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  • About Shira

    I am an international photographer based in New York, an award-winning member of the prestigious Wedding Photojournalist Association (WPJA) , ISPWP, and a member of the Best of Wedding Photography Association. My work has been published and acclaimed internationally, appearing in Brides Magazine, Anhelo (Japan), The Knot, and The Knot China. I have also been featured on many industry-leading blogs such as Grace Ormonde, Style Me Pretty, WellWed, Essence, Bride's Cafe, Brooklyn BrideOneWedMerci NY and more. Originally from Israel, I have had the pleasure of photographing many American, French, Yemenite, Ethiopian, Korean, Indian and Moroccan weddings and events. I have photographed in New York's most legendary spots like the Waldorf-Astoria, The Plaza, The Pierre, Gotham Hall, the Hamptons, and more. Through my photojournalistic style, I aim to capture the spontaneity, joy, emotion and ambiance of the important day with photos that present an unfolding story. My incredible clients have taken me all over the world to photography their weddings; including India, Canada, the Caribbean, etc. I am free to travel throughout the US and internationally, and am available for a wide variety of events. Feel free to look at my website.

    Also, here are a few testimonials from some of my wonderful clients.

  • My Blog

    Welcome to my blog!   This blog showcases not only my work from many of the beautiful weddings I am privileged to photograph, but also reveals glimpses of my personality.    Here is an opportunity to share some great moments  as well as give clients,  guests and friends the chance to comment. I also hope prospective clients will be able to not only explore my photography and style, but will also find inspiring ideas, recommendations , and tips for their own wedding planning.   I myself got married five years ago and I remember how overwhelming it all was- especially picking the right photographer!  :-)

Sarah and Leo were married at the Midtown Loft.

Leo and Sarah are so incredibly romantic. Seeing them together is really witnessing a couple that have found the love of their lives.  The deep admiration they held for eachother was obvious in every glance they shared. My second shooter, Lauren, and I fell in love with them and we could not stop talking about how much fun it was to shoot them.

Leo is Brazilian, so it was a great festive atmosphere, filled with Brazilian music and his family flew in.
Sarah read the vows in Portuguese and her brother led the ceremony. They literally “tied the knot” in their special intimate ceremony
when Sarah’s brother tied string around both of their hands. Leo and Sarah, who had traveled all over the world, did a marvelous job of united friends from different places and different periods in their lives in one room and their collective energy and love was very powerful.

Here is a sneak peak of the a few photos as I edit their wedding. Their charming story of how they met also follows below.

And, here is their story:

“Leo and I had both been traveling solo during 2007. We both started in Australia where we dove the Great Barrier Reef. I was there in February 2007 and he was there in March. Of all the dive boats in Cairns Australia, it turns out we were on the same boat, but one month apart. That was the closest we came to meeting. We were also both in the Himalayas, but I was in the foothills in Northern India and he hiked right into the mountains in Nepal.

By March of 2008, I had returned to the states, gotten a job, then an apartment and was unpacking my apartment one weekend when my yoga instructor, Linda, invited me to have dinner with her, her husband, their baby and their friend Leo at their house. The unpacking was going slowly and so with a car full of boxes I headed over to her house. Leo was late. When he came in, I was sitting on the floor playing with the baby. He came in and while I was struck by how handsome he is, he was wearing jeans that were too big for him and these huge red shoes that stood out. Neither of us had realized that it was a setup, until we saw each other. There was an awkward moment when I reached my hand up from the floor to shake his and said “I’m Sarah.” He stared at me and rubbed his hands together and said, “oh, okay, I see.” And Linda’s husband, Steve, said, “nice shoes, Leo.” I sat there for what seemed like an eternity with my hand out until he finally shook it. I think we were both digesting the fact that we had been setup.

As the evening proceeded, we sat at the dinner table and Linda and Steve found excuses to leave the table with their baby. Whenever they left the table, Steve would initiate a topic — “talk about the scariest part of your trip!” he would shout as he headed upstairs ostensibly to check on something for the baby. After dinner, we moved to the living room where we showed each other pictures from our trip. I had learned that no one ever wants to see more than a handful of pictures of someone else’s trip, no matter how long it is, and so had printed a few representative shots. Leo had simply brought his whole computer which he couldn’t get to work well. Most of the evening was spent with Leo and Steve bickering over the computer not working well, but eventually we did get to Leo’s many many photographs.

As it got late, Leo and I said our good byes. Leo left first. When I left, he was waiting for me in the driveway. I stopped to talk to him, but he wasn’t saying much and I felt awkward so I thrust my hand out and said that it was nice to meet him. He shook my hand and said likewise and I hurried to my car.

As I drove away, I could hear his car behind me. He has a sportscar with a really loud engine. I have a clunky station-wagon that was full of boxes so I couldn’t see in my rear-view very well. His car was making me nervous. As we drove up the street, I was so uncomforable that I went through a red light and then made a wrong turn away from the highway, giving Leo the impression that I was trying to get away from him and hide as fast as I could.

The next morning, Leo and Steve met for coffee and Steve asked how it went. Leo said that he liked me but that I had run away from him. Steve said that he just thought I was hard to read and that Leo should ask me out.

I liked Leo and knew that I had thrown him a little by hurrying away when we were outside the house. The day after we met, a friend of mine emailed me that he was too sick to go to a concert for which we had tickets the next day and asked if he thought I could find someone to take his ticket. I emailed Leo and invited him…and then waited impatiently at my desk feeling that I had put myself out on a limb with this invitation.

As I sweated it, Leo and Steve finished their coffees and Leo headed back to his house to find that I had emailed him an invitation. He was so excited that he replied without putting any text in the body of the email. When I saw the reply, I was so excited, but when I opened it there was no text. I anguished for a while over what that could possibly mean, when, about 15 minutes later, an exuberant reply came saying that he would love to go to a concert with me.

And, the rest is history…”

Carol and Michael were married at the Manhattan Penthouse. I was happy to work again with their wedding planner, James Abel.

It was so nice to work again with Carol and Michael after our engagement session when I first really got to know them.
I love a multi-hour engagement session as when the wedding day arrives it feels like the continuation of a friendship.
Carol possesses that rare trait of deep sensitivity, which heightened by the emotion of the wedding day,
made her excitement infectious. And I glimpsed a tear in Michael’s eye as Carol walked down the aisle, which showed how appreciative he was of the woman with those very qualities that he knows so well and how eager he was to embrace Carol in a lifelong partnership.

The charming story of how Michael and Carol met was read at the wedding, during the ceremony.

“In the fall of 2005, Michael broke his arm throwing a softball during an MTV company softball game. The break was so severe that Michael needed surgery to repair the bone, and he was forced to spend five days in the hospital. During his stay, friends and family visited him and wished him a speedy recovery. One of those visitors was Carol, a work associate of Michael’s who was also becoming his good friend, as they had worked together on several projects. When Carol entered Michael’s room, his father was already there, but was about to leave since Michael was growing more and more agitated and cranky, complaining about how the hospital food was inedible and the pain medication wasn’t working. Carol said hello to Michael’s father, then walked up to the side of Michael’s bed, and held up a brown paper bag. Mike’s eyes lit up, knowing it could only be one thing – real food. Carol smiled and opened the bag revealing a tupperware of rigatoni with her homemade meat sauce. Mike’s dad was in awe, impressed at Carol’s warm generosity. He told Mike he was one lucky guy as Carol, who also brought a real fork, began feeding Michael the pasta. Upon chewing the first bites, Mike smiled, but then stopped and turned to Carol asking, “Why so little sauce?” Michael’ dad immediately rolled his eyes and yelled at Michael for being rude. Michael claimed he was just stating a fact. Carol’s first reaction was to apologize, as she always aims to please in every aspect of her life, especially with her cooking, but then even she realized Michael had some nerve complaining giving the circumstances – so she started arguing with him as well. Michael’s father, who had been dealing with Michael’s ongoing crankiness for days now, put his jacket on and said to Carol, “You can have him!” Fortunately for Michael, Carol took his father’s advice…and today we are gathered here to witness the marriage of Carol and Michael who will begin a life together, filled with of love and respect, and a life where all imperfections are ignored – unless of course it relates to any sort of complaint about Carol’s cooking.”

Usually, I like to post a “sneak peak” of the wedding photos as soon as I can, but it has been a little bit crazy here
lately in the middle of the summer wedding season.  When I sent Carol the slideshow, she evidently received it at the gym and immediately emailed me that she was running home to watch it.  I then received another email from her to alert me only moments before she actually began watching it. This was finally followed by a third and truly wonderful email from her that made my day and which I have cut and paste below…

“I am beside myself. All the pictures are so amazing. I can’t even believe there are more. I feel like there are so many already.
I honestly think you managed to get at least one picture of almost everyone there. That is impressive! Michael and I can’t thank you enough
for working so hard for us. I wish someone had a picture of you standing on one of the chairs, trying to get the perfect shot. You are such
an amazing artist. Each picture captures the beauty and happiness from that day…, I feel so lucky to have found you. I hope there is an opportunity for us to hire you again.

THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU!!!!!

I can’t wait to watch it again.”

Vendors:

Dress:  Melissa Sweet
Shoes:  Manolo Blahnik
Bridesmaids dressed:  JCrew
Hair:  Christophe Naselli
Make-up:  Lori Conte :  917-797-4668.


Dana and Andrew were married at Bridgewaters (where I will be photographing several weddings this year). Michelle Larner did the make-up.

The day began at Dana’a apartment, which by coincidence is only two blocks away from mine.  Many of my brides have chosen to get ready at a hotel, but I must admit that doing the preparation in Dana’s apartment lent a lovely, intimate family feel to the shoot. Besides Dana’s Mother, Andrew’s Mom, Dana’s sister and friends, I also had the pleasure of being introduced to her cat hiding in the closet, who if not sensing the emotional pressures and excitement of the wedding day, was at least scared from all the noise. Dana and I shared our funny stories about cats, and I told her about one of my three crazy cats who is actually taking Prozac – no kidding :)

I never met Andrew before the day of the wedding itself. When we were in Dana’s apartment, she showed me a picture for the first time and I could immediately sense his good energy (I guess that is special sense you develop when you look at ten of thousands of photos all the time!). This was of course confirmed later when I actually met him and I wasn’t surprised as Dana is also an amazing person.

One day after the wedding, I received an absolutely gorgeous bouquet of flowers with a very appreciative thank you card from Andrew and Dana. The doorman actually jokingly asked my husband what was going on with his marriage, with busy-bee Shira never home and now splendid flowers arriving for her (and not from her husband :)

I will be adding the story of how Dana and Andrew met when they return from their honeymoon in Greece.





Michael and Elena evidently love to get married. They have married each other four times! (no joking) :) If that is not a beautiful celebration of devotion, I don’t know what is. I was lucky to be the photographer last year for their third wedding and now I am so happy to post some photos from their fourth one below.

They were married at the Holy Russian Orthodox Church in Yonkers and later celebrated at the New York Athletic Club, graciously overlooking the Long Island Sound.  Peggy Kontogiannis at Artistic Visage did the make-up (peggykontos@msn.com).

I found the Russian Orthodox Ceremony to be very interesting. I read up about the service and wanted to post its meaning on my blog to give context to the pictures. “The bride and groom are handed candles which they hold throughout the service. The candles are like the lamps of the five wise maidens of the Bible, who because they had enough oil in them, were able to receive the Bridegroom, Christ, when He came in the darkness of the night.” The service of the Crowning is the climax of the Wedding service, when the groom and the bride are crowned as the king and queen of their own little kingdom. Olga, Elena’s best friend, and Michael’s brother had to hold up the Crowns for fifty minutes.  I don’t know how they did it.

Michael and Elena are the sweetest couple on Earth and I was anxiously waiting for their wedding. At the last wedding, I met Michael’s amazing Italian family, and at this one, I had the added pleasure of finally meeting Elena’s parents who flew in from Russia.

Elena is a professional dancer and was a dance instructor in Russia. While she was doing her make-up, she showed me and my second shooter, Matt, photos of a competition in which she took part and for which she looked absolutely stunning. Her training shows in the elegant way she carries herself and the camera loved her. Later, she and Michael performed a beautiful and well rehearsed Tango (it is amazing Michael only took five lessons and was so good). I was reminded how my husband convinced me to dance an Argentinian Tango at our wedding to the same music Michael and Elena chose . In my memory, I danced nicely, but after seeing them grace the floor, I realize that I had no clue what I was doing :)

I also especially loved the toast when Michael’s brother recounted how Michael one day was driving and stopped short in the middle of a busy road to redirect and relocate a little lost turtle. It was a small deed that spoke to his sensitivity as a person, and a care and concern for the little things that he will no doubt carry into his marriage.

Gabrielle and Anthony were married at the Trump National Golf Club in Briarcliff Manor, NY on July 11. This post is just a very short sneak peak as I begin editing their photos.

These two shots quickly caught my eye. The second picture was taken while Gabrielle and her Dad were in the car on the way to Church. I was sitting in front, always at the ready for my documentary coverage, but this particular and powerful moment between Father and Daughter, shortly before he was to give her away, gave me pause. I could not help not only observe, but also deeply feel the way they looked at eachother- Gabrielle’s soft tears, restrained only by the need for composure, and the intense and tender emotion that can be glimpsed on their faces. I told them they were going to make me cry as I felt my own eyes becoming wet.

The story of how they met follows below.  I have also attached the vendor list from Gabrielle’s wedding.

Here is Anthony and Gabrielle’s story:

“Anthony and I met in August 2004 through childhood friends. I had completed my undergraduate degree the semester prior and had just returned from studying abroad. Anthony was in the middle of perusing his Master’s Degree in School Psychology. That night I had gone to dinner at the home of a girlfriend i know from high school. The very same night Anthony was visiting with his good friend Angelo. Coincidentally, our friends lived across the street from one another. As I was leaving my girlfriend’s house Anthony and Angelo were talking outside of Angelo’s home… we all began to chat.

After talking that night we all made plans to “go out sometime”. The next weekend we went on a double date. Soon after we were dating exclusively.. Three years later Anthony asked me to marry him on July 7th 2007at 7:00 pm. It was the Saturday night before my 25th birthday; I was getting ready to go out to our favorite restaurant. (Wasabe, Nyack, NY) Anthony had said he was going to pick me up at 7:15. At aprox 6:50 there’s a knock at the door and it’s Anthony. He seemed to be sweating profusely, but I thought maybe it was very hot outside and I quickly went to finish getting ready. I asked Anthony to walk our dog, Tortellini. Anthony grabbed Torti and slipped a CD he said he had burned for me in my computer. Connie Francis began singing “Al di la”, and I was humming along for a bit.

A few minutes later Anthony came in with a big object covered in a sheet. (He had mentioned earlier in the week that we was going to take up painting and had borrowed my easel – so I didn’t think this was out of the ordinary) He told me to come take a look, that I had to critique his painting. So I walked over to the couch and sat down. In retrospect, he was on his knee at this point, but I didn’t notice. I remember asking him what it was supposed to be. (So I didn’t hurt his feeling if I couldn’t tell) He laughed and unveiled the piece. Anthony had spent the last few days making a mosaic that said, “will you marry me” in glass tile. When I looked over to him he was holding out the most beautiful ring I had ever seen. As you can imagine I was shocked and elated and … said yes! This was especially thoughtful and personal because I create mosaics and studied Ancient Mosaic making in Ravenna, Italy for a bit. I love how Anthony put so much thought into his proposal and made the moment to special and personal for me.”

Here is the vendor list Gabrielle kindly sent me:

Hair: Grace stylishbride@aol.com

Video: Avvento Wedding Cinematography

Limo: Silver Star Limousine

Music: Around Town Entertainment

Flamenco: Rumba Flamenco Group

Flowers: House of Flowers

Cake: Lulu’s Cake Boutique

Dress: Pronovias

Bridesmaid dresses: Botticelli Bridal Boutique Inc

Invitations: Saccente’s House of Printing

Make-up: April Dawson prildawson@aol.com