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Anonymous
sup /p/

I recently got a canon 24-105 f/4 IS on the cheap from ebay ... well, "cheap", but still lots cheaper than retail price

allied to my 50mm f/1.4 and maybe a 80mm f/1.8 do you think I'd be set for wedding photography? given a rental extra camera, just in case anything goes really wrong... and maybe a friend to work as assistant :p

feel very tempted to concede to a friend's invitation to shoot her wedding... more worried about equipment redundancy than proper style, though.

any o/p/inions? thx
>> ac !!VPzQAxYPAMA
Sounds like a good setup to me.
>> Anonymous
>>55030
Do you have a flash? A really good flash? If you answer "yes, duh," You probably should be okay, though you should probably get some experience (read TFP) before asking for money for shots. If you don't have a good flash... might want to get some more practice, too.
>> Anonymous
What camera do you have?

If you're shooting the reception, too, you'll probably want a fast wide angle. A maximum aperture of f/4 won't cut it.

You probably will be fine with your 50mm, if you're shooting with a full-frame camera with no crop factor. If not, go find a cheap, fast, wide-angle prime.
>> Anonymous
>>55038
Well, duh. I have a speedlite 430, it's not the best, but it's more than enough to bounce off a normal ceiling. I can rent a more top of the line version, though, in case I'd need to bump light off further surfaces.

As for the money... I'm not thinking of charging anything, since it's a friend, maybe just a nominal fee, like gasoline fee :P she's quite comfortable with my style, and I could use the wedding portfolio, so it's win/win
>> Anonymous
>>55049
hmmm. good point. I'll look into that.
>> Anonymous
ooops forgot to mention it's an eos30d