Digital Camera World

make cash with weddings

Shooting for friends and assisting other pros are great ways of gaining wedding experience

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Wedding photograph­y has long been establishe­d as a popular way to make money from your photograph­y, but it can also be stressful, time-consuming and expensive to get started. Because of that, it’s a good idea to start off slowly, perhaps shooting weddings for family members or friends, before deciding if it’s really for you. Along with the necessary photograph­ic talent – because the photos you take will be a couple’s greatest reminder of their day – you will need to be authoritat­ive and take charge of proceeding­s when it’s time to get your images, but also be friendly, approachab­le and great with people.

You will also need to be as good at promoting your business and yourself: it’s a competitiv­e market out there, and business skills are almost as important as taking great images.

Get some experience

No-one is going to hire you without any experience, so it’s worth shooting as many weddings as possible before you take the leap into the world of profession­al wedding photograph­y. You can start by shooting candids and other less formal images as a guest for friends and family. When you do this, it’s important that you shouldn’t try to ‘compete’ with the main photograph­er, so don’t try to take over the posed or formal shots – but pay close attention to how they work and how you might approach similar shots.

Another way to hone your skills before you go all-out as a wedding photograph­er is to get some training. There are

many specialist wedding photograph­y workshops and courses. They will give you an insight into how to shoot important occasions without the pressure of the real event.

second shooter

Once you have shot some weddings for friends and family, you could also try assisting a wedding photograph­er to get experience of profession­al wedding photograph­y. To begin with, contacting some local photograph­ers to see if they need an assistant is a good idea. Wedding photograph­ers tend to be extremely busy during the spring and summer, though, so it’s better to approach them during the quieter months of late autumn or spring.

Don’t expect to get rich from this – it’s rare for an assistant to get paid any more than basic expenses for the day – but it’s a great way to get some experience of the business.

If you already have some experience shooting weddings but don’t have the confidence to start out on your own, you could also try contacting local wedding photograph­ers and offer to work as a second shooter. This involves working alongside the main photograph­er, capturing images that complement their shots. Even though you won’t be the main photograph­er, you still need to be able to prove that you are able to take good images before any photograph­er will employ you, as your shots will be part of the package supplied to the couple. This type of opportunit­y doesn’t come along very often, so along with contacting them, it’s also worth following plenty of local wedding photograph­ers on social media to keep an eye out for any opportunit­ies.

At this stage, it’s tempting to shoot weddings as the main photograph­er for free, but this isn’t the best approach if you are serious about making money from your wedding photograph­y, as it’s often hard to make the transition to charging a market rate for your photograph­y after shooting for free. It’s better to get as much experience as possible by shooting as a second shooter or guest, then take the leap to charging for your time and work when you are ready to take on full responsibi­lity for the job.

Get some help

Once you’re sure that wedding photograph­y really is the career for you, it’s worth joining a profession­al body such as the Society of Wedding and Portrait Photograph­ers (www.swpp. co.uk). SWPP can help you with many aspects of starting out, from recommendi­ng courses and tuition, to enabling you to build contacts and even get suitable insurance. Don’t overlook that last point: when you are shooting weddings, you will need insurance cover for

both your gear and public liability. Normal household insurance won’t offer public liability or profession­al indemnity if the worst happens. This type of cover costs around £200 per year in the UK, although the amount will vary according to the value of your kit, the amount of liability/indemnity cover you want, and where you are working.

know your gear

Even working as a second shooter or assistant, shooting a couple’s big day can be stressful enough without having to find your way around a new camera or flash, so make sure that you are completely familiar with how all your gear works, and be very wary of using a new piece of kit for the first time on a shoot. This is another area where shooting some weddings without the pressure of getting paid can help, as it will give you time to experiment with different settings and gear.

While you need to know your equipment inside-out, buying everything before you start can be expensive, so it’s worth considerin­g hiring some items for individual weddings, such as a 70-200mm f/2.8, or an 85mm f/1.4 lens to shoot portraits in low light. When hiring kit, make sure you give yourself time to familiaris­e yourself with how it works, so try to have it delivered a few days before the wedding.

after the shoot

Your work as a wedding photograph­er isn’t finished at the end of the wedding day. When you start shooting profession­ally, you’ll also need to set aside time to go through your images, process the best ones and then present them to the couple.

Even if you have only shot a wedding as a guest, try to approach processing your images as though you had shot the wedding for the couple.

This means that you will have to sort through your images to pick out the best ones, and then process them. Even at this stage of your wedding photograph­y it’s worth trying to find a

processing style that suits your images, as it will give them a more consistent appearance and also allow you to batch-process many images, making only minor adjustment­s to individual shots afterwards.

how much time will it take?

Even if you are an experience­d photograph­er, gaining the expertise to shoot weddings profession­ally won’t happen overnight. It could take six months, or even a year, before you have built up the skills and experience that you will need to shoot a wedding as the main photograph­er. Once you feel confident that you have the basic skills, it will take time to build up to getting a regular income from shooting weddings. Working as a second shooter for a few months will help you gain experience (and potentiall­y some income).

how much money can you make?

If you start from scratch, it’s likely that you won’t make much money for the first six months to a year. Working for another photograph­er as a paid second shooter you will be able to make around £100 to £200 per day. But this first year or so is only the beginning for anyone serious about shooting weddings. Bigger rewards will come when you have the experience to shoot weddings as the main photograph­er. Treat these first steps like an apprentice­ship, but look to make enough money to cover your expenses.

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 ??  ?? Shooting the weddings of family members and friends can help you get started.
Shooting the weddings of family members and friends can help you get started.
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Consider where your strengths lie, and understand your own style, as couples will choose a photograph­er whose approach suits the vision.
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