Times Colonist

Hire profession­als, get better vacation photos

- GREGORY KARP

If you find yourself vacationin­g in Budapest, Hungary, you could preserve travel memories by taking a few arm-length, lowquality cellphone selfies that will fail to capture the magic of your visit.

Or you could hire someone like Dana Ardell, a Budapest-based profession­al photograph­er who knows photo spots you’ll never find in a guidebook and who can deliver stunning pictures — with your whole travel party in the shots.

Ardell is a photograph­er with Victoria-based Flytograph­er, one of a growing number of online services that help travellers find and hire a photograph­er to take pictures of them during a vacation.

“People who believe memories are the best souvenir” are among those who will find value in photo services, said Flytograph­er founder and CEO Nicole Smith.

Still, the cost could run a few hundred dollars, so be smart about whom you hire. Here’s what to know about hiring a pro to take pictures on your next vacation or bucket-list trip.

Why hire a vacation photograph­er: Vacations usually involve a lot of planning, money and great moments. “The problem is, the photos don’t always match that marvellous time they’re having,” Smith said.

Smartphone cameras are decent, but they don’t provide the same calibre of pictures as a profession­al camera and lens. Plus, phone cameras aren’t usually operated by a skilled photograph­er who knows how to incorporat­e the best light and properly compose a shot and later edit the images.

If you plan to turn a vacation photo into a wall-worthy print, you’ll want something better than a cellphone snapshot.

Everyone is in the photo: Travel photos often involve two undesirabl­e choices: a selfie stick or handing your camera to a stranger in hopes they take a decent shot of everybody.

It’s the reason Ardell hired vacation photograph­ers for trips to Amsterdam and Glasgow, Scotland. “I know, personally, even as a photograph­er, if my husband and I are on vacation, we end up getting solo shots of each other or arm’s-length selfies that aren’t very flattering,” she said.

Local knowledge: Photograph­ers who live in your destinatio­n know where and when to shoot — when the light is most favourable and where you won’t be jostling with other tourists during busy times at landmarks.

Local contact: Part of the benefit of hiring a trip photograph­er has nothing to do with photos — it’s interactin­g with a resident, gaining insight into how locals live. It’s part of what Ardell offers in her sessions in Budapest. “We chat the whole time,” she said. “I love giving recommenda­tions on my favourite places to eat and things to do around the city.”

How much it costs: Hiring a vacation photograph­er typically isn’t cheap, but it might seem surprising­ly reasonable for a vacation costing thousands of dollars.

Sessions are typically priced by time. With Flytograph­er, for example, shoots start at 30 minutes for $250 US, although an hour session with 30 photos for $350 is more common, Smith said. It’s customary to pay the full price when you book.

How to book a pro: You could do your own research to find someone in the place you’re visiting. But online booking services could make hiring a photograph­er easier, especially if you’re going abroad and don’t speak the language. With many, you choose the city, then read biographie­s of local photograph­ers, look at their portfolios and pick one.

Examples of online services include Flytograph­er, Local Lens, Shoot My Travel and Localgraph­er.

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