How to find an event photographer (without regret).
Photography is where the cost-cutting always seems to make sense, until half the photos come back out of focus and the gallery takes a month. The pre-booking checklist for hiring a photographer, wedding, or brand activation: where to look, what to read in a portfolio, what to ask, and what a pro will and won't agree to in a contract.
Where to start looking
- Venue coordinator referrals. Best signal. They watch every photographer who works the building.
- Top-5 organic Google results for "event photographer + your city", not ads.
- Instagram studios with full event galleries posted (not just one or two highlight shots).
- Photo+video studios. Studios that do both bundle pricing and bring one crew, which removes coordination headaches.
Skip Thumbtack, listicles, and "Top 10 in your city" articles. Those are advertising-driven, not quality-driven.
Reading a photography portfolio
A portfolio of 20 perfect images is curated. A real test is a full gallery from a single event. Ask:
- Show me three full galleries from events in the last 12 months. Each should be in the format they'd send you.
- Are the candid moments sharp, or only the posed ones? Candid is harder. If their candids are soft, they don't know how to anticipate.
- Are the dark-venue shots clean, or grainy and yellow? Casino ballrooms, hotel lobbies, and event halls have terrible lighting. Pros bring flash and know how to use it without flattening faces.
- Is the color consistent across the gallery? Not "stylized" the same, actually consistent. Inconsistent color is a sign of rushed editing.
- Are there portraits and details, not just wide shots? A good event photographer mixes scale and intimacy. All-wides = no story.
8 questions to ask before booking
- How many events of my type have you covered in the past 12 months?
- Will you be the primary shooter or are you assigning someone else? (If someone else, can I see THEIR portfolio?)
- What gear are you bringing, bodies, lenses, flash?
- How many final, edited images should I expect?
- How long until I see sneak peeks? How long until the full gallery?
- How are the images delivered, Pixieset, Pic-Time, Google Drive, hard drive?
- What's the usage license, can I use the photos in ads, on the website, in print?
- What's the policy if the lead photographer is sick the day of the event?
Why photo + video from one studio almost always wins
Booking photo and video separately seems like it spreads risk, actually it creates new risk. Two crews fighting for the same vantage point, getting in each other's frames, working on different timelines, and producing assets that don't look like they came from the same event.
One studio doing both means:
- Stills and motion match. Same color treatment, same look across both deliverables.
- One contract, one COI, one point of contact. Less operational overhead for you.
- 20-30% savings versus booking separate crews.
- Faster delivery. One post-production pipeline instead of two.
The catch: the studio has to be genuinely strong at both. Ask to see photo galleries AND video reels before you bundle.
Photographer-specific contract red flags
- "Raw files included" without a clear definition. RAW files are huge unedited camera files, most pros never deliver them because the edit is part of the craft. If a photographer offers all RAW files, ask why.
- No image count. "We'll deliver what we get" is not a deliverable. A range, even a soft one, should be in the quote.
- Usage rights stripped. Some photographers retain all rights and license back to you with restrictions. That's normal, but you need to know if you can use the photos in paid ads, on social, on your website, in print.
- No mention of backup gear. If their primary camera fails, your event becomes uncoverable. Real pros have two bodies on them and a third in the car.
- Same-day delivery promises for full galleries. Sneak peeks same-day is normal. Full edited gallery same-day is impossible to do well. If they promise it, they're skipping the edit step.
Bundle photo and video. Save 20-30%.
One studio, one schedule, one look across stills and motion.
Book a Call