Question For You Guys!
I've been getting into wedding photography a lot over the last year or so... slowly getting better with each wedding I shoot... I've only been second shooting but hoping by next summer to have one or two of my own
I have a question though in terms of what you give your brides (and grooms) after the wedding... I have had two friends whose weddings I've been involved in (not photography wise) over the last two years who have gotten back all unedited images. The one most recently paid $900 for 3 hours of shooting (ceremony + formals). She got her pictures back today and it was 400 unedited pictures with the option to buy the edits of the pictures for $5 for a 4x6... I asked her if she got a disc of unedited ones (that's what my other friend got instead of buying prints) and she said no but she gets a slideshow dvd... so if she wants edited pictures they are done on request but at an additional cost...
Looking at the pictures I personally was unimpressed with them but maybe its cause I've seen so many amazing pictures here and these photos were completely unedited... although there were some where people were covered up by others and they had flowers growing out of their heads...
Anyways long story short... would you ever post your unedited photos??? Personally I can't imagine doing so because it doesn't always reflect your best work (don't get me wrong - a lot of us shoot to get it right off the camera but when the colors are dark and the white balance is off it doesn't reflect how good you are imo)
Just thought I'd ask here and see what everyone does!
I have a question though in terms of what you give your brides (and grooms) after the wedding... I have had two friends whose weddings I've been involved in (not photography wise) over the last two years who have gotten back all unedited images. The one most recently paid $900 for 3 hours of shooting (ceremony + formals). She got her pictures back today and it was 400 unedited pictures with the option to buy the edits of the pictures for $5 for a 4x6... I asked her if she got a disc of unedited ones (that's what my other friend got instead of buying prints) and she said no but she gets a slideshow dvd... so if she wants edited pictures they are done on request but at an additional cost...
Looking at the pictures I personally was unimpressed with them but maybe its cause I've seen so many amazing pictures here and these photos were completely unedited... although there were some where people were covered up by others and they had flowers growing out of their heads...
Anyways long story short... would you ever post your unedited photos??? Personally I can't imagine doing so because it doesn't always reflect your best work (don't get me wrong - a lot of us shoot to get it right off the camera but when the colors are dark and the white balance is off it doesn't reflect how good you are imo)
Just thought I'd ask here and see what everyone does!
Just a girl playing with a camera trying to learn as much as she can.
www.kp-photos.com : facebook.com/kpphotos
www.kp-photos.com : facebook.com/kpphotos
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Comments
...say when!
=Matt=
My SmugMug Portfolio • My Astro-Landscape Photo Blog • Dgrin Weddings Forum
DManning Photography
With film, the price used to be very arbitrary, because we ALWAYS just paid a lab to do our printing, and they just corrected our mistakes for us. It pretty much cost us the same to process and print a roll of film, whether or not we nailed our exposures. But now with digital, when everybody is trying to become their own lab, the "price" of NOT nailing your shots is VERY clear- Time, time, TIME. If you shoot sloppy, you could be spending a 40 hour work week in post, instead of a 4 hr half-day.
I'm not saying that anyone here shoots sloppy, I'm just rambling on mostly.
The flip side of the coin however is that Photoshop actually IS a very powerful tool. Take away burning and dodging, and Ansel Adams would NOT be Ansel Adams! The same goes for many of the greatest wedding and portrait photographers of our time- Photoshop CAN be a powerful artistic tool. It can even be the defining element in a photographer's style! Just check out the work of someone like Scott Robert Lim...
So the road goes both ways. On the one hand, know what the heck you're doing and nail it in-camera. On the other hand, don't think that "needing" Photoshop to define your style is a sin; you have some (actually MOST) of photography's greatest legends who relied heavily on darkroom and PS tools to define their style...
:-)
Oh and you also bring up a good point about WHO we're trying to impress here- Fellow photographers might be able to tell the difference between a SOOC image and a corrected / processed / stylized one, but the cold truth is that most brides won't be able to tell. That doesn't mean get sloppy, that just means that the delivery timetable is WAY more important to clients than perfect color.
=Matt=
My SmugMug Portfolio • My Astro-Landscape Photo Blog • Dgrin Weddings Forum
Unfortunately I don't know what was agreed up.
I agree with you guys that not all images need to be edited, but in this instance there were photos that were either blown out, too dark, or completely off in color. I've had two people contact me (one of them the bride) saying she'd rather order my pictures that i shot (I did some getting ready ones for her as a wedding present since she was only paying for three hours) and just not deal with her photographer anymore... What got me was that the photographer was charging $11 for an edited 5x7... So I guess another question then, do you charge extra for edited images?
www.kp-photos.com : facebook.com/kpphotos
ALL of the photos get basic processing... (brightness, contrast, color and or conversion editing) and at least 30 of the photos get deep processing (blemish, double chin, distracting element edits... plus extra creative processing. Basically anything opened in PS) My clients appreciate the effort, and I feel proud of the photos at both process levels.
In my opinion, "SOOC" means that you don't look at individual images, you either shoot JPG and truly DO upload them without touching them, or you shoot RAW and you output them without touching them individually.
=Matt=
My SmugMug Portfolio • My Astro-Landscape Photo Blog • Dgrin Weddings Forum
Natural selection is responsible for every living thing that exists.
D3s, D500, D5300, and way more glass than the wife knows about.