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Mark Todd |
“What a perfect day,” my husband
announced as Saturday morning dawned gray and gloomy.
That afternoon our friend was to be married in Memorial
Church, and while I worried that it might rain on her wedding,
my husband was delighted by the cloudy sky, which he calls “the
mother of all Soft Boxes.” Married to a shutterbug,
I know what this means: the bride and groom may not be thrilled
by the overcast, but what’s a little haze when it means
there’ll be no harsh shadows in the photos?
As the ceremony approached, we walked from the Oval
to the church, passing enough bridal photo shoots to
warrant a group discount. To my hubby, the weather
was still unbeatable, and he couldn’t wait to snap
pictures of our 4-year-old in her pink flower-girl
dress. Still, his jaunty gait was remarkable, considering
he carried a camera bag weighing more than the average
ring bearer. In its 76
compartments, he kept various lenses,
filters and other accessories. All this gear could
pay down a summer house (and probably did for the owner of
B&H Photo),
so to throw off would-be thieves it’s all stowed in
an ordinary-looking backpack. No one would suspect
its owner is a photographer—unless,
of course, they’re tipped off by the tripod, too tall
to fit inside.
Part of me likes my husband’s hobby, which he took
up ostensibly to capture memories of our children. I’m
glad he found a pursuit that flawlessly meshes his interest
in art with his knack for all things technical. Still, I’m
not thrilled. Just because I like cute pictures of our kids,
do I really have to hear about f-stops and flash brackets?
Apparently, yes. In an earlier era, an amateur photographer
might have spent hours sequestered in a makeshift darkroom.
But gone are the days of husbands locking themselves in closets.
Today’s all-digital photographer has no fear of accidental
exposure, and my spouse relishes sharing with me every stage
of a print in the making. When he’s done snapping the
pictures, he retreats only so far as the computer next
to mine. While I write, he interrupts every few minutes,
asking me to assess his latest polishing of the pixels. “What
do you think of it now?” he asks. “I recalibrated
my monitor, burned in the edges and isolated all the radioactive
isotopes.” Or something like that.
When I ask why he keeps asking my opinion, he tells
me he trusts my judgment. Or, as he puts it, “You seem
to know what the average person likes.”
He never tires of honing his craft. For example, he’s
in Week 4 of Floral Photography, an online class that
teaches, among other things, how to clamp down a delicate
daisy so that it stays perfectly still while facing the camera.
There’s
homework each week, compelling my darling to bring
home flowers with uncharacteristic frequency. I’d be
delighted if I didn’t know that every rose, tulip and
hyacinth had been selected only with an eye to how it would
look under a macro lens.
When I express dismay that the flowers aren’t for me,
my love tells me that they’ll all be mine as soon as
he’s done with his assignment. “They’ll
still be fresh,” he assures me brightly. Which only
makes me want to open the aperture and head for it with the
nearest watering can.
It wasn’t always like this. Eight years ago—well
before he’d been bitten by the camera bug—I remember
arriving at the Quad to have our own wedding portraits taken.
That day, he had eyes only for me, and not for the official
photographer’s medium-format Hasselblad.
My friend’s nuptials, like mine, came off beautifully—all
tulle, calla lilies and heartfelt vows. But let’s face
it: the perfection of a wedding, with its months of planning,
lasts about as long as a clutch of orchids. That’s
why everyone brings cameras.
But if a wedding is about cut flowers, then marriage
itself is more like, well, a vegetable garden. So here’s
my wish for newlyweds: in addition to getting lovely
albums and frames for your wedding photos, may you also receive
a lifetime supply of Miracle-Gro.
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