Looking for some destination wedding photographers

I'm slowly working on a side/pet project and I'm looking for a few photographers who have experience shooting destination weddings in California or Hawaii (experience is the key word, not just a desire to do it).

If this is you (or someone you know), please get in touch with me via email (erik-dot-dungan-at-gmail-dot-come). If you know of similar vendors (DJs, florists, cake builders, etc.) even better.

Thanks.

It aint Martha Stewart Living, but it's a start

If you happen to be in Central Oregon–which I must admit, I don't know the official boundary of–you can currently find some of my images in 2 local magazines. I've got some garden images in the current issue of Gusto, our local foodie mag. I also have an editorial spread in True North, a new parenting magazine.

Anyway, pick one up. They're good mags, despite having my pictures in them. If you're in Bend, they're in just about every store in town.

True_north

My Santa Barbara Destination Wedding

Ceremony: Santa Barbara Courthouse Mural Room

Reception: Stella Mare's

Preparations at: The Eagle Inn

I recently had the pleasure of shooting Nicole and Nohel's wedding in Santa Barbara, California. Pretty much everything was turning up Dungan that weekend. The weather was perfect. Everyone looked amazing. The ceremony and reception venues were tip-top. I rented a Canon 14mm lens. Budget upgraded my rental car to an SUV for free. (Apparently when gas in LA is $4.60 a gallon, everyone rents economy cars.) I could go on-but you'd rather see pictures.

Here's a few of my favorite images of the day.

bride getting ready at the eagle inn in santa barbara

bride putting on her dress

the bride's bouquet

portrait of the bride, nicole, at the eagle inn

black and white portrait of the bride

ceremony at the santa barbara courthouse mural room

ceremony

portrait of the groomsmen on the courthouse grounds

portrait of the bride and groom on the santa barbara courthouse lawn

bride and groom dancing at stella mares in santa barbara

black and white image of the bride and groom

Thanks for visiting. 2 down, 2 to go for 2008.

Kate
T-Minus 7 Days

My Smoothies are Better than Yours

I never brag about my photography or my cooking–I can hold my own in both arenas, but I have a long way to go and I'm surrounded by craftsmen whose talent far exceeds mine (espcially with photography).

However, one area in which I know no equal is smoothie making. Breakfast smoothies. Fruit smoothies. Protein smoothies. You name it, I dominate it. My wife and daughter have tried to imitate, but they just don't have the magic touch.

Someday, I'll share some of my favorite smoothie recipes here. Until then, feast your eyes on this.

Happy Fathers Day to all you dads out there.

Jessica
Practicing With My Lights: Jessica

Speaking of Backups ...

Recently, I've been testing new backup procedures on one of our BIG Folio servers. Its working quite well so far. For those of you who have dedicated servers, large hosting accounts, or use *nix-based servers in your studio, this might be interesting. In fact, with some tweaking, this could apply to Mac users as well.

Most hosting providers will offer a tape-based or managed backup as an option with a dedicated server. While its essential, it can also get expensive and chew up a lot of bandwidth. Here are some DIY alternatives. Be warned, these techniques can get a bit geeky and I take not responsibility if you blow up your server.

Database backups

Our sites–and many other photography sites/tools/blogs–rely on MySQL databases to store vital information. Here is a nice tutorial on dumping your MySQL database daily (via cron) and then syncing it to a remote location (via rsync).

File backups

As I mentioned in my previous post, I backup high-res JPEGs of all my photography to an Amazon S3 account. Well, there is a sweet little Ruby script called s3sync which basically mirrors the functionality of rsync but will sync files to an S3 bucket instead of a remote server. Using this forum thread and this article, I was able to install Ruby 1.8.6 and s3sync on a RedHat Linux server. I then wrote a small shell script which looped through all the sites on the server and synced each one to an S3 account. The initial sync takes quite a while, but subsequent syncs are fast (since only changed files are transferred).

The great thing is, you can access files backed up in this manner FAST. Some FTP clients like Transmit support S3 connections, allowing you instant access to your S3 buckets. No more waiting for your hosting company to restore a backed-up folder.

I'm going to explore backing up a Mac using this method and report my results. It should be fairly straightforward since Macs now come with Ruby pre-installed.

Anyway, there you have it. Some nice "roll your own" backup methods for linux-based dedicated servers. YMMV, natch.

Forward in time