• The Knot says, “Say buh-bye to cookie cutter wedding albums” and hello to WriteShot.  Read more here . . ....

  • WriteShot brides have been asking for archival quality image albums and proof boxes in addition to our one-of-a-kind books and custom fine art prints. There are a million wedding album companies out there, but most of them didn’t pass muster. We looked for a company that builds by hand each album and box. A company that is as dedicated to craftsmanship as it is dedicated to the same archival quality of WriteShot’s existing line of books, fine art prints, book jackets and other products. Enter, Cypress Handmade Albums and Boxes. Each WriteShot Cypress album or box is custom-crafted by hand ...

  • Albuquerque’s Hotel Andaluz is the oldest hotel in the city. Listed on the National Registry of Historic Places, the hotel recently underwent a 34-million dollar renovation that included much more than a property’s standard updates. WriteShot’s book will detail the history of the hotel and the story of the entrepreneur with a vision who breathed life back  into it, transforming the property into the only USGBC silver-level LEED certified building on the National Registry of Historic Places. Commencing with the hotel’s creation by Conrad Hilton in 1939 and ending in the present day wit...

  • We’re thrilled to learn that we’ve been featured in My Wedding Concierge’s Bridal Fascinations blog. Check out the post here. Afterward, download My Wedding Concierge’s iPad app. Pull a pin and have some fun . . . Heralded by wedding industry insiders, like Sean Low and Rebecca Grinnals, as a revolutionary inspiration search engine for brides, My Wedding Concierge searches hundreds of cutting edge wedding blogs, so that brides don’t have to. We also love the geo-locator tool that displays a map with pin drops from coast-to-coast. Brides touch a pin and vendor information for that are...

  • The wedding album has long been a cherished memento of one of the most important days in a couple’s life together. But as the memories fade and the album is passed on through the generations, details of this important occasion, and the couple’s journey to get there, can be lost. That’s where WriteShot comes in. Founded by photographers and journalists Natasha Chornesky and Chris Cozzone, WriteShot delivers not only magazine-quality photos of a couple’s wedding day; Chornesky and Cozzone document the whole love story—from the first meeting through the courtship and engagement—c...

  • Anti-Bridezilla, Allison Kornberg, featured WriteShot in today’s LA Times. Check it out here and be sure to follow Allison’s “Nuptials by Committee.” ...

  • Tip No. 1: Personality By Natasha Chornesky and Chris Cozzone Don’t buy into the hype. Any photographer who is trying to sell you on his/her sparkling, oh-so-fun personality will, most likely, have the potential for serious flaws in his/her craft. Ask yourself this: Are you hiring someone to be the life of the party (your party), or do you want good shots? Do you really care that the photographer likes long walks on the beach, loves to watch “Mad Men” or can rifle off jokes faster than his 11 frames-per-second camera? Study a photographer’s website. Are there more photos of the photog...

  • 2010-10-13T12:51:00Z Wedding Ideas

      Say "buh-bye!" to cookie cutter wedding albums. Photography and design company WriteShot offers a much more personalized alternative: They'll write and photograph your entire love story into a keepsake book. From photographing the week leading up to your wedding to chronicling the behind-the-scenes stories, every detail will be recorded in a book (seriously, a whole book!) about you and your new spouse. Chris and Natasha (owners and founders of the company) shoot, write, and design the whole thing from start to finish -- they'll even give you an iPad version -- so you can share it with lo...

  • Looks like Daily Candy‘s sweet tooth led their 2010 LA Wedding Guide scouts to directly to WriteShot. Check it out here. We are so excited! How sweet life really is . . ....

  • 1. Selective portfolio. You might like the portfolio a photographer puts before you, but keep in mind that it may encompass the best of a zillion photos taken over a decade of work. Ask the shooter to let you see all the shots from any given wedding. 2. Trend-happy shutterbugs. Beware of photogs who rely too much on Photoshop filters and the latest set-up shots. It’s about getting the shot – not about saturating colors that do not exist in nature, adding impossible blurs to focus your attention on any given area, or turning what used to be a photo into a sun-bleached Polaroid pic your iPh...