Wedding 'Packages' - how many?

cheers DD

how kind :lol:.
a m8 of ours is self employed and is helping out with all we need to sort it out .
so it isn`t that we won`t be telling the tax man . we will . i have receipts for around £10,000 of kit .

How kind indeed - always glad to help my cousin Gordon Brown and his mates :lol::lol::lol:



Seriously though, tell them sooner than later as if anyone wants to 'shop' you, it can cause a whole load of hassle proving you haven't been making a tonne of cash for years

DD
 
How kind indeed - always glad to help my cousin Gordon Brown and his mates :lol::lol::lol:



Seriously though, tell them sooner than later as if anyone wants to 'shop' you, it can cause a whole load of hassle proving you haven't been making a tonne of cash for years

DD

well we are of to france for 2 weeks from friday ,we have said when we get back we need to sort it out.


like i say i don`t want loads to do a year . i have 4 more this year and 5 for next year . we don`t advertise yet. but might decide to .

rog :thumbs:
 
Compared to some of the 'monopoly money' prices bandied around by wedding togs, £250 set fee, or £40/25 per hour looks eminently reasonable.

It's one of the most difficult branches of photography to undertake, as not only do you have to produce top class images under pressure, you need to be able to crowd control, keep your cool, be confident, able to respond to changes in circumstances (eg p****ing down) , you need to be an amateur psychologist, counsellor and at times mediator, and be able to deal with Auntie Ethel who has spilt trifle down her Laura Ashley two piece, or Uncle Jim who is so rat-arsed at the reception that he staggers all over the group shots.
And you can't go back and do it all again when the lights right.

It's definitely not a job for the faint-hearted :)

Another point is that over the years the parts/labour ratio has changed dramatically.

When I did weddings (25-30 years ago) is was around 50/50 i.e. I'd charge £100 for a wedding shoot, but 50% of that went on film processing/prints/albums etc, in those days a 10x8 print at a pro-lab was around £1-about what it costs at photobox today.

So currently the split is skewed very much towards the 'labour' part, and there is so much more to do nowadays. in the 'olden' days, I'd do a shoot, send the rolls of film for processing, stick them in a proof album, send the negs away for 10x8's paste them in an album and deliver.

Nowadays, you have the extended time in front of the computer post processing, retouching, indexing, sorting, resizing etc perhaps setting them on a website and still have to produce albums.
 
Compared to some of the 'monopoly money' prices bandied around by wedding togs, £250 set fee, or £40/25 per hour looks eminently reasonable.

It's one of the most difficult branches of photography to undertake, as not only do you have to produce top class images under pressure, you need to be able to crowd control, keep your cool, be confident, able to respond to changes in circumstances (eg p****ing down) , you need to be an amateur psychologist, counsellor and at times mediator, and be able to deal with Auntie Ethel who has spilt trifle down her Laura Ashley two piece, or Uncle Jim who is so rat-arsed at the reception that he staggers all over the group shots.
And you can't go back and do it all again when the lights right.

It's definitely not a job for the faint-hearted :)

Another point is that over the years the parts/labour ratio has changed dramatically.

When I did weddings (25-30 years ago) is was around 50/50 i.e. I'd charge £100 for a wedding shoot, but 50% of that went on film processing/prints/albums etc, in those days a 10x8 print at a pro-lab was around £1-about what it costs at photobox today.

So currently the split is skewed very much towards the 'labour' part, and there is so much more to do nowadays. in the 'olden' days, I'd do a shoot, send the rolls of film for processing, stick them in a proof album, send the negs away for 10x8's paste them in an album and deliver.

Nowadays, you have the extended time in front of the computer post processing, retouching, indexing, sorting, resizing etc perhaps setting them on a website and still have to produce albums.



I think we can all use this as part of our advertising - thanks Les

Prices up 75% on the back of this explanation of how wonderful we Wedding Togs are

:D

While it may be £40+ an hour for the shoot, I doubt many could calculate it at that rate for the whole effort that goes into Wedding toggery (new word?) where an album is needed too; without some very efficient systems or 'junior' fee rate assistants

DD
 
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