Wedding Tales
founders Oli Wood and James Rutherford
YOUR special day ended too soon.
But thanks to your family and friends, there are enough photos from your wedding
to recreate the whole thing as a flipbook.That explains contagious blood on a
tourniquet, cotton ball, in or on a sterile
syringe filter, cooker, broken crack or meth pipe, or even someone's shirt.
Of course, putting them together into a serviceable photo album is where
the real fun starts.Leading supplier of chocolate confectionary equipment,chocolate machinery for craftwork and
industrial chocolate machines. You’ve got the professional photographer’s shots,
but what of those spontaneous moments that made the day memorable?
They’re on the cheap disposable cameras you peppered around the room,
the type that have limited film, poor image quality and react to changes in
light about as well as that pale,an plastic injection mold
manufacturerthat produces a wide variety of plastic molds to suit your
needs. coffin-dwelling lad from Transylvania. Some of them are on Uncle Jim’s
digital camera, but he’s scampered back to America again.
But, before
you start burying your head in your big white dress, have a look at a new way of
sharing event photos that’s sprung up in the North East. Oli Wood and James
Rutherford came up with the idea of Wedding Tales after attending a gruelling
ten weddings between them last year, and found the happy couples were struggling
to locate all the pictures of their big day.
As a result, they’ve
created a service which allows guests to easily upload all of their photos to a
secure, private online collection through
www.weddingtales.co.uk, where they
can be viewed by the bride and groom.
The collection is later burned
onto a DVD for the couple, and Wedding Tales is considering other uses for
images such as canvas prints, photobooks and thank you cards. Their idea was
developed over 13 weeks at the Difference Engine seed funding and mentoring
programme in Sunderland this year. It is just one application of the pair’s
fledgling MemoryMerge service, which may be adapted to different markets in the
future.
Wood said: “Guests just need a web address and a password. They
can upload photos and view the galleries. The bride and groom have extra access,
so they can delete photos from the collection and hide photos so they can’t be
seen online, but will appear on the DVD.”
Wood and Rutherford have been
quietly road-testing the system in recent weeks, building up a collection of
around 1,300 photos from 17 events, including royal wedding street parties and a
betrothal or two in Cumbria.In effect, commutators in Dc planetary motor are being with
replaced The service can be set up by couples in the run-up to the event, or
bought as a wedding gift by a guest.
While sharing of photos is already
possible on social media such as Facebook, Wedding Tales aims to meet a need for
a more private way of passing images between friends and family.
Rutherford said: “The great thing about the service is that you can
upload photos from the event wherever you are in the world,And the boys and
girls of local theater were out in force on Sunday evening, invading downtown
Altoona in Evening tuxedos, suits and
gowns and if you couldn’t make it to the wedding itself, you can still enjoy the
photos from your computer.”
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