By popular demand and only for brides, we are offering a special on our popular boudoir sessions for weddings booked during the month of March. Surprise the one you love with a unique wedding day gift--a 5"x5" hardcover book with 20 sexy images of you!
Location? Your home, our studio or at a sleek, contemporary hotel.
Regular price: $1150
March special: $950
Call now!
604-435-9581
jane@janeeatonhamilton.com
Friday, February 16, 2007
Wednesday, February 14, 2007
Monday, February 12, 2007
Trash the Dress! SPECIAL OFFER FOR BRIDES!
Everybody's been writing in to find out what the heck we mean when we saw we're giving away complimentary "trash the dress" sessions to couples that book 6 hour or more packages in this month of love, February.
Now here is a website that will show you exactly what we mean! Navigate to
www.trashthedress.wordpress.com
or
www.trashthedress.com
and you'll find many images and much discussion about these sessions. Trashing the dress doesn't mean ripping it intentionally, just not worrying about getting it dirty, and for that matter, not worrying about if it rips accidentally. Totally fun, and a great way to spend a day!
Brides don't really even have to use their wedding gowns for this--they can rustle up a cheap dress on eBay for something like $100 US. Made overseas, the dress will be shipped right to your house. Or you can do what a couple of my clients opted for right after their weddings, Vera Wang dresses be damned--run around the PNE Playland grounds playing pool, eating burgers, visiting cows, and riding in bumpercars. One of the pictures shows Kimberly holding up the bottom of her dress as if having second thoughts at seeing all the oil that had gotten on it, but she told me later that it came perfectly clean.
The truth is, I've been trying to convince all my brides to do "trash the dress" sessions ever since I started shooting weddings! They are just too much fun to be resisted, and the images they produce are awesome. I am really hoping someone will want to go underwater for some shots this summer, because I've got two underwater cameras just itching to catch a bride swimming.
Holy cow! Brackendale, BC!
Joy and I popped up to Brackendale over the weekend to witness the "winter home of the bald eagle" for ourselves. It's late in the season to have many eagle spottings, and indeed there were few to be seen, especially up close, but we loved the awesome scenery. Check it out. Isn't it fantastic?
I shot these with a Canon 100-400 f4.5-5.6 IS with a 1.4 extender, but I was frustrated with the lens all day long. I could have made some excellent photographs of eagles had I had another 100mm at my disposal; as it was, we were just too far away from them with the Squamish River between us.
If anyone gets a chance to go north and shoot in about two weeks when the buds are fully out, the colours will be amazing. Many of the trees are dripping with moss and backlit, it looks astonishing. I'll be back no matter what, trying again for the one great shot.
Friday, February 2, 2007
Katari Taiko performs in Vancouver
Katari Taiko has used two of my photographs on their poster for their upcoming concert! Here is their press release:
KATARI TAIKO, the first taiko group in Canada, presents an evening concert at the "Cultch" on Saturday, March 10th. This concert will feature the eight-member taiko ensemble plus a guest appearance by the virtuosic Vietnamese music duo Khac Chi. The program will feature an eclectic mix of traditional and contemporary pieces, showcasing Katari Taiko‚s energy, joy and passion. Khac Chi will perform the opening set and will collaborate with Katari Taiko in a grand finale piece.
Katari Taiko was formed in Vancouver in 1979 by a group of Asian Canadian activists inspired by performances by the Kodo Drummers of Japan and San Jose Taiko. They began learning and practicing on old tires in a community hall. Since then, they have built and acquired an impressive collection of taiko drums and percussion, on which they pound, tap and sing out their exuberant songs. Katari Taiko has built up an extensive repertoire of both traditional and modern pieces, including original compositions. Their performances incorporate vocals, martial arts, poetry and theatre. The synergy of the group, together with the visceral experience of the drumming, appeals to audiences of all ages and transcends cultural barriers.
Khac Chi features two of Vietnam‚s premiere performing artists, playing music of exquisite beauty. Their rare talents and superb musicianship have won them numerous awards for excellence, as well as many invitations to play across Canada, the US, Europe and Asia. Showcasing rare and unique musical instruments, made of bamboo by the mountain peoples of Vietnam, interspersed with the haunting melodies of Dan Bau (a one-string zither from northern Vietnam), Khac Chi takes you on an adventure in sound. Their concert performances are a rare insight into the sophistication of Vietnamese culture. Khac Chi has released three CDs: Moon Light in Vietnam, Spirit of Vietnam, and their most recent CD, The Sounds of Dan Bau released in 2006.
"Katari Taiko [showed] incredible discipline matched to exhilarating improvisation. The crowd wanted an encore!" Georgia Straight
www.kataritaiko.bc.ca / www.khacchi.com
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