I feel you have missed my point
I don't give a monkeys who is doing the shooting. I just noted at one end of the scale, you have people who earn good money doing something else, and don't have any financial pressure to earn a living from an individual job, hence they can charge a few hundred quid.
At the other, you have the chap who literally will or wont eat, if he charges a unsustainably low price.
Brides make a choice - that's blunt market forces and economics. I am not going to make an impact on it, so...
As a self employed photographer...
IF
I don't provide a product and service at a price people are prepared to pay
AND...
The money I then make after costs isn't enough to support my family
THEN
I'm bust
WHEREAS
IF
I have a full time job that pays the bills & supports my hobby
AND
I shoot a wedding for £200
OR
If I dont shoot any weddings at all
THEN
I will still be in a job and I will still pay the bills
HOWEVER
If the whole world run like the second scenario, nothing will get done, nothing would get developed, the world as we know it would come to a grinding halt. We accept we all need jobs, we accept we all pay for goods and services, and we accept that there are always going to be 2 prices - the real price and the underground price. Yes it makes business a little more challenging, but ultimatally, the low prices are unsustainable, which is why people charging the real price are still there, will always be there etc. etc.
Same applies to anything - car mechanics, decorators, photographers, cake makers etc.
It's OK to test the water and gain experience, but please don't fall into the trap of believing that there's a viable business in that price.When does someone go from being an amateur where you, as the customer, are sacrificing quality for cost, to someone entering the market who can provide you with quality at a lower cost in order to build a reputation and a working portfolio?
In answer to the op, no I don't think the lower cost of digital is killing the industry - it's astonishing how many people cannot even get a half decent shot with a very capable camera. The Uncle Bobs will be at every wedding but not in a paid capacity and if a client is prepared to pay £200 for mediocre shots then they were never really in the running for a pro anyway. Maybe these people, people like me, are filling a gap.
I have booked a wedding recently, it will actually be the first I have charged for and am charging £350 for the full day coverage with a DVD. It will seem like peanuts to some but over-priced to others but the couple are happy with my style of photography and are comfortable enough with me. I also noticed another newbie locally advertising their services and charging less than I plan to, but I checked them out and we are very different so people who are interested in them probably wouldn't be interested in me - I can live with that, variety is the spice of life or so they say![]()
jamesoliverstone said:Oh well, it seems that according to some people on this thread, because I shoot with a Sony a77 I guess I am not a pro anymore.
Too damned right you aren't! Unless you've finally managed to flog those holiday snaps of yours!![]()
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I feel you have missed my point
I don't give a monkeys who is doing the shooting. I just noted at one end of the scale, you have people who earn good money doing something else, and don't have any financial pressure to earn a living from an individual job, hence they can charge a few hundred quid.
At the other, you have the chap who literally will or wont eat, if he charges a unsustainably low price.
Brides make a choice - that's blunt market forces and economics. I am not going to make an impact on it, so...
As a self employed photographer...
IF
I don't provide a product and service at a price people are prepared to pay
AND...
The money I then make after costs isn't enough to support my family
THEN
I'm bust
WHEREAS
IF
I have a full time job that pays the bills & supports my hobby
AND
I shoot a wedding for £200
OR
If I dont shoot any weddings at all
THEN
I will still be in a job and I will still pay the bills
HOWEVER
If the whole world run like the second scenario, nothing will get done, nothing would get developed, the world as we know it would come to a grinding halt. We accept we all need jobs, we accept we all pay for goods and services, and we accept that there are always going to be 2 prices - the real price and the underground price. Yes it makes business a little more challenging, but ultimatally, the low prices are unsustainable, which is why people charging the real price are still there, will always be there etc. etc.
Same applies to anything - car mechanics, decorators, photographers, cake makers etc.

Unless the 'UBs' and 'WWs' have to take on some of the costs of a Pro, Insurance, Tax, Back Up gear etc, then there will always be the cheap option. :shrug:
.
I agree with you apart from low prices being unsustainable. Why not? :shrug:
Unless the 'UBs' and 'WWs' have to take on some of the costs of a Pro, Insurance, Tax, Back Up gear etc, then there will always be the cheap option. :shrug:
I've reluctantly done a few weddings, but these were for people who were unwilling, or because of the cost and location of the wedding couldn't want to pay top dollar. If these people are unwilling to spend on a Pro for (hopefully guaranteed) results on possibly the biggest day of their life then that is their choice. :shrug: If they are unable to pay then they make the most of what they can get. :shrug:
I am firstly not sure why we always end up talking about weddings... however
The prices / businesses are unsustainable (in terms of a business model or anything else really). You realistically are not going to shoot 20 weddings for a couple of hundred quid each. On a practical level they absorb so much time
- acquiring the customer
- dealing with websites
- doing the shoot
- editing images
- doing the backups
- uploading stuff on line
- dealing with album enquires
- designing albums
- delivering products
- driving to the post office
la la la
This is why I see locally, each year a new crowd of bottom feeders arrive and go. They shoot about 5 weddings and get totally lost, behind and sink - it is unsustainable financially, and in practical terms too
I just spent all day making back ups, burning disks, making sideshows - non stop.. its Sunday, I work full time at this, and it still takes over my free time.
look at a camera that costs 4K and has a shutter expectancy of 200,000 clicks. Without shooting anything else, based on 2000 shots a wedding, it will last 100 weddings. Wil a Pro take it anywhere near 200,000 click - no unless he is mad. The camera costs £40 per wedding, in reality, if you shoot few weddings, you still need to invest in ALL the gear, so lets just say to be generous, it costs £100 per wedding in gear, that is based on not shooting too many weddings.
I recon you need to invest £8000+ in gear to have the right amount with you at a wedding and do the job properly and have a backup £8000 is £220 per month for 3 years at 8.8 Apr (don't mention depreciation)
It is all these reasons why shooting weddings for a few hundred quid is unsustainable, and possibly why people justify buying a pile of gear for their hobby to their spouses
Minor point...
A new camera costs £4000, a new shutter and service about £400. Why would you buy a complete new camera unless it was obsolete?
very artificial figure there rich - why would you shoot 2000 shots per wedding for a start - the last one i did i shot about 400. So given that my camera is good for about 100,000 clicks that would be 250 weddings
secondly you dont need anywhere 8 grands worth of gear - 2 bodies, 2 flash guns and a couple of lenses (plus associated sundries) , and theres a lot of snobbery about having to have full frame or having to have fast lenses - the last wedding I shot I used a 20D and a 450D with a 18-55IS, a nifty, 90m f2.8 , and 70-300 IS, 2 canon 420exs - total cost about £1500 (and that includes buying the 20D new eight years ago)
(Even if you decided full frame was a must you could still pick up a couple of 5D clasic and short Ef lenses and have change out of 2 grand.)
so thats a cost of £6 per wedding for gear
All that notwithstanding I do agree that shooting a full day for £300 quid isnt a sustainable model - I'd usually value my time at about £50/hour , so eight hours at the venue and 4 hours PP would give a cost of £600 which is about the minimum i'd charge unless it was a very short job
Ask.
I did pluck the figures out of the air there a bit
However
Most wannabe wedding photographers are shooting stupid amounts of images, machine gun style, nothing like 400. Perhaps we could all chip in what we shoot and what we deliver.
I shoot about 1200, and deliver 1150
Secondly, I really disagree with you about the gear - to cheapskate this..
Lets say as a minimum 1200 for a body x 2 = £2400
and at least a couple of grands worth of lenses = £2000
2 half decent flash guns £600
a set of stands and some accessories £150
Some radio triggers £400
Tripods, monopods and reflectors £200
CF cards £200
Batteries £100
Decent camera strap £100
Decent carry bags £150
Thats still 5K +, and TBH that's light on the lenses, and probably light on one of the cameras
Most Pro's who do this a lot will have available to them an additional pile of lighting gear, and other spares and a wider range of lenses
- micro/macro
- fish eye
- fast super wide angle
- fast long prime
- 85mm 1.4 and/or or 50mm 1.4
- a range of 2.8 zooms
(thats on top of the good long zoom on camera one and the good short zoom on camera 2)
Maybee even
- colour passport etc.
) as its all a matter of personal preference and also of how much cash you have to inject - but my point is that it isnt essential to spend that ammount of cash on kit in order to shoot a wedding.