HAVE FUN AT AVENCAS BEACH IN PAREDE by THE WEDDING PHOTOGRAPHER IN LISBON
Beach photos of the bride and groom with their children after the wedding day
A photographic session, in the beach
When we go to do a photographic session, knowing the place is a great help for what we intend to do. It was what happened when I arrived at Avencas Beach, Parede, for a session with Ana, Rui, and his three kids. Two are on the beach, still moistening their feet, and another waiting to step on the sand one of these days, something he, or she, is indelibly condemned.
This is because I know that beach as I know my hands and it is a fantastic scenario to photograph but only when the tide is down. When this happens I have at my availability countless combinations to do photos. Upstanding, seated on those beautiful rocks, mirroring in the small lakes waiting for a vain princess with Cascais as a fantastic background. So the photographic cameras and lenses of the wedding photographer love this.
A family at its best, offering photographs
But it was a full tide. So I only can work in that small slice of sand where stubborn waves love to chase photographers not interested in getting wet feet and, as if an unsatisfied designer erased all that beach and only left that slice of sand, which ends just there and not let me pass to the other beach as usually crossed by the couples in love, especially in the sunset, done by generations.
Scratching my head about how I am solving this problem, suddenly I have in front of me people with easy communication with sand, waves, and the sun. So the problem was solved by himself, because this family transformed that slice of sand into the most beautiful beach in the world, with bonds, tenderness, and joy and with no difference between them and the water bubbles, the grains of sand, and kissing waves. At the end of the day sunlight, evolving them did the final touch.
I hope that my photos can show you what really happens in that little slice of sand. They did all the work and I wish that all those bonds never get lost. The wish of a wedding photographer.