see the local fireworks. Because the kids are a little scared of the loud boom, we stay far away from the launching site. This year we decided to stay in the parking lot across from the launching site. Besides softening the boom sound, we figured that we would beat much of the traffic too. Hey we would be the first to our car. But as you will see, there is a reason why no one stays in parking lots for fireworks!!!!! Hey whose ever car this is.... nice job! Please, please, please do not set your car alarm if you are parking within 5 miles of fireworks. DUH! But other than the idiocy of others, we still had a great time. We hope you did too! Happy B-day America!


Tuesday, July 03, 2007

The Digits

The Feds Studio is still under construction so I just want to keep everyone up to date and I will continue to do so.

As you all see the Blog has changed and that was just the start(cause it was the easiest:)) A new website is coming so all the newer photos will continue to be posted here so keep checking back.

The Feds Studio now has a new Phone Number so take it down and tell your friends that are getting married or going into their senior year.

781.353.6924 Love that Vonage great prices and voicemail we can get on our email, cool.

And if you didn't have our new email addresses take these down and do the same as above.

james@thefedsstudio.com
kate@thefedsstudio.com
seniors@thefedsstudio.com

Monday, July 02, 2007

I Love Kate

That right I love my wife so much and I thought I should let everyone know. Today is our anniversary wow we have been married for 3 years and been a couple for over 10 years now. We were high school sweethearts and she is still my sweetheart. I love you so much sweetie, your the best. (()):**

Thursday, June 28, 2007

Kates Senior Photos AGAIN!!!

Today because of possible t-storms in the afternoon we postponed the Senior photo shoot at Braintree High. Instead I got to shoot some hot chick (My Wife) earlier in the morning. Here are a few of the shots, check them out.

Get Free



David Jay has just released the Freedom Club earlier today. It looks like it's going to be a great place for photographers to learn, share and grow their businesses. Head on over and check it out. Thanks DJ this looks like it will be a winner .

photographik MA photographers