Looking at the differences between traditional marriage videography and today’s cinematic wedding videography better known as the ‘cinematography’, is like looking at the differences between a story and an epic story. You read a short fantasy story that you love, but only read a few times before you know back to front and bored. An epic story is a novel can be read again and again without tiring of it.
The same is true for the wedding film. Some people still opt for traditional wedding videography, but more and more people are opting for cinematic videography, for their wedding day to capture a memory for the most original, creative and emotional videos, that they can watch over and over again for the rest of their lives.
Traditional wedding videography, if done properly, will document your day for you in continuous light, beautifully lit shots marriage. Although there is nothing wrong with the traditional videography and can meet many people, it has the same heart and creativity that has a cinematic wedding videography but Wedding Cinematography explains the highlights of your perfect day and put them together to make a heartwarming story, as opposed to a step-by-step, monotonous account, which can get boring and repetitive as in traditional videography. When choosing a wedding videographer for your wedding video in the cinematic style, do proper research, checks the previous work of cinematographer and choose the one that speaks your emotions. For example, if you are looking for wedding videography, go online and find video highlights of the wedding film. This gives you an idea of how it works and videographer how to tell a story and let you know whether their style of Cinematography (aka-story) suits to you. If chosen wisely, your wedding videographer will create a fantastic wedding video film and photos for you and your partner that you will enjoy and cherish together while watching wedding video for the rest of your life.
Before the final mix of both worlds, watching a video of either the traditional wedding and a wedding video film.
Shot with bows, taps, steadicams, spider and carts in almost every situation a cameraman can find himself in.