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The blog of Brooklyn, New York based wedding photographer Craig Warga. You'll find a few fun wedding pictures here.

Jeanne and Matthew at Brecknock Hall

 

Jeanne and Matthew's wedding at Brecknock Hall out in Long Island wine country on the North Fork was one of the most beautiful, emotion filled weddings I've ever seen. The setting, the people, the event.... all lined up for a day that I'm sure these families will remember, and cherish for the rest of their lives. This was really one of the closer, stronger families I've ever met and worked with, and it was truly an honor to do so. Congratulations to Jeanne and Matthew!

 

Lauren & Rich at the Emerson Spa, Phoenicia, NY

Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com) I've known Rich for about 8 years from my other life as a photojournalist. He's one of the finest writers I've had the pleasure to work with and also one of the guys who just "gets" what I do, helping me to do my job better in the process. Needless to say when he asked me to shoot his wedding I was completely humbled, and excited. When I met his fiancé Lauren over dinner I knew we'd all have a fun day together... and we ended up having a blast.

 

They picked out the Emerson Spa and Resort in the Catskill Mountains and the area was stunning. I know the area quite well from years of camping trips in the region and couldn't wait to make pictures in those surroundings. Getting the chance to shoot the two of them on the banks of the Esopus River at sunset was all a photographer could ask for, and frankly, with surroundings like that, a monkey could take a good picture! And another note for the books... not much else looks as romantic as barefoot in a creek in a wedding dress. Winning combination!

 

Congratulations to Lauren and Rich!Photographed by New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed by New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed by New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed by New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed by New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed by New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed by New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed by New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed by New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed by New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)Photographed By New York Based Wedding Photographer Craig Warga (www.CraigWargaWeddings.com)

Gotham Hall Wedding

Meredith and Stephen were an amazing couple to work with and their wedding day at Gotham Hall was absolutely beautiful. What makes it even more amazing was they planned the whole New York City wedding from the West Coast. Now that's impressive!! (And something I completely sympathize with since my wife and I planned a Tokyo wedding from NYC). Congratulations to Meredith and Stephen!

 

Sunset in Sag Harbor

I remember when I first started as a photographer how I would look at sunset photos and say, "what's so great about that? Anybody could take a good picture of a sunset. Come on! It's a bit cheesy!" Now as an older, wiser, seasoned and salty photographer I realize there is "cheesy bad" and "cheesy GOOD LORD THAT'S AWESOME!!!!" I thought these photos that my colleague Ron and I got at Angela and Eric's wedding at East Hampton Point definitely fall into the latter category. Congratulations Angela and Eric!  

Fear of Flying

Some days my job is fun. Some days its really hard work. Once in a while it can be a bit scary. Rarely is it all three at once, but when it is I know at least I'll have a good story to tell. I was assigned by my paper to do arial photos of the New York City Marathon as it's runners crossed the Verrazano Bridge. It's such a great New York moment and deserves every bit of effort and preparation you can put into it to do something fresh. Getting to fly for it was something I'd never done and was really excited about it.

Now, one thing you learn in photo school, is your lens is only as good as the worst piece of glass on it. They tell you that so you buy a high quality filter to protect the front of a lens. After all, what good is it if your spend $2,000 on a lens and then put a $5 filter made of window glass on the front of it? Makes sense, right? Well, that same principle can be applied to something like a helicopter's window glass; If you can avoid it, you don't want to shoot through it. Now, whoever designs these helicopters normally doesn't put in roll down windows, so there's one obvious solution... Just take the whole door off.

When I walked onto the runway at Westchester County airport and saw the helicopter I would be flying in I was a bit taken aback by the size of it, or the lack thereof. Imagine a VW Bug with a propeller. Now, as you're taking off, imagine sitting in the backseat of said VW Bug and someone has taken the whole door off of it. There's you in your seat belt (not a harness mind you, but a seat belt) the open air, and 1,500 feet down to the Hudson river below. This might be a good time to mention I'm not wild about heights either.

After about a 20 minute flight past Manhattan (absolutely beautiful by the way) we got to the airspace around the bridge where there were 8 other helicopters all buzzing around the bridge looking for the best angle like us. My new helicopter pilot has never flown for these big New York news events before and was freaking out about the proximity of all the other helicopters. He enlisted me to help him as a spotter to find the other helicopters so we didn't crash into one another. I'm not the biggest wimp in the world but it is a bit scary when your pilot starts shouting, "Where'd the red one go!? I lost the red one! He was really close. Where is he?" At this point I'm not too reassured of my pilot's abilties and probably not focusing on the actual photography that much.

Now, back to imagining the backseat of that VW Bug with the door ripped off. Sometimes, shooting straight down to the ground can make a really cool picture in the way it flattens out the subject and makes for a very graphic, 2 dimensional picture, the effect can be quite nice. To do that picture, you have to bank the helicopter at at angle so you can hang out the window and shoot straight down on the crowds as they go across the bridge. 1000 feet up, one hand on your camera, the other hand on the most solid object you can find in the helicopter, and your heart firmly planted in your throat. Good times.

In the end the shoot went well. I got some pictures that I really liked and a good variety of different photos for my editors. They were really happy with the results, and so was I. But not nearly as happy as I was to have my feet back on the ground.