At some point, almost everyone needs a photographer for a momentous occasion, and choosing the right one is harder than it looks.
As camera gear has gotten cheaper and more accessible, it can feel like everyone is a photographer. There’s also a common myth that an expensive camera automatically produces beautiful images. It doesn’t. Without an understanding of light, real command of the camera, and strong editing skills, even the priciest gear won’t deliver. So how do you actually choose a wedding photographer? Let’s move past “what are your packages?” and talk about what really separates one photographer from another.
Understand the Different Styles
Most couples don’t realize how much a photographer’s lighting approach shapes the final images. Many photographers work only with natural light and a single flash mounted on top of the camera. That setup is convenient, but it’s creatively limited, bound by whatever the sun is doing and by a flash that can only point in one direction. It’s difficult to create dramatic, magazine-worthy images that way.
This is why higher-end photographers invest in off-camera flash. Instead of a single light fixed to the camera, they position multiple lights around you, controlled wirelessly, to sculpt soft, flattering, dimensional light, sometimes using several lights on a single portrait. It’s the difference between a snapshot and an image that makes your family say “wow.” You can see what that looks like in my dramatic and creative style galleries.
Decide on the Look You Want
Beyond lighting, you’ll want to think about the overall mood of your photos: light and airy, dramatic and editorial, or natural and timeless. There’s no wrong answer, but knowing your preference helps you find a photographer whose style genuinely matches your vision. My own work leans dramatic, with hints of the whimsical and the natural, and you can explore the full range across my photography styles.
Why this matters: a photographer’s style is hard to change. If you love bright and airy images, hiring a dramatic photographer (or vice versa) usually leads to disappointment, no matter how skilled they are. Match the style first.
Why Creative Photography Costs More
Pricing naturally comes into play, and it helps to understand what drives it. A more creative, higher-end photographer typically costs more for real reasons, not arbitrary ones:
- More equipment — those off-camera lights, stands, and modifiers get carried and set up throughout the day.
- More involved editing — a single creative edit can take anywhere from fifteen minutes to an hour, a dramatic increase in workload over basic color correction.
- Higher-end gear — professional cameras and luxury lenses produce sharper, more detailed images.
If you don’t want your photos to look like everyone else’s, it’s worth investing in the fine details. For a fuller breakdown, see my guide on what wedding photography costs.
How I Approach It
My philosophy is about bridging quality, artistry, and genuine care, an approach that isn’t as common in the wedding industry as it should be. I shoot with professional, industry-standard cameras and luxury lenses, and I give every couple a blend of natural light, multiple off-camera flashes, and on-camera flash, whatever each moment calls for. On top of that, clients receive a selection of advanced “signature edits” that turn standout images into true artwork.
I’m a boutique studio, which means exclusivity and personal attention for every couple, one wedding per day, always. If you’d like to talk through what you’re envisioning, please don’t hesitate to reach out.