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Why A Wedding Video?
No other medium can capture the sight, sounds and emotions of your once
in a lifetime day. Pictures are nice but they cannot help you relive and
experience the emotional essence of the day like a well produced wedding
video can. Imagine being able to see it all for the first time again:
the actual exchanging of vows and rings, laughter, hugs, dancing, toasts,
well wishes from friends and family whom you haven't seen for so long,
and much much more. You will also be able to share your treasured video
with loved ones who could not attend. Your wedding video is a priceless
family keepsake that even YOUR children will enjoy.
To the Bride & Groom to be: (a unique perspective on your
wedding video)
The year is 2055. This evening you celebrate your 50th wedding anniversary.
You are still as much in love with each other as you were the day you
wed. Your friends, children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren have
gathered from all over the country to honor you and to reminisce. How
wonderful the years have been to your marriage. How quickly they have
passed.
Your five children have spent months in preparation for this event. The
rented ballroom is beautifully decorated. Photographs and memorabilia
of your life together are displayed throughout the room. After dinner
and a toast, the highlight of the evening is presented on a large high
definition screen. It is your wedding video, which years ago had been
transferred permanently from tape to computer disc.
Your guests are awed as they view your stunning dress as you walked down
the isle with your father, the tear streaming down your cheek as you took
your lifelong vows together with your handsome groom, and the first of
many married kisses together. How young you both looked. Many of your
guests are overcome with emotion as they view you and your wedding party-
then in their youth or in their prime: Your parents, swinging to a 1950's
tune on the dance floor at your reception, Aunts, uncles, and members
of the wedding party sending best wishes in personal interviews, your
bridesmaid sister lunging successfully for your bouquet. Your guests roar
with laughter as your new husband proudly confides to his best man that
you will have no children, at least not right away. The sights and sounds
captured on your wedding day are priceless. This is the first time many
of your guests have seen the production that you have enjoyed many times
over the years.
As the disc ends you turn to your husband, sitting close to you in the
darkened room and whisper, "honey, I'm so glad we chose to get a quality
video of our wedding day." Your husband gently replies, "Yes, dear, but
I'm even more fortunate to have chosen you."
The year is 2005. I'm exhausted as I stand in front of my wedding booth
on the last day of a two day wedding show at the Fairgrounds. I am encouraged
that some brides have stopped and shown interest in having a professionally
produced wedding video, but many pass our booth and the booths of our
video competitors' with hardly a glance. A number of brides that do stop
balk at our prices, not realizing the endless hours of shooting and editing
and thousands of dollars in equipment necessary to produce excellent quality
wedding video. Most will rely on 'Uncle Charlie's' questionable video
skills to capture the most important day of their life. Other brides will
hire a low-end videographer as an afterthought after spending the rest
of their wedding budget on 'more important' vendors. The booths to my
right and to my left are jammed with brides eagerly shopping for a Florist,
a Baker, a Disc Jockey or a Photographer.
An elderly couple stops at my booth and watches intently for several minutes.
"We really wish our wedding many years ago was recorded, and with this
quality," say the saddened couple. "All we have left is just a few photos
and the memories." The show is nearly over. The last group of Brides rush
hurriedly pass my booth to visit other vendors. And I can't help but wonder
as I shut down the weddings displayed on my monitors- how will they be
celebrating their anniversary 20, 30 even 50years from now?
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