Archive for February, 2010

Engagement Portraits~Brighton Beach

Tuesday, February 23rd, 2010

Jess and Chris are getting married this Weekend! They both live in Dubai but Chris is from the UK and Jess is from Melbourne and they’ve chosen to have their wedding in Melbourne. Yea, for Melbourne! They both have a fondness for the beach so it made sense that we do their engagement session photographs there. They also mentioned they wanted Melbourne icons to feature heavily in their photographs because of their special decision to have their wedding in Melbourne.

Despite the crazy winds, we managed to get some great shots. Jess’s sister, Rachael also came along “just for laughs”, but got roped into a few shots as well!

I am looking forward to photographing what promises to be their super fun and relaxed wedding this weekend!

portraits brighton Engagement Portraits~Brighton Beach

Engagement portraits ~ St Kilda Gardens

Thursday, February 11th, 2010

As soon as I met Toby and Cally I knew that I wanted to photograph their wedding. Our initial meeting was all laughs and lots of random flowing conversation. Needless to say I was pretty stoked when they picked me as their wedding photographer.

These photos are from their engagement photo session (e-session). An e-session is a really great way to get comfortable in front of the camera and talk about the style of photography you like. It’s also great for me, as I get to know you a little better and see how you and your partner connect with each other. The end result is that everyone feels really relaxed and comfortable in front of the camera on the wedding day.

Every wedding I photograph includes an engagement session like this one!

It was no big surprise that Cally and Toby were great to photograph. They are naturals! It might have something to do with their acting training; however there is no acting here – the connection between them is very real!

caly and toby Engagement portraits ~ St Kilda Gardens

Engagement portraits~ Edinburgh gardens

Monday, February 8th, 2010

I am a big fan of Melbourne. I grew up here, but I don’t think I really appreciated Melbourne until I went away for a while. Five years away can make you realise what you had and didn’t fully appreciate. It’s the small things. My friends in Queensland think that Melbourne weather is madness: Why would you live somewhere that gets so cold? Well, for starters, since we get so much dreary weather, we really go out and celebrate the warmth!

I noticed this on Sunday; the weather was balmy and it felt like everyone was out and about. Cafe tables on the sidewalk were buzzing and Edinburgh Gardens, where I did the photos for this shoot, was brimming with people playing cricket, walking dogs, having picnics and riding bikes. It was so nice to be out and about enjoying it with everyone.

Sarah-Jane and Adrian also have a fond affiliation with Melbourne and wanted it to play an important feature role in their wedding and engagement session photographs. Their first date was actually at Eureka Tower and Adrian proposed to Sarah- Jane in Edinburgh Gardens overlooking the city. Hence, it seemed fitting to do their engagement session at the Edinburgh Gardens!

edinburgh gardens Engagement portraits~ Edinburgh gardens

Images from The Big Issue feature (plus a few extra)

Friday, February 5th, 2010

These are the images (and a few extra from the same shoot) featured in The Big Issue magazine in which my husband (David Carroll) and I collaborated.  He supplied the editorial, I supplied the images. You can read the article and see the magazine here. The photographs were taken of the ‘Vincenzo Bellini’ band in Melbourne.

band photos Images from The Big Issue feature (plus a few extra)

Lizzy C Photography Big Issue Magazine Feature

Monday, February 1st, 2010

The current issue of The Big Issue features a four page spread of my photographs accompanying a story by David Carroll (my husband!) about joining an Italian marching band in Melbourne.  I’ve posted images of the magazine and the story, but still go out a buy a copy and support a really great initiative. The Big Issue magazine provides opportunities for homeless, marginalised and disadvantaged people to make positive changes in their lives. Authorised vendors buy the magazine for $2.50 from The Big Issue and sell it on the streets for $5, keeping the difference.

MG 3446 Lizzy C Photography Big Issue Magazine Feature

MG 3447 Lizzy C Photography Big Issue Magazine Feature

MG 3454 Lizzy C Photography Big Issue Magazine Feature

ROVING EYE/ SERIES BY ELIZABETH BULL

 Banding Together

 After years of playing in back rows in Queensland, David Carroll moved to Melbourne and, through the brotherhood of tuba players, broadened his musical and cultural experience through a banda musicale Italiana.

“You come back next week or we kill you!” These words, spoken in jest, made it clear to me that I was becoming a member of an unusual extended family. No, not a clandestine crime syndicate or an outlaw bikie gang but, rather, an Italian concert band named ‘Vincenzo Bellini’ in suburban Melbourne.

I had been playing tuba in bands since I was at primary school in regional Queensland. Having spent nearly two decades performing as both a professional and enthusiastic amateur I thought that I had ‘been there, done that’ as far as music was concerned.

The Bellini band proved I could not have been more wrong.

Within five minutes of sitting down in my customary seat in the back row I was offered a drink from an espresso cup. Assuming that this was a rite of passage into the band I quickly drank it. Instead of the espresso coffee that I was expecting, the cup contained grappa, an Italian concoction that tasted like a blend of plum juice and lighter-fluid.

It very quickly became clear that rehearsals were conducted in Italian. At one point the conductor threw his arms in the air and exclaimed “Mamma mia!” A fellow member of the brotherhood of tuba players, Renato, offered his services as an Italian–English translator. “That means that he’s unhappy with how we were playing,” he explained. I didn’t have the heart to tell Renato that the conductor’s passionate expression and hand gestures had already made his message pretty clear.

At this point the rehearsal gave way to one of the few things more important than music – espresso coffee and homemade Italian biscuits. It all seemed a million miles away from the rock-hard scones and cups of instant coffee served during band rehearsals back in Toowoomba.

During the break I started talking with some of the bandmembers – making a conscious effort to avoid slipping into my Marlon Brando impersonation – and discovered that, beneath their gruff exteriors, they were a wonderful, magnanimous group of people who seemed to take pleasure in leading me into their world. I left my first rehearsal with a stomach full of cake, a navy blue uniform that made me look like a tram conductor, a dozen words of Italian and plenty of you’ll-never-believe-what-happened stories.

For many weeks my newfound friends showed concern about me rehearsing on Fridays and in a Catholic church. They had assumed I was Jewish because my name is David. They couldn’t believe I was just David from Queensland. I had to be “something”, and at least have some exotic religious background. When I corrected their error, I was fondly given the nickname ‘Skip’. Despite the significant differences in age, appearance and cultural background I’ve never felt so welcome.

One night, my wife (Lizzy) and I accepted a dinner invitation from one of the bandmembers, Emi, a kind-hearted saxophone player who emigrated from Malta as a young man. As we sat in his living room, drinking his homemade wine, he leaned over to me and said: “David, you are here tonight for two reasons. The first reason: I like you. The second reason is because I, too, know what it is like to move far away from your home. It is an honour and a pleasure to return to you some of the hospitality that I received when I first arrived in Australia all those years ago.”

It was only then that I understood what really kept this group of people coming together to play music and drink every Friday night. When they are together, home probably doesn’t feel so far away.

These photos were taken by Elizabeth Bull, from Lizzy C Photography (lizzyc.com.au), one Sunday afternoon at a Catholic Feast Day in Melbourne. David Carroll is still playing in the Bellini band and has also added a Maltese and an additional Italian band to his gigging schedule.