My optometrist once told me that all his daughter ever wanted was a sunset wedding. Never mind that a morning wedding with a luncheon reception would be so much less expensive at the country club, she was heartset on filling her wedding album with the reds, hot pinks, and golds New Mexico sunsets are famous for. Dad gave in.
Right on time, the photographer stole the couple away for some romantic shots on the golf course. He had his camera and lights set up and the couple posed just right – then the sprinklers turned on. The photographer quickly grabbed his costly equipment, while the groom scooped up the bride in her costly dress, and they ran for drier ground. (Yeah, but did he get the shot? No? Those grab-and-dash moments make for some great candids.) What's more, there was no sunset that evening.
Does Farmer's Almanac keep records of sunsets in New Mexico? Don’t know, but conditions have to be just right. There can be no clouds right on the horizon where the sun is specifically setting or the colors will be dull. But there do have to be clouds or lots of dust to refract the light. The most exquisite sunsets are during monsoon season (July-August) when the billowy cumulus clouds can paint a Renaissance painting. Of course, one runs the risk of having their wedding rained out during monsoon season.Sunsets in New Mexico can be so spectacular that when growing up with my photographer father, we were always on watch. When they'd happen, we'd run through the house yelling, 'sunset alert.' New Mexico usually has two sunsets at a time, one in the west and the other reflected on the adjacent mountain. There's always a mountain somewhere in this state to reflect the sun.
Glorious, epic sunsets are not rare but they are hard to predict. If a couple isn't attached to the sun producing dramatic colors, the so-called magical hour around sunset does produce beautiful lighting for photography. The half hour prior to the sun set turns the light golden, and the half hour after the sun sets provides diffused lighting with no shadows. The five minutes or so when the sun is actually disappearing below the horizon turns the subjects a dull color. With pushed ISO speeds, the photography session can last into the darkness when the sky has turned a dark blue. Timing is everything in this case.But why chance it? The solar industry claims that New Mexico has 310 energy-producing days per year. The sky is almost always a deep blue, patterned by an array of clouds -- a colorful backdrop for foliage and adobe buildings.
