Posts Tagged ‘expenses’

Why Wedding Photography is So Expensive

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

After the last bridal show in Austin Tx, we got together with some friends for dinner and the conversation shifted to the cost of wedding photography and why it can be so expensive. When someone books a 5-6 hour wedding with us they may not be aware that our true time commitiment to our customer is about 30 hours.

We want our customers to understand that a professional photographer does more than “just shoot and burn a disk”. The wedding day is just the beginning. As professional photographers we always photograph in camera RAW format. This means that our workflow after the wedding is a day or so to process the 800-1500 images. Yes, we do check/adjust each image for color balance, exposure, composition etc as part of our processing. Then, we upload the entire wedding to the internet so family and friends can enjoy the photos. It takes quite a bit of time even with page templates and upload scripts to create/upload the 800-1500 thumbnail images, larger images and web proof pages.

A few months after the wedding, our happily married couple contacts us to go over their initial selection(s) for inclusion into their album and for prints. Many times we meet again and go over the 1st draft list, then select album covers, inserts or work up album page layouts. The images then go “off to the lab” for printing/processing. The appointments, lab transportation, phone calls, emails, etc add a significant amount of time to a wedding client.

Anyway, as you go about selecting your photographer or vidographer, please consider how much time and commitment your photographer is including in the “5 hour job” as you look at the cost for capturing your most special day – your wedding.

Authored by Raymond of EverafterImages.Com

Expense or expression? You decide

Monday, March 30th, 2009

There was a point in time during the past couple months that I got tired of writing the economy into nearly every news story I covered.  Of course, I couldn’t argue that it was relevant — just old.  But the fact is, the economy IS an important thing to consider, especially when planning a hefty event like a wedding.

First of all, know this: More dollars does not translate to a better event. So instead of stressing about your tight budget, try to think of ways to express yourself uniquely without draining your savings account.
Here are a couple things to try:

• Shop online.
The beauty of the Internet Age is the incredible variety of tools available to you on the Web, often in bulk or for cheaper prices than you will find at your local craft store. For invitations, for example, try using a site like vistaprint.com, which lets you design your own invitations, save-the-dates, etc. and prints them for you, then ships them in the mail.

Looking for decorations, and needing a lot of them? Check e-bay. You will find a generous number of former brides who are more than excited to let you take their lot of 100 lily bowls off their hands. An added bonus: After your big day, you can resell to the next bride in line! (I have never sold on e-bay, for the record, but have bought numerous things there and have never had a problem.)

• Shop around.
A temptation with wedding shopping — whether for accessories, décor or even a venue or photographer — is to splurge just because it’s a big day, a once-in-a-lifetime event, etc. While that may be a fact, a streak of impulse buys on wedding shopping trips could lead to regret down the road when you’re struggling to finance something the two of you may have a need for.

Yes, those flashy, custom-designed invitations are REALLY cute, and yes, the $2,000 photographer has an amazing portfolio. But before you decide to splurge, double-check your bottom line. Would it be easier on your budget to stick with the lower-end invites and embellish them yourself? Could you check with a photographer friend or look up a student in a college photojournalism program (insert plug for Kent State University’s top-notch journalism and photojournalism program here) who might be able to provide his services for a discounted price?
Sometimes, a splurge may be merited — but not without careful consideration.

• Put uniqueness before gallantry.
Your wedding should be an expression of you and your husband-to-be: Your tastes, your passions, your creativity. Don’t forget to shop local, where you can find some embellishments or creative touches that might not be offered by the big names. Try to think outside the box and put your hard-earned cash into a celebration that your guests will remember as being “you” — not just extravagant.

Our nation’s economic woes are touching just about every wallet out there, in one way or another. But that’s no reason to fret about pulling off a gorgeous wedding ceremony and reception. A little creativity and some savvy shopping skills will work wonders for your budget — and perhaps leave room along the line for that nice little house you’ve been saving for.

Authored by Abbey Roy for LV Sound Entertainment http://www.lvsoundent.com

Abbey is a brand-new bride from Wadsworth now living in Newark, Ohio. She is a general assignment reporter for the Newark Advocate and married fellow reporter and Kent State graduate Seth Roy on Oct. 25, 2008.