winter

Winter Family Portrait Session At Harriet Island On The Mississippi River In Downtown St. Paul, MN by Bradley Hanson

I photographed a portrait session for Lauren and her daughter a few days ago when it was about 25F degrees outside. My wife Jackie made some beautiful birth and family portraits for them last year, but she is taking a break from photography and referred the client to me. We started as the sun was setting, but in conjunction with nap time, it wasn’t ideal timing for her daughter, Austin, but we forged ahead. We met at the Lilydale Yacht club at the bottom of a steep hill. My plan was to make the photographs in the beautiful woods and bike path nearby. Once we got to the intended location, I realized the light was harsh, so I suggested Harriet Island, two miles toward downtown on the Mississippi River. We worked in short bursts, stopping to warm up in the car. I’m extremely pleased with the results, and so was Lauren, and grateful to my wife, Jackie, for the referral.

If you want to follow me on Instagram, I have two accounts: @bradleyhanson is my personal one, all square images from my iPhone since 2008. @bradleyhansonphotography is my professional portfolio, a mix of weddings, family and portraits, as well as black and white and color landscape images. If you are still reading this far, you’ve already figured out how to find my website…

I am a Minneapolis/Saint Paul, Minnesota based wedding photographer, specializing in documentary style weddings and Indian/Hindu weddings all over the world. To see more of my wedding work, click the wedding galleries under the portfolio heading. To inquire about my rates and availability, call me at 206-393-8292, email me at bradley@bradleyhanson.com or fill out the contact form (click the “contact” link on the top right above this paragraph).

Holiday Trip To Amsterdam, Rome and Naples by Bradley Hanson

Happy New Year!

Our son, Oliver is 6 and is obsessed with natural disasters like earthquakes, tornadoes, tsunamis and volcanoes. Of particular interest to him was the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius on the city of Pompeii in year 79. We love travel and decided to spend the holiday season traveling to Italy, focusing on Rome but spending a day in Amsterdam on the way. People seem to like to go to warmer spots in the winter, but Italy has been on our list for a while and we found a Black Friday deal we couldn’t pass. My wife also found tickets for a day tour of Pompeii with some time in nearby Naples.

Once we purchased tickets for the trip, we excitedly prepared by getting a couple travel books about Rome (Rick Steves book is the best), as well as watching Rick Steves 3 Rome episodes on PBS and watching as many documentaries about Rome and Pompeii as we could. We even watched Gladiator.

We arrived in Rome on Christmas day, which was, as expected, unusually quiet for the city. After a great dinner in our neighborhood with homemade pasta carbonara, a heavenly Italian red wine, a Neopolitan pizza and a perfect tiramisu, we found a huge neighborhood playground and Oliver immediately starting making friends. You can see a frame from this moment at the very last image below.

The weather was lovely and mild. The highs were in the upper 50s, but somehow with the sun and the euphoria that accompanies exotic new locations, it felt more like 70. The timing was perfect as we had been watching the weather in the weeks leading up to the trip and arrived just after a week of straight rain.

It was immediately apparent was that the light in Rome was unusually lovely. Like Los Angeles, but even softer. There is an amber haze that seems to flatter everything and mysteriously, there was no harsh noon light. It always looked like the sun was low in the sky like morning sunrise or evening sunset. We saw the sun every day and this pattern of beautiful light remained throughout the trip.

The next day we spent at the Colosseum, also walking around nearby neighborhoods. We had the best gelato we’ve ever had (tip: avoid the bright artificial colors and make sure it’s not whipped with air as it often is in the US) and some of the best espresso, pasta, pizza and wine in Rome and Naples.

Oliver is also a Lego addict and a great builder, so it was a happy find to see “I Love Lego” exhibit at Palazzo Bonaparte, one of the many art museums in Rome.

We tried one of the “hop on/hop off” bus tours, which was a painless way to get around the city and get one’s bearings, but we still walked an average of 8-9 miles a day. We checked out the Pantheon, the Vatican, the ruins of the Roman Forum, and countless other sites. While all major European cities are old and have a rich history, Rome is unique in the sheer scale and volume of it’s 2000+ year old sites, a remaining byproduct of a former empire that covered Europe and part of Asia and northern Africa.

The bus tour to Pompeii is 3 hours each way, with stops in the middle to stretch and get a snack and a local espresso. The tour guide on the bus, Valentina, was truly amazing and the other guide once we got to Pompeii, Giuseppe, was hilarious. Oliver was gathering “treasures” during the tour, finding old stones, actual pieces of ancient terra-cotta pottery and some of the 2000 year old volcanic ash from the Vesuvius eruption. Oliver showed his finds to the tour guide, who referred, sweetly, to Oliver as “the bambino” and confirmed that he did actually find a piece of terra cotta pottery. The tour guide comedically and strategically made the Pompeiian brothels kid-friendly an even told a few funny jokes for people paying attention. He would often punctuate his sentences with “Okey dokey artichokey.”

On the way back to Rome, we stopped in Naples for an hour or so. Naples is definitely a much denser city and requires greater fortitude and strong elbows to brave the heavier crowds. From the edge of town, Mt. Vesuvius is visible (you’ll see a color photo of this below).

I highly recommend both Rome and Amsterdam. Naples was good (and I do recommend Pompeii tour), but I’ve heard Florence or Venice might be a better pairing with Rome. PS. Wear comfortable shoes that are already broken in. It was a wonderful trip. I would have loved to spend more time in Amsterdam, but we were grateful for every minute.

In the spirit of traveling light, I brought one camera with one lens.

If you want to follow me on Instagram, I have two accounts: @bradleyhanson is my personal one, all square images from my iPhone since 2008. @bradleyhansonphotography is my professional portfolio, a mix of weddings, family and portraits, as well as black and white and color landscape images. If you are still reading this far, you’ve already figured out how to find my website…

Click the first image (or any) to view it at full size, which will also allow you to scroll through the entire gallery with the full frame, un-cropped images.

I am a Minneapolis, Minnesota based wedding photographer, specializing in documentary style weddings and Indian/Hindu weddings all over the world. To see more of my wedding work, click the wedding galleries under the portfolio heading. To inquire about my rates and availability, call me at 206-393-8292, email me at bradley@bradleyhanson.com or fill out the contact form (click the “contact” link on the top right above this paragraph).

Downtown Minneapolis Snowy Wedding In The Historic Lumber Exchange Building by Bradley Hanson

Illyas walks out on the roof of the Lumber Exchange Building as the snowstorm begins on March 9, 2019.

I’ve been photographing weddings for 20 years now. I’ve personally been to 600 of them. Yeah, I know. It’s gone by quickly since April 1999. Anyway, 13 years of that was in Seattle, the last 7 here in Minneapolis. As someone who grew up in Minneapolis, the feeling is often that there is snow on the ground 6 months of the year. It can start as early as October and it can happen as late is May. We don’t get the kind of heavy snow we used to get all winter when I was a kid, but we are getting wild extremes. This year, we had a bone dry December, then February was 40 inches of snow rather than the average of 7.

Snow gets old when you grow up with it, but it still has a magical quality to me, particularly the first snow of the year. There is a quiet and peacefulness that happens both from the visual minimalism and the sound deadening of the snow itself. It literally absorbs sound and the combination enhances the beauty.

When Anna and Illyas hired me to photograph portraits for them, it was a relatively humid day. They had just gotten a sweet little dog named Louie who didn’t want to be away from them during our time together.

Fast forward to a week ago. The wedding day, March 9th, came quickly and meteorologists forecasted a late winter storm of 8-10” in the Twin Cities. I was excited because I could finally take photographs of a bride and groom in the snow. Well, the serious part of the storm ended up hitting the part of the state south of Minneapolis and while we ended up with more like 5 inches of snow, it was beautiful: large, heavy and dense snow that fell slowly and accumulated quickly.

In a brief moment after the wedding ceremony, Anna, Illyas and I went to the roof of the historic Lumber Exchange Building to take a few photographs it was the opportunity I’ve been waiting for. I rarely use flash, but with snow it highlights every flake on its way to the ground.

I’ll be adding images to this blog post in a few weeks.

To see more Minneapolis/St. Paul, MN portraits, wedding photography and weddings all over the world, visit my main portfolio on bradleyhanson.com or email me at info@bradleyhanson.com or call me at 206-393-8292 and we can discuss your wedding plans in detail.

Nikki And Brett's Snowy Wedding At Swiftwater Cellars Winery In Washington State by Bradley Hanson

I just finished editing this beautiful wedding from Swiftwater Cellars Winery in Cle Elum, Washington, an hour east of Seattle. I met the groom 10 years ago when I photographed his big brother's wedding at the Woodmark Hotel in Seattle in 2007, and was happy to hear from the family again when Brett got engaged to Nikki. 

It was a beautiful sunny day, and at the altitude of the Cascade Mountain range, it was so intensely windy that Nikki's veil went flying while we were walking outside in the snow. Even though it was snowy and relatively cold by Washington State standards, the snow and altitude made the temperatures feel warmer than reality.

There were 10 bridesmaids and 10 groomsmen, and they were surrounded by friends and family, as well as what might be the world's cutest dog in a tux. A great day.

You can follow me on Facebook, Twitter, VSCO, Pinterest, Instagram, and LinkedIn through the links on the upper right.

To see more Minneapolis/St. Paul, MN portraits, wedding photography and weddings all over the world, visit my main portfolio on bradleyhanson.com or email me at info@bradleyhanson.com or call me at 206-393-8292 and we can discuss your wedding plans in detail. My speciality is shooting family portraits in an unposed, natural style and wedding photojournalism. I photograph weddings as they happen rather than direct the action, which is often referred to as documentary style wedding photography. I’ve photographed weddings in Minneapolis, St. Paul, Seattle and many countries around the world.

To listen to the bi-weekly photography podcast I do with UK photographer Ian Weldon, visit https://www.outerfocuspodcast.com or search for Outerfocus on Apple Podcasts or Google Podcasts.