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As you plan for your wedding day, you will end a wide range of experiences, some of which you will be familiar with prior to this point. Young brides may have hired a caterer for a past function, or a florist for non-wedding arrangements, and so on. However, many brides have never bought to employ a photographer, particularly to document and capture what is to be one of the most important days of her life. Oh, and it is important to the groom, too.
So there can be a lot of pressure in this undertaking. (Minor understatement.)
After these concerns, hiring a wedding photographer can be a fun process (or, at the very least, less than stressful). Most importantly you need to focus on five distinct behaviors and characteristics of a photographer and her business.
1. Rapport
You will likely meet with more than one photographer, and in doing so you will learn a lot about the personality and interpersonal skills of the photographer. You may meet with one who acts like the stereotypical used car salesman, pushing you to sign on the dotted line while smiling and gazing inappropriately at your mother. You may speak with a photographer, only to find that she is actually able to engage in basic conversation, signaling her lack of social graces.
These are, of course, the extreme cases. You will, though, meet different personalities, and – like it or not – some personalities match you better than others. It is the way of human social interaction. The general rapport of the photographer will be absolutely crucial when it matters most – on the day you are married. Find a photographer who can hold a conversation, be pleasant, and still get the shots needed.
2. Style
You are hiring a photographer for one primary purpose – ie, to take photographs at your wedding that you will like after your wedding day. You have to like the style of the photographer selected, be that traditional and posed, dramatic with a fashion flair, photojournalistic and contemporary, and so on. You are hiring an artist, and the art must be something that speaks to your aesthetic sense. This is, to my mind, the easiest element to determine. Look at the sample photos, and you may very well have the 'A Ha' moment.
3. Product
You are not looking for a photographer so you can later claim that you did indeed purchase the 'Rose' package, or whatever cute moniker they develop for their most expensive 'plan.' You are looking for photographs, usually actual photographs you can touch and show to your grandmother who does not have a computer.
What I am getting at here is, you probably have an idea of what it is you want to HAVE – in your hands – after the wedding. That might be a DVD with high resolution photographs, it might be two hundred 4X6 prints, or an album. Whatever it is that you really want, you need to be sure that the photographer can produce, not only the item itself, but a QUALITY item. Albums vary incredibly in style and quality. Prints produced at your local big box outlet store are NOT the same as prints produced at professional photo printers. Be sure that you are comfortable with the photographer's products.
4. Professionalism
Let's say you set up an appointment with a photographer to talk about her services and she is twelve minutes late, uttering things like, "wow, traffic was bad," or, "I had a hard time finding the place." These statements may hold weight in ordinary events, but this is planning for your WEDDING DAY. Imagine that same photographer making the same statements after missing the beginning of your wedding. That is unacceptable.
Suppose that the photographer is on time to your meeting, but is wearing an Iron Maiden t-shirt claiming that the Dublin concert in 1984 really was a lot of fun. You can even like Iron Maiden and still find this dress less than professional.
You should expect, and indeed deserve, a professional photographer – one who exhibits the habits and behaviors of any business owner. The photographer will need to know their practice inside and out, and if you ask a question about their business and they seem flustered, then chances are incredible that you will be flustered while they are trying to take pictures of you. Professional conduct applications in any business, and certainly no less so in photography.
5. True Gestalt
Psychologists may cringe at my use of the term 'gestalt' here, but what I am getting at this is:
You are hiring the complete photographer. They will be at your wedding day and play a prominent role. You have to like the whole package.
So 1-4 above – rapport, style, product, and professionalism – must come together in a confluence of all the other things about the photographer and yield a complete package that you can support. This is important because, it is certainly possible that a particular photographer will satisfy your requirements on elements 1-4, but fail in the gestalt overview. If it does not all come together, walk away and keep looking.
When you are able to find a photographer with a rapport that matches your general demeanor, a style that calls to your artistic side, the products that will satisfy you and your loved ones, the professional characteristics necessary for conducting a good business, and the ' gestalt 'nature demonstrating the whole package – you are done looking! Hire that photographer!
(As an aside, let me go out on a limit here and make radical claim – the price does not really matter. in a wedding photographer, what is the difference of $ 500 (or more)? In the overall scheme of things, this is a small small price to pay for a really great service. times. Then you should get your cousin's friend to photograph the wedding who offered to do it for free since he just got his DSLR and would love to learn how to use it.)
This will all take some time, though some brides luck out and meet with the photographer they will hire on their first attempt. Do not be discouraged if you have to meet with several, though, as the time spent now will be more than worth it on your wedding day.
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Source by Peter Hanowell