I'll try to react to photo number 1 first.
Good suggestion. I rarely add any saturation to a photo, so I guess the overall yellow is ok? I can desaturate the plate only of course.
The fellow at the right side of the car was just waiting for his turn
I definitely agree with you that the composition of the shot is not that great now that I look back at it. The presence of the car(details) overshadows the rest quite a bit. Weddings are not really my thing, but since they didn't want a photographer in the first place, and I had to go there since they are my girlfriends brother and sister in law I could just as well take a few shots. I cannot change the composition, so this is the shot I have to work with. If I ever do this kind of photos again I will pay more attention to it.
That's pretty cool. If I look back now after just two years I notice how different I'm looking at some aspects now, so 10 years must be quite a shock![]()
Cloning the plate away will probably help solving the distraction, but also makes it more unreal. I personally don't care about the car, but the groom loved it so in the end it's probably the best to just leave it in. The red in the drivers face is a hard one, because my displays weakspot is showing the reds. On my display it looks great, but I have test-printed these shots and it did look quite red without adjustments. I will reduce the amount of red a little bit as well. Note that the driver also really had quite a red face plus it wasn't the warmest day
Try number 2, I desaturated the plates and the reds a little: