2nd shooter pay

QarikQarik Registered Users Posts: 4,959 Major grins
edited February 6, 2010 in Weddings
curious on your thought on this. What do you pay your 2nd shooters?

1) assuming they are rather new
2) assuming they have a bit of experience
3) assuming they have a lot of experience
D700, D600
14-24 24-70 70-200mm (vr2)
85 and 50 1.4
45 PC and sb910 x2
http://www.danielkimphotography.com

Comments

  • The MackThe Mack Registered Users Posts: 602 Major grins
    edited February 5, 2010
    Qarik wrote:
    curious on your thought on this. What do you pay your 2nd shooters?

    1) assuming they are rather new
    2) assuming they have a bit of experience
    3) assuming they have a lot of experience

    I have a great 2nd..
    He gets $100 per wedding and dinner/lunch/drinks before/after on me.
  • zoomerzoomer Registered Users Posts: 3,688 Major grins
    edited February 5, 2010
    If my daughter does it I pay her the same $5.00 an hour she always gets for helping me (she is 15 now...may need a raise).

    People who contact me wanting to second shoot to gain experience I do not pay. I have never used more than 2 or 3 of their shots to actually give to a client. What is that saying about a blind squirrel....????
    I have never searched out a second shooter to hire.

    If a person is second shooting to gain experience I wouldn't worry much about the pay. Experience gained would be the pay.

    For a second shooter with lots of experience that you have hired and you expect to have contribute a significant number of shots he would probably expect to be paid some percentage of the wedding fee, 15-20% would probably be reasonable.
  • Kevin KramerKevin Kramer Registered Users Posts: 74 Big grins
    edited February 5, 2010
    My wife is my 2nd shooter.. she's free! haha. I actually treat her to an awesome dinner for being an awesome assistant.

    Whenever I have downtime though, I'm always looking to 2nd shoot. I hate not doing anything with a camera on the weekend.
    Nikon D300s and Nikon D7000
    Nikon 50mm 1.8 | Tamron 28-75 2.8 | Tamron 70-200 2.8 | Tokina 11-16 2.8
    2 SB-900 and 2 SB-600's
    website | blog | facebook
  • jeffreaux2jeffreaux2 Registered Users Posts: 4,762 Major grins
    edited February 5, 2010
    $50...ish per hour.

    Regardless of experience.

    A lack of experience doesn't make it any less work.

    My teenage daughter has helped me....but doesn't shoot. For her....usually $100 for her help. (gear guard.....moving light stands...dragging gear around for me)
  • tenoverthenosetenoverthenose Registered Users Posts: 815 Major grins
    edited February 5, 2010
    jeffreaux2 wrote:
    $50...ish per hour.

    Regardless of experience.

    A lack of experience doesn't make it any less work.

    I'm closer to this amount. I pay what I'd like to get paid.
  • Matthew SavilleMatthew Saville Registered Users, Retired Mod Posts: 3,352 Major grins
    edited February 6, 2010
    jeffreaux2 wrote:
    $50...ish per hour.

    Regardless of experience.

    A lack of experience doesn't make it any less work.

    My teenage daughter has helped me....but doesn't shoot. For her....usually $100 for her help. (gear guard.....moving light stands...dragging gear around for me)
    However a lack of experience means I don't hire that person in the first place, usually...

    Personally, I don't need "assistants" to carry my bags or fetch lenses; I mostly just need extra eyes, talented eyes to capture the candid moments happening elsewhere when I'm busy with the main moments of the day. So, I only ever "hire" people who have already shot with me a lot, and whose work I can trust, both for technical quality and artistic value. For 2010, I'm paying 2nd shooters $350 for up to 8 hrs.

    =Matt=
    My first thought is always of light.” – Galen Rowell
    My SmugMug PortfolioMy Astro-Landscape Photo BlogDgrin Weddings Forum
  • The MackThe Mack Registered Users Posts: 602 Major grins
    edited February 6, 2010
    damn, I should come shoot w/ you lol
Sign In or Register to comment.