Wow - Crazy to see all the "gear hounds" pounce on this thread...
I've shot two weddings myself... both of them in similar circumstances to the OP (friends; weren't planning on having a 'tog at all)... and I did it both times with a 450D + 17-55 f/2.8 and a 55-250 with only a 430EX for a flash! They were both _very_ dark (second one was at night in a tiny church) but both times the photos came out great! My friends were absolutely overjoyed at the results.
Now - of course I wasn't as good as a real professional... especially if you were to drop some real cash for a high end professional.. BUT they were REALLY good and perfectly captured the moment for my friends. The bonus is that they got the full RAW photos + full resolution worked up JPEGs that they could do whatever they wanted to with.... which is something you don't normally get from professionals.
My point? The OP's gear is great for this particular purpose. He's NOT a professional... and isn't planning on becoming one. Suggesting that he buy new gear for this is ridiculous. Suggesting that his 70-300 won't be adequate for this situation is asinine. Suggesting that he buy a new body (!) when he has a 7D is insane.
My suggestion to the OP: PRACTICE! The way you use your gear and the way you know your gear will make more of a difference than any lens or body. Being able to fluently change lenses; getting good at focus/expose and recompose; switching back and forth between your two bodies quickly (so you can have two different lenses ready to go); understanding AI Servo mode on your 7D and getting good at switching AF points / modes; getting used to composing attractive shots on the fly
All of that will make or break your photos. Before I did both of the weddings I practiced a lot with my wife. We went to a nearby church and I would practice shooting her walking up and down the aisle. I practiced with a monopod at a distance in a dark church with her standing in the front so that I could get a feel for how long my 55-250 would take to hunt. Right before each ceremony I repeated the above in the actual place where the ceremony was going to happen. At that point I dialed in how I would use my flashes and what surfaces acted best for bounced flashes, etc.
The first wedding I did they didn't want any flashes at all during the ceremony. Let me tell you... that definitely tested me! But things still came out fine. The second wedding allowed flashes and everything came out beautifully.
Don't let the people here talk you into buying new gear... just utilize the gear you have to the best your ability and I bet your friends will be thrilled.
I've shot two weddings myself... both of them in similar circumstances to the OP (friends; weren't planning on having a 'tog at all)... and I did it both times with a 450D + 17-55 f/2.8 and a 55-250 with only a 430EX for a flash! They were both _very_ dark (second one was at night in a tiny church) but both times the photos came out great! My friends were absolutely overjoyed at the results.
Now - of course I wasn't as good as a real professional... especially if you were to drop some real cash for a high end professional.. BUT they were REALLY good and perfectly captured the moment for my friends. The bonus is that they got the full RAW photos + full resolution worked up JPEGs that they could do whatever they wanted to with.... which is something you don't normally get from professionals.
My point? The OP's gear is great for this particular purpose. He's NOT a professional... and isn't planning on becoming one. Suggesting that he buy new gear for this is ridiculous. Suggesting that his 70-300 won't be adequate for this situation is asinine. Suggesting that he buy a new body (!) when he has a 7D is insane.
My suggestion to the OP: PRACTICE! The way you use your gear and the way you know your gear will make more of a difference than any lens or body. Being able to fluently change lenses; getting good at focus/expose and recompose; switching back and forth between your two bodies quickly (so you can have two different lenses ready to go); understanding AI Servo mode on your 7D and getting good at switching AF points / modes; getting used to composing attractive shots on the fly
All of that will make or break your photos. Before I did both of the weddings I practiced a lot with my wife. We went to a nearby church and I would practice shooting her walking up and down the aisle. I practiced with a monopod at a distance in a dark church with her standing in the front so that I could get a feel for how long my 55-250 would take to hunt. Right before each ceremony I repeated the above in the actual place where the ceremony was going to happen. At that point I dialed in how I would use my flashes and what surfaces acted best for bounced flashes, etc.
The first wedding I did they didn't want any flashes at all during the ceremony. Let me tell you... that definitely tested me! But things still came out fine. The second wedding allowed flashes and everything came out beautifully.
Don't let the people here talk you into buying new gear... just utilize the gear you have to the best your ability and I bet your friends will be thrilled.
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