About Me

This is what happens when a poet meets an artist. Alicia and Erin share the same love for documentary photography, Mary Ellen Mark, vintage photographs and are both Columbia College of Chicago photography Major Graduates. They combined their similar loves with their different ways of seeing the world to create a wedding photography style that uses both of their unique visions. We take our work very seriously because we know that our photos have to last a lifetime. you won't get the boring, "stand here and smile" wedding photos because we know our photos should be as unique and fun as you are. We put much consideration and care into our clients because they always become our friends. Their day is as unique and important to us because we choose to only shoot a select number of weddings per year and we want those weddings to be with people we connect and share our vision with. It is our pure passion and joy to be able to be a part of your love story, and to create poetry with your wedding day images.

Friday, February 11, 2011

that one time we launched our website.

Yesterday we did something we have been bragging for months about!
we had the launch of our Ryan _Project designed website!

for months we were telling clients about how spectacular our website designer is and how he has weekly pillow fights with Oprah.

We built him up quite a bit and he lived up to the hype and delivered.
He also makes spaghetti as well as he makes websites so Erin and I had the best night ever.
We have a lot of plans for making the website better and more "us" but we wanted something that fit us for the time being,  until we could put all the work into making a site that had all the bells and whistles we wanted. It will be really awesome to be able to send cleints to one place though now instead of having to send them to 5 different places to see our work.  between the beginning stages of our website being up and running, the delicious spaghetti and red velvet cake we would say the night was a success.



"we're a hoot!"

Many, many, thanks to Ryan for all of his hard work, creativity, kindness, dependability, hospitality by making us dinner and a website, and patience in dealing with two girls who have no idea how the internet works. We can't thank you enough, and we can't be more excited.

to see the new website go to

http://www.fstoppoetry.com/


Monday, February 7, 2011

Creativity.

In art it seems like one of those things you are “just born with.” I have come to realize that not everyone gets handed wild imaginations and that for the rest of us that aren’t struck with 8 brilliant ideas before breakfast, we can painstakingly learn the rules so we can figure out the best ways to break them.
I read somewhere that there is nothing new under the sun. And I believe this, everything we do as artists have already been done, but I love that Picasso said “bad artist copy, Good artists steal.”
I remember growing up I would get a hello kitty lunch box and then my annoying next door neighbor Bethany would do the same.  Or I would order a Chicken McNugget happy mean with a High C for lunch and then Bethany would do the same. This is infuriating even as an 8 year old.
Now that I am 24 it still feels just as infuriating and just as infantile. Not that what I do is too terribly creative, I envy the seemingly effortless creativity of a lot of my peers, but when you scrape to find a way of doing things and a visual voice and then the next week someone who has seen your work does the same- It can be awfully discouraging and even more annoying.
Erin and I have had many conversations about this. About branding, copying, stealing and honoring.
Plagiarism is so easy these days,

Why take the time to go on a journey of self discovery and struggle through writing a book that moves people when you can just regurgitate someone elses cool blog.
Why take the time to figure out who you are and what you think and how to convey that in your work when you can just compose your image the same way as someone else?
To quote cursive- art is hard.
And it’s a slippery slope that every artist faces: when to borrow from an inspiration and when to just rip it off completely.
I say for all of us artists out there lets do some soul searching. Lets ask why with our work.
Why do we make the work we do?
Why do we care about it?

Why is it important?
Why is this representational of us and of the subject and of the concept we are trying to convey.
Why do I have to make this work
Why should any one else care.
I bet if we all started looking at our work that way we would already be well on our way to being better artists and using visual language in our own words instead of eating someone elses.