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Andrea & Marcus Photography – On Location

$49 for Two-Hour Photo Shoot with Five 4"x6" Prints and Online Gallery ($800 Value)

$49
Buy
No Longer Available
Sat May 12 03:59:59 UTC 2012
Value
$800
Discount
94%
You Save
$751
  • T460x279
  • Party Planner

In a Nutshell

Photography team nabs fashion editorial-inspired images noted by Vogue and Elle, organizing boudoir, family and kids’ shoots.

The Fine Print

  • Expires May 15, 2013
  • Limit 1 per person, may buy 2 additional as gifts. New clients only. On-location only. Not valid for weddings. Valid only in Manhattan.
  • See the rules that apply to all deals.

Flash bulbs help correct imperfections in natural lighting, brightening the scene on an overcast day or making up for the fact that the model's shadow blinked. Light up a frame with this Groupon.

$49 for Two-Hour Photo Shoot with Five Prints and Online Gallery ($800 Value)

The photographers snap an unlimited number of shots within the two-hour, on-location shoot, then print five 4"x6" keepsake photos. Clients can opt for a boudoir, family, kids’, or engagement shoot.

Andrea & Marcus Photography

No strangers to the world of international fashion, the duo behind Andrea & Marcus Photography spent nine years snapping shutters in Germany and Switzerland before importing their distinct use of canted angles and soft lighting to the U.S. The photogs cultivate an editorial-inspired style, shooting images that fit right into the magazines that have featured them—Elle and Russian Vogue, among others. They call their style “couture wedding photography,” though they don’t just shoot weddings; they bring tasteful black-and-white and color imagery to boudoir shoots, compose high-fashion close-up portraits, and capture tender shots of unposed couples in a loving embrace. Prospective models can get a taste of the pair's style by viewing their online galleries.

Andrea & Marcus

No strangers to the world of international fashion, the duo behind Andrea & Marcus spent nine years snapping shutters in Germany and Switzerland before importing their distinct use of canted angles and soft lighting to the U.S. The photogs cultivate an editorial-inspired style, shooting images that fit right into the magazines that have featured them—_Elle_ and Russian Vogue, among others. They call their style “couture wedding photography,” though they don’t just shoot weddings; they bring tasteful black-and-white and color imagery to boudoir shoots, compose high-fashion close-up portraits, and capture tender shots of unposed couples in a loving embrace. Prospective models can get a taste of the pair's style by viewing their online galleries

Groupon Says

Dem_teaser_cat

The Groupon Guide to: Doll History

Dolls aren't just toys designed to look like lifeless, dead-eyed versions of the children who play with them, but also collectors' items that reflect the era they come from. Here's a list of the famous dolls that every collector should have in their glassed-in doll hutch:

  • Mr. John, 1901: Victorian toymakers didn't want to create a female doll that girls might admire or model their bodies after, so they created Mr. John. The porcelain figure was dressed in a formal innkeeper’s tuxedo and had a real wooden cane he could swing at children.

  • Stick Wearing Bird Nest, 1931: It looks like a woman if you pretend the nest is hair.

  • Sally Wetsherself, 1961: Sally had a nozzle in her back that could be hooked up to a garden hose for what doll experts have called "the most realistic doll urination to date".

  • USA Young Miss Dolls, 1974: Each doll in this series was from a different time period in American history and came infused with her own special guilt about American political policies.

  • Nancy, 1986: Nancy was the youngest doll to ever get pregnant. She named her baby Arfie.

  • Twerpz, 2002: Twerpz Dollz hate skool, luv candi, and eat their parents for breakfist!

Why do dolls hate skool so much?