Tips & Education – Where are the Rest of the Images?!

Jul 27, 2013 | Uncategorized

Here is a fabulous article from Design Aglow that addresses a question we get asked pretty frequently, “Where are the rest of the images?”

In addition to everything you will read below, Front Room has come up with a great workaround for our wedding clients. The All Day Time Lapse is a fun new product that allows us to deliver all of the images we shoot in a day . The speed of the time lapse allows each image to only be seen for a fraction of a second. This means even the images that we don’t deem worthy of being a “Front Room Image” can still contribute to the telling of your story! (Which is what we are all about!)

The larger collection of art that is available to our brides (on USB and online gallery) are the beautiful images that tell the story of their wedding. These are the images a couple wants to look at in the years to come! We know that in 5 or 10 years they will not want to wade through 10,000 pictures to find that one where they look good. We value our clients time and they value our expertise. We have their reputations in mind. So, we work hard on each wedding to not release images (for the world to see) that are not flattering.

When all is said and done, we tell stories using the most beautiful mediums and images we can. That’s our goal for every single client!

Typically, photographers provide clients with an estimated number of images they can expect to receive from their session.  However, they also shoot a lot more at the session.  So why aren’t those shared?  What if you don’t think you see an image you imagine you would love when it was shot?  What if you feel that something was just missed?  How come you can’t make the final call?

In short, you hired a professional based on what you saw in their portfolio, and their ability to replicate that consistently in their gallery presentations. You really just have to trust that the photographer has made the correct call in what to show you.

“Fine.  But honestly, where are the rest of the images and why can’t I see them?  I heard you shooting almost 2-3X as many as are in the gallery.”

Photographers overshoot – the degree to which they do that, depends on the photographer, and the type of session.  Some photographers have a low shoot ratio (low number of shots in relation to number of keepers), and some have a high.  The reasons behind over-shooting can range from uncertainty about a situation or lighting, the inability to perhaps capture that one great family shot (eye blinks, expression changes), gear issues (trying a shot with a couple of different apertures, crops or angles), or  simply not wanting to miss anything at the session.  Whatever the reasons, the photographer never believes at any point in time that they will show you everything they shoot.

Add to this, sometimes the photographer is testing out the light or just getting a feel for how you look behind the camera.  Sometimes they want to shoot and move around you, to figure out just what makes you look best.  Sometimes, especially in group shots, they are shooting quick because they are hoping that the one person whose expression or behavior isn’t cooperating will turn it around without them having to address is, and that additional swapping and merging won’t be necessary.  Sometimes they are trying something new and there is never an intention that it will be shown, unless it surpasses their expectations.

And sometimes, the shot just isn’t good. Maybe there was action blur. Maybe your eyes were closed.  Maybe a zipper was undone or a hand was not where it should be. Maybe they could see something inappropriate that required adjustment.

But whatever the reason, the photographer is showing you a gallery of images that has been culled and edited based on their experience of what will best represent their work that you hired them to create.

A sample of an All Day Time Lapse – only some of the images that were used to tell the story here stood up to scrutiny of our production team. 

 

For every gallery that comes out where the client wishes they saw “more,” there is a client that wishes their photographer had more carefully edited down.  When clients are shown too many images, unless all are spectacular, they are left with the feeling of “These 5 family shots are all identical, I wonder if she felt she had to include them all because she didn’t like the rest?”  If a gallery is comprised of a few great shots and the rest “filler,” you will not feel any more satisfied than you would if you saw ALL the images.  And inevitably, if the photographer decides to include a sub-par shot from a series, that is the one shot the client will focus on and remember.

So unless you feel that entire segments of your session are truly missing, or your photographer has provided you with no explanation, but less images than they promised you with your session fee, trust that they have culled their images, edited out the unusable or exact duplicates, and provided you with the range that they feel most represents their style.  Quite often, asking for “more,” just because you believe more were shot, and for no other reason, will not net you with anything else that is usable, or that you would want.


Here is the Story Collection from the same wedding.  Our FAVORITE images of the day that we have finished (fully retouched to our Fine Art level). One more way we tell your story!

As a client, do your homework and invest in someone that has the experience to create consistent galleries with variety… discuss your session goals, as well as what you can expect to receive as an outcome (not just volume, but a general idea of what is included in the gallery), and put your faith in that what you are seeing is the best of the best and enjoy what you receive rather than question or wish for what you did not!

By DesignAglow.com.