Personal blog

I set this blog up as a way to spout out my thoughts on photography, generally spew out random thoughts and hopefully give new photographers something to think about (or not). So here it is, a blog by me - some might say the best documentary wedding photographer in cheshire, or not. Who cares !

Your job's dead easy mate

Guest banter | New wedding photographer tips

I love chatting to people at weddings, you never know who youā€™ll meet and how interesting they are. Obviously my day photographing a wedding isnā€™t simply an excuse to go along to a party and have a good time - although thatā€™s exactly what I do.

Really I like chatting to people because it makes them comfortable around me, if I engage with people like Iā€™m a guest I get treated as a guest, they relax and donā€™t see me as ā€œThe photographerā€, just someone else who happens to be there. Thatā€™s really how I get the pictures I do - by not being seen as the photographer at all.

I had an interesting chat with a guest the other week, weā€™d spoken a few times during the day and come the evening a fair few drinks had been consumed which is where the banter usually starts. It went along the lines of

ā€œYour jobs a piece of piss mate, walking around taking a few pics, beer in your handā€

ā€œI know, easy isnā€™t itā€

ā€œYou get paid a fortune to party with us, not bad that ehā€

ā€œI could think of worse ways to be earning money to be fairā€

ā€œYouā€™re not even taking that many pictures, Iā€™ve been watching youā€

ā€œShhh donā€™t tell the bride and groom thoughā€

Now then, if youā€™re new in the wedding photography game or thinking of starting out youā€™re probably thinking wooohoooo easy money !!

Hereā€™s the reality though, even though I do literally walk round chatting to people all day and donā€™t appear to actually be doing anything particularly taxing.

To get to this point Iā€™ve put in thousands of hours of work with my camera before going into weddings, I continue to do it now - itā€™s rare I donā€™t have a camera in my hand. So yes, to a casual observer Iā€™m merely occasionally randomly take the odd picture here and there but really itā€™s the pre-work thatā€™s gone into getting to the stage where I can take pictures on autopilot (like driving a car doesnā€™t take any thought but itā€™s a highly skilled and complicated thing to do)

My casual walking around for a day usually clocks up something like 25 miles on average, thatā€™s a lot of walking without a sit down. I shot a wedding in Italy last year, when I got home 2 of my toenails had come off and I had blisters all over my feet (sorry to be gross but there you go), not to mention sunstroke that was my own fault though.

Then thereā€™s the constant thinking, sure Iā€™m stood talking to people but while Iā€™m doing that Iā€™m acutely aware of my surroundings, listening to other conversations going on, watching other happenings, framing my next picture blah blah blah. Thatā€™s an awful lot for a brain to do for 16 hours straight. To put some context here, I usually have a 2 day brain hangover after a wedding where I feel like Iā€™ve been on a weekend bender. Iā€™m physically and emotionally drained.

Not to mention the stress - now itā€™s not really stressful once you have a bucket-load of experience but thereā€™s still the responsibility associated with the most important day of someoneā€™s life in your hands. You still have to be on point throughout the day, weddings have a habit of throwing something you werenā€™t expecting at you and even when they donā€™t thereā€™s still the additional thought that needs to go into ā€˜absolutely making sureā€™ you donā€™t stuff up pictures like the aisle walk etc

Shooting a wedding well from a documentary perspective is hard graft, physically and mentally - a real documentary photographer isnā€™t simply taking random snaps, thereā€™s a method, a story, a lot of observation and quick thinking involved. All while making the whole thing look effortless, actually being so effortless youā€™re not even noticed.

I guess what Iā€™m trying to say is, yes my job is a piece of piss mate, itā€™s a doddle and I get to party, chat, be involved and thoroughly enjoy someoneā€™s wedding along with everyone else, and do something Iā€™m massively passionate about - but itā€™s not simply a case of buying a camera, tipping up and taking a few snaps. Well it is kind of I suppose, it just depends how good you want those pictures to look.