10 Things a Photographer Should Not Do

Do not…

  1. Spend too much time thinking about your gear.  Equipment is important, but it is not the core of photography.  In fact, I think it is good for every photographer to learn how to work well under the challenge of cheaper equipment.  Remember, ultimately only photographing makes you a better photographer.
  2. Leave your camera at home.  To drive this incentive home for me I have committed to “a Photo a Day” and am working towards getting a Kelly Moore purse so I literally always have my camera on my person.
  3. Forget to fuel your creativity.  It is good to have a repertoire of “go to” ideas when you are stumped but you will only improve as you let your creativity continue to flow and the best way to do that is to be seeking for new ideas at every shoot.  If you need help I suggest trying new lenses, new locations, or do some online research for new poses and great artwork to get your juices flowing.  Remember, you want to separate yourself from your competition.
  4. Ignore the value of your copyright.  If your copyrights are not valuable, why are people working so hard to get them?
  5. Take every assignment.  The best photographers find their niche and build on that.  At the beginning I found it valuable to take a little bit of everything.  In my opinion, how else are you going to find our what you like and what you’re really good at?  But as soon as you find that niche hone in on it.
  6. Ignore the math.  Are your expenses higher than your income?  You can only do so much work so be sure you are charging enough per session.
  7. Ignore blogging.  Blogging is the most “Google friendly” way to get your material out there.  I’ve found frequency to be the key.  CLICK HERE for more info on how to blog for your business.
  8. Ignore social media. Social media are the best ways to share your work with the world, especially if you get a network of friends supporting your work enthusiastically.
  9. Think you can fix everything by editing.  The bottom line of a great photographer is getting the lighting and the settings right first and only using editing programs like Lightroom and Photoshop to spruce it up.
  10. Stop learning.  Always be researching your field and looking for new ways to advance your work.  Look at art, look at other photographer’s work, and look into all areas of your business and continually seek improvement.  You will never know everything.

Why so much for wedding photography?

I am tired of clients declining my services in favor of hiring a family friend or a company that doesn’t care about them or their needs for $750.  I am tired of feeling like I have to defend my prices to myself and others.  I am tired of feeling the weight of the financial burden of being a self-employed photographer.

The fact is, the joy of being a self-employed photographer is that I mostly get to work from my in-home studio and I’m doing what I love, but the woes are many.  I work until a job is done and when a job is done there is always one in line right behind it (this means 9-5 begins to look ideal as I often spend 10+ hours a day and a lot of weekends working).  While I work clients are calling upon me to finish faster despite the fact I’m still well within my deadline.  And with all of this I am scraping by to pay the bills because December – March is the SLOW SEASON.  This means $50 – $200 portrait sessions are attempting to pull the weight of all our bills (roughly 10 – 40 of these would satisfy that need), but there are business expenses to be looked after as well.

So, now I seek to educate my readers in hopes of more considerate client to photographer dealings. I hope I don’t sound angry or mean because I am not, I am just disheartened.

Before I divulge, thank you so much to my brides and other clients who love and appreciate who I am and what I do.  I am ever so grateful to you and the joy your support and encouragement brings me and my family!

Why so much for wedding photography?

This first section of data was taken from a blog by Nikki Wagner because my statistics are in a significantly lower price bracket but I still have these expenses and needs and yet I still get complaints.

“Dear Bride,

I am a wedding photographer in the Erie, PA area. Wedding season only last about 4 months here, so I photograph an average of 20 weddings per year for an average of $2,500/wedding (which totals about $50,000/year).

  • That being said, I am a small business owner, so I pay all of my taxes, totaling about $15,000/year, which leaves me with a gross income of around $35,000
  • Of that $35,000 I pay $600/month in rent for my small house and garage which I converted into my studio (which is where I would be editing your wedding images).$35,000 – $7,200 = $27,800
  • Then I have my car, which I would use to get me to and from your wedding, which I pay $400/month for the lease, plus $200/month in car insurance. $27,800 – $7,200 = $20,600
  • To get to your (and my other brides) wedding consultation, second wedding pre-consultation, the wedding itself, and to and from the printers I spend $840/year in gas money. $20,600 – $840 = $19,760
  • I also have $500/year insurance in case you sue me, or if any of your drunk guests would happen to break any of my equipment. $19,760 – $500 = $19,260
  • You also probably found me through my website, which I pay $30/month for hosting, and another $30/month so that you can view your photos online and share the images with your friends and family. $19,260 – $720 = $18,540
  • Or perhaps you found me through my advertisements in the newspaper or local bridal magazines, or a bridal show that you attended that I paid to have a booth at. $18,540 – $1,000 = $17,540
  • I also pay $250/month for my own health insurance in case I were to get hurt at your wedding. $17,540 – $3,000 = $14,540
  • I pay $200/wedding for a second shooter for your wedding, so that you can have more images and different angles, as to make sure you get the best images possible at your wedding. $14,540 – $4,000 = $10,540
  • I also need to have a new pair of shoes ($100) every season because my shoes get worn out and dirty from season to season. $10,540 – $100 = $10,440
  • I need high speed internet so I can upload all of your images online, my home phone for my business and my cell phone so I can communicate with you. $10,440 – $2,500 = $7,940
  • Oh yes, and I also pay a lawyer to make sure my contracts are iron clad and an accountant to make sure that I am paying all of the taxes I need. $7,940 – $500 = $7,440
  • Sometimes I attend workshops and seminars to teach me how to better my business, and make my client happier (that would be you), as well as keep up on the trends and learn new techniques so that I can make sure you have the best quality images available.

That would technically leave me with about $7,000/year to feed myself, buy groceries, pay for my heat and electricity, clothe myself, etc. But, usually I end up reinvesting whatever I have left on upgrades and new equipment.”

-stats from Nikki Wagner

Now for stats by me…

For your wedding I bring my high quality professional equipment to ensure your wedding images are the best I can make them.

  • I have two Canon 5D Mark II cameras (I keep both strapped on me all day to ensure if one fails I have a back up) = $4,000
  • I also have high quality lenses to capture your low light special moments:
    Canon 85mm f/1.2L lens = $1,200
    Canon 50mm f/1.2L lens = $1,440
    Canon 35mm f/1.4L lens = $1,330
  • I have lighting equipment to give you great family pictures:
    Light stand, light box, external battery packs: $1,000
  • I have brilliant flashes to capture all the moments at your reception
    Canon 580EX II = $650
  • I also have multiple battery backups and memory cards and a bag to carry everything in = $1,000+

After spending 8-10 hours at your wedding, I then come home to my home office and spend about 20-25 hours editing your images, creating your album, blogging about your wedding, posting pictures on Facebook, ordering your prints and burning your DVDs.

  • I edit your photographs using a 27-inch iMac computer = $2,500.
  • I edit your photographs on Adobe Lightroom ($200) and Adobe CS5 ($400).
  • I buy custom DVDs in bulk for $300
  • I archive all of your photographs on a 2TB external hard drive = $220.
  • I also have office expenses as far as buying paper, staples, envelopes, packaging, filing cabinets and files, etc…
  • I also spend time and money ordering your prints and albums, paying for shipping, going to the post office etc.
  • Lastly, but certainly not least, I am fully educated with a bachelor’s degree and that came at a price of $300,000 +

TOTAL INVESTMENT:  $315,000 +

All of that being said, I’m constantly pinching pennies, and take on many family portraits, senior portraits and any thing else I can get in order to make ends meet.

Photography is my passion and my livelihood, and it is also expensive. Yes, it seems like a lot of money for one day, but one day isn’t all I spend on you or on my business. I know you will spend thousands of dollars on a wedding dress, flowers, a venue, and on catering which you are going to have for only one day. The photographs I give you will be the only thing you have to remember of that one day for the rest of your lives.

I do feel insulted every time a bride scoffs at my price.  I hope you can see why in light of the full description of what my financial life looks like.  I understand every bride has their budget.  So brides, please know when you set your budget to factor this information in when deciding how much you will spend on your photographer and know that we are in charge of your memories of this special day of yours.  And please know that there are people behind that camera and though our goal is to serve you we do have feelings.  When you insult my work or my price I take it personally because I do consider my photography art and art comes from the heart.

Sincerely,

Kaia Calhoun

Blog post inspired by Why Wedding Photographers’ Prices are “Wack”

Book Review | An Echo in the Darkness

2Tuesday

SUMMARY

An Echo in the Darkness is the second book in Francine River’s Mark of the Lion historical fiction series.  In the first book  the reader is introduced to all the main characters: Hadassah, Marcus and Julia Valerian, Rizpah and Atretes.  In An Echo in the Darkness Hadassah, Marcus and Julia take over the narrative – Rizpah and Atretes take the narrative of As Sure as the Dawn, the third and final book in the series.

SPOILER ALERT, if you have not read the first book in the series I will give away some key details below by sharing the basis of An Echo in the Darkness.

When we meet Hadassah she is a Christian Jew taken from Jerusalem to Rome to become a slave in the Valerian household.  Marcus is the son of the prominent and abundantly wealthy Decimus Valerian.  Julia is the wholey self-absorbed, stubbornly independent daughter of Decimus.

We start An Echo in the Darkness with the broken-hearted and hungry Marcus.  He wanders about Ephesus and then Rome with a new pair of eyes that reveals the corrupt and broken nature of the two great cities.  Shortly thereafter, he resolves to seek God in order to curse him for taking Hadassah from him.  That is where his journey really begins.  His tale is full of wonderfully colorful characters and revelation.

We find Hadassah in a new role as an assistant to Alexander, a great physician.  Alexander saved Hadassah.  When she was still breathing after being brutally attacked by a lion, Alexander had compassion for her and instead of slicing her open for medical research he smuggled the dying Hadassah from the arena.  He was able to heal her, but at the expense of a terribly scarred face and a crippled leg.

The reader meets Julia in her fancy villa at the beginning of a treacherous illness and at the end of a long string of terrible decisions.

REVIEW

In contrast to the increasing hopelessness and turmoil in A Voice in the Wind, An Echo in the Darkness brought reward and hope to the tribulation of its predecessor.  What I loved most about this novel was the character molding, the hope of the redemption message and how I got to better understand the history of the Bible.

As the second book in the Mark of the Lion series An Echo in the Darkness carries on with character molding.  In A Voice in the Wind the reader follows Julia from a whimsical and carefree young woman to a sinister and self-indulgent wealthy aristocrat, Hadassah evolves from a destitute Jew to a shy slave girl to a bold woman of faith, and  the bull-headed and promiscuous Marcus becomes devoted in love to Hadassah and his financial desire slips away.  This is where we begin with our beloved characters in An Echo in the Darkness.  It is in this book I really fell in love with the characters and because of their stories I found myself feeling hopeful, challenged, and encouraged in my own relationship with Christ.  When Marcus chose the Lord and was baptized my heart rejoiced, almost as if for a real person.  I felt the same about Julia but almost ten-fold.  She was so stubborn and selfishly lost that for her to recover enough to recognize her own sin as sin and walk into the open arms of Christ was a miracle.  With these two redemption messages I found I was washed with a whole new wave of hope for my own journey in rescuing the souls I love.  It gave me the hope that, ultimately, God can reach the lost without my help but if does he call me it is an honor I’d better respond to.  When Hadassah grows in her newfound strength through Christ and becomes his vessel for as a healer and then as a caregiver I found myself challenged to allow God to take even more control in my life.  It was through Hadassah’s story that I realized I wasn’t as fully willing to do anything God wanted and felt so inspired to give way to my new-found barriers.  I was convicted to put all my faith in God even when circumstances seem impossible and that even the farthest from God can find Him if I can only deliver an abundance of love and prayer.  The lesson that particularly stuck out to me was from Hadassah’s story and the way she took care of Julia.  I hope and pray that I can have as much grace and patience when, one day, I find myself a caregiver.

Just as in A Voice in the Wind I loved the way the storytelling shed new light and meaning onto the history of the Bible.  An Echo in the Darkness takes place several years after Jesus’ death on the cross, shortly after the reign of Nero.  At this point the only apostle left living is John and the reader gets to encounter him within the story.  Because of the chosen time period Rivers was able to bring to life the context in the time Jesus was alive with stories from characters who met and followed him and brought even stronger context to the letters that follow the New Testament Gospel.   I would even go as far to say that I even better understood some aspects of the old testament because my perception of the New Testament was clarified. Because of this series I have found it is so educational to learn about the Bible through a story.  I love that now I can say I much better understand the New Testament letters because I have a good grasp on their historical context.

Any dislike for the book started and ended with the quality of writing.  In A Voice in the Wind I was frustrated with the lack of care in the writing but I found An Echo in the Darkness to be much better.  With the exception of still too much switching between points-of-view, long-winded Biblical excerpts within the story, and a sometimes choppy or unprofessional approach to writing, this second novel was, overall, much better in the quality of writing.

CONCLUSION

Just as with A Voice in the Wind, I strongly recommend this book to anyone but especially to seekers and believers.  It brought the Bible to life in ways I haven’t experienced before and helped me to understand my faith better because of it – that’s such a valuable experience to have.  Heck, I hope and plan to read them again, maybe even once a year.  The lessons I learned from the character molding are so valuable for the assertion of exhibiting a life resting on childlike faith – hoping on hope that ultimately God’s will prevails despite our shortcomings and sometimes because of our shortcomings.  I gave new meaning to the idea that “God works for the good of those who love him” and “He works all things for His greater good” – because of this story I was able to tangibly see how it’s sometimes the death and destruction of the world that can ultimately lead a soul to salvation.  But what I loved most about this book was that it called me out of myself.  I wasn’t even aware I had retreated into the recesses of me until I saw more tangible ways to be a servant and to be more self-sacrificing to others and to the Creator.  It challenged me to see the people God had surrounded me with as my personal call to love and serve.

Please Pray for my Grandma

Dear friends,

It is not a blogging day, I dont’ usually post on Saturdays and Sundays, but I got news yesterday that my grandma has decided to stop her kidney dialysis treatment.  This means she may only have 2 weeks – 2 months longer to live.

I simply am desperate to see her find Jesus before she goes.  So I reach out to my network of readers in hopes to extend her prayer warriors beyond my family and small network of friends.  I know prayer can do great and wonderful things and I have faith that my grandma can still find the love of her life!  Even if she is a stubborn Norwegian 😉

Thank you so much for your support and your prayers!

Love,

Kaia Calhoun

FACT: Col. Chris Hadfield takes pictures from space

The Astronaut Photographer

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I feel like we never hear much about Canadians.  But I’m glad I heard about this one.

Col. Chris Hadfield is a flight engineer on expedition 34 on the ISS with a love of photography.  Every day on his Tumblr he posts one image for the world to see.  His Twitter is also popular as he tweets those images and more.  Hadfield has made all of this even more fun by engaging his fans in various photo challenges.

Chris is on the ISS until May 2013, but, don’t fret, it looks like he’s planning on going up for expedition 35 as commander on the ISS 🙂  Heck, I wish I could go and take pictures too!

30 Favorites

  1. Swirls in the Sea of Mumbai
  2. Eight Clouds
  3. Snowy farms in Central Asia
  4. Inspiration for Pollock
  5. A Chameleon in sub-saharan Africa
  6. London at Night
  7. The Green Amazon Basin
  8. Andes Mountains + Pacific Fog
  9. A River Meets the Sea
  10. Clouds in the Sand
  11. One Big Dam
  12. The African Sun
  13. Earth has a Bellybutton!
  14. Ferngully Returns
  15. God Painted the Andes Mountains
  16. Venezuelan valley framed by misty clouds
  17. Cauliflower clouds over the Amazon Rainforest
  18. A Natural Work of African Art
  19. Weightless Water
  20. Australian river mouth
  21. And Australian River Crying in Agony
  22. An Angry Smoke Cloud in Australia
  23. The Great Snowstorm Divide
  24. An Astronaut’s Sunrise
  25. God’s Hidden Checkerboard
  26. The Bahamas from Space
  27. Medusa Lives in Africa
  28. Profile Portrait of a Pregnant Belly
  29. Wind Swept Southwestern Africa
  30. Lava Carbuncle

FOR YOU

How would you caption this one

Which one is your favorite?

If you haven’t already, check out my 100th Blog Post and enter for the giveaway!

Christ Hadfield:  Twitter | Tumblr | Photo Contest