PcolaDawg
Member
Never mind!
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Thanks! Actually, none of us were openly carrying during the actual wedding. After the pre-wedding photos were taken, all of those (completely empty) guns were put in the trunk of my car. I didn't carry my normal pocket gun because it printed too well in my tuxedo. I think my eldest was carrying his Kel Tec P3AT, and that was it.The first one looks the best. I was armed during my wedding, and so was my best man, plus at least two of the guests.
Congrats on the new butter bars, too!
It's a Smith & Wesson 625JMIs that a Smith & Wesson M625?
All trigger fingers in the proper place.
Sweet. I don't know who all at the wedding was carrying during the ceremony, but I do know the preacher usually carries a Kel Tec P32, the wedding photographer (a female) usually carries a Makarov, and her son who was helping her usually carries a Springfield XDM.PcolaDawg, yes, all of our sidearms were concealed and fully loaded - my wife-to-be had justifiable worries about her pot smoking ex inmate ex husband showing up to the wedding. Found out years later he was actually in prison in Texas at the time.
I had a Keltec P-11, best man a Smith Model 19 3", and one friend in the congregation had a Glock 21. At least one more was carrying, don't remember what it was. My parents would have been mortified if they had known.
I'm deadly serious. I counted seven major and imminent mistakes regarding where muzzles are pointed (imminent meaning someone should have spoken up immediately), and a few that are just kinda bad (as if kinda bad isn't bad).elcaminoariba, you can't be serious.
Thank you for retaining a good spirit in the face of my criticism (a lot of people just get mad and turn the brain off). I'm being completely sincere. There are serious problems with muzzle direction by several individuals in those pics. Muzzles pointed directly at people, or close enough to violate the basic rules (sheesh, one where a guy is clearly standing in front of the guy pointing the gun at him). Eyes not looking where muzzles are pointed, sometimes WHILE muzzles are pointed at people, and eyes not looking where muzzles are pointed as firearms are horizontal.Well, hey, at least you found SOMEthing good about it. lol.
If a photographer wants to take that picture, at least the eyes would be looking where the muzzle is going.I've seen wedding pictures where a handgun was aimed at the photographer. Not pointed, but aimed.