Elke and Jan : A Terrible Weather Forecast Turns into a Golden Engagement Shoot

Weddings

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Jan stands behind Elke with his arm around her shoulder. She takes his hand in her hand and they are both smiling

There’s nothing quite as predictable as the unpredictable Dutch weather. Especially in Spring. Especially when you plan an engagement photoshoot at a historic watermill for golden hour like I planned with Elke and Jan.

Another predictable thing is that after a session, I spend the next few days sighing over how lovely my people are.

I’ve never considered myself overly emotional. I mean, my sisters and I used to laugh at my mom when she cried watching movies. I prided myself on never crying. I would read letters to editor at the local newspaper as an exercise in reading provocative opinions without reacting. What I’m saying is I’m practised and pretty even keel. But there’s something about obvious love and connection that just touches me deep in my soul and makes me sigh. Engagement photoshoots do that to me.

So while writing, I pause every few minutes to sigh and smile. And then I tell anyone near me, including the cat, how much I love engagement photo sessions.

Referred to me by another couple

Elke and Jan were referred to me by Britney & Djurhi, owners of Tweede Thuis restaurant in Nuenen. I loved photographing Britney and Djurhi’s wedding at the historic villa in Helmond last September. And it pleases me to no end knowing they’re referring me to other potential clients. That’s the highest compliment I can receive.

Black and white couple stands looking at each other in front of watermill

When Elke & Jan told me about their wedding planned for family and friends in the heart of Nuenen, I knew I wanted to be their photographer

An expat myself, I actually highly value a sense of place. So when Elke and Jan told me they would be married in the Van Goghkerkje, I loved the idea. There’s just something so personal and beautiful about keeping things local and centred on the people who matter most.

With the location of their wedding and celebration in mind, we brainstormed possible engagement photoshoot locations in the area. I like to schedule engagement shoots with Amy Harper couples at least a couple of months before the wedding date. But with Elke and Jan having chosen a wedding date of 15 May, I knew we needed to wait until the end of March to take an edge off the dreary late winter landscape. We decided to hold the session at two locations within our gemeente, the Collse watermill made famous by Vincent van Gogh, and the Kamerven in the Stiphoutse woods.

Wedding rings side by side on a stick with wildflower and ivy details around

Of course we also needed to keep an eye on the weather

Last year was the wettest winter on record, and many fields and forests still stand ankle deep in water that has nowhere else to go. I’d been keeping particular eye on the Kamerven. What is usually an open heath with grasses, heather, and a small pond or two had become a lake that filled the whole field and sent messengers out into the surrounding forest. Whilst this is impressive on nature’s part, it can cause problems with an engagement photoshoot.

We’d planned our photoshoot for golden hour as well, and as I saw how dark the skies remained around our photoshoot hour, I began to second guess myself on my timing. I’d used an app called The Photographer’s Ephemeris to help plan our session, but I still worried that if it was very overcast, I’d lose the natural light I love too quickly. News like hearing Eindhoven had broken its previous record for the number of rainy days in the past did little to assuage my nerves.

But to be perfectly honest, I always have a bit of nerves before a photoshoot. I’ve learned this is very normal for me and I even laugh about it, even while stressing. I guess knowing I get nervous about photoshoots just goes to show how unremarkably human I am and that I take my work seriously. So there I was a small nervous ball of stress worried about lighting, posing, and mud in the days leading up to the photoshoot.

A couple stand kissing at the end of a black watermill

And of course the dreaded text message: rain forecast

The text came from Elke: rain was forecast at the time when we’d planned to begin the engagement photoshoot at the Collse Watermolen. I do continue outdoor photoshoots in the rain, but I base it on the photoshoot itself and the comfort level of my couples and families. Having Elke text me about the weather let me know she would rather not have a rain shower featured in her engagement photoshoot.

And that is all I needed to know what I should do. I messaged her if we could possible move it to the next evening at the same time because the weather was forecast to be clear, or if she’d rather hold the photoshoot earlier in the day Monday. I should say that though the Dutch weather system is not 100% precise, it does give rain updates divided down to the hour and is reliable enough to make or break plans with.

Elke & Jan chose the rain delay, and switched their photoshoot to the following evening. This was also fine with me, since Tom was busy all of that Monday with a metrology assessment for RVA. Of course, then the forecasted rain didn’t even show up! To be fair, it had rained hard over the weekend and earlier in the day.

To the watermill

I always like to arrive early to a session or wedding. That way I can have a walk around, check what is happening with the ambient light, and be on the lookout for any amazing angles or perspectives that I can use during my active time photographing. I noticed straight away that the location was muddy, but it was still passable without becoming stuck. Fortunately, the water receded from mid-winter, when the whole area flooded.

But I thought of our second location and realised it would be just as muddy, if not muddier. It does have sandier portions, too, but I could imagine if you’d dressed for an engagement session, you’d hardly feel like sinking in mud.

Elke and Jan arrived on time, and Elke explained how after reading my Bridal Guide, they’d carefully chosen their outfits for their engagement photos. I was happy to hear that she’d actually read the guide & followed the instructions – which meant no moiré effect in the photos for me or for my couple. Moiré happens when a small scale pattern interferes with the camera sensor’s own pixel pattern and can cause strange waves, dots, patterns and colours to appear in the photos.

With a bit of creativity, reassurance, and timing, we caught golden hour and captured beautiful lasting memories together

One of the things I love about photography, besides the amazing people I meet and the love stories I get to capture, is the fact that it is so much more than showing up and pushing a button. I started posing Elke & Jan, and gauging their comfort level with posing and with me as their photographer. They were so easy to work with and such a joy to be with!

As we continued our photo session, I kept the changing light in mind as I set up positions and poses. With a mixed overcast sky, sometimes the sun would shine directly, and other times it would diffuse. Since I shoot in manual, this is something I constantly adapt to. In fact, Jan commented on how he’d never noticed how light can vary and dramatically impact images.

We came across a couple of other location challenges. We resolved them together with a bit of creativity, reassurance, and timing.

The creativity involved me pulling rotted wood around

When shooting on location, a photographer obviously has far less control over the environment than do studio photographers. As I’d mentioned before, the ground around the watermill was muddy. There was a bend in the river that both Elke and I wanted to photograph. I brainstormed a way to carefully pose them in the muddy bend without them sinking too far in. Then I spotted a pile of rotted wood and carefully hauled a couple of pieces over to make stable ground. In this way and working quickly, I was able to back up and capture the landscape photo I was composing.

I reassured my couple that I would edit out the piece of tissue paper someone left behind

I am careful with my assurances about what I can and cannot edit out of images. And I try to place my couples in positions that require as little post-processing in Photoshop as possible. I do this simply because it provides my couples with better images at less cost and stress. I’ll happily tidy a location up before a photoshoot because I want my couples to have their best possible experience.

But I do draw the line at wet toilet paper in the grass. I didn’t come equipped with a hazmat suit. Fortunately, I knew I didn’t even need to leave Lightroom to edit that bit of unfortunate litter out later. So I reassured Elke and Jan that the toilet paper wouldn’t be making their engagement photo album.

A couple stand facing each other and kissing in front of a stream and countryside by the Collse watermill
Elke chose the location of my favourite golden hour photo of our whole session

With only a short golden hour due to the overcast skies, we stayed at the Collse Watermill.

Keeping the light in mind, we decided we’d lose too much light heading to the Kamerven. And we knew portions of it would be unreachable with recent rainfall. So we chose to stay at the watermill. And this golden location. Elke was admiring the coppiced willow trees in the background and wondered how we could incorporate them into the photoshoot.

I said, ‘Don’t worry, and pose here, ‘ and then we had this beautiful lighting and location. I love the way the old fences frame Elke and Jan. Just know that from here, due to mud, water, and stinging nettle, we could walk no further! North Brabant will eventually dry out, but it won’t be this March.

Fortunately, by taking a rain delay, we were able to set this golden hour photoshoot in the light it deserved. We also avoided getting too muddy or wet. I enjoyed photographing Elke & Jan, and am looking forward to photographing their wedding at the Van Goghkerkje in May!

Liefs, Amy

A man stands behind a woman with his arm around her shoulder. She takes his hand in her hand and they are both smiling

Why is this post in English if I’m working in the Netherlands and can speak Dutch?

Firstly, because I respect the high level of English, many Dutch people can read and comprehend. Secondly, I’m an English-speaking expat myself. I make no pretence at being anything else – it’s a bit of Dutch directness if you will. And lastly, well, I’m just better in English. It is, after all, my mother tongue.


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