Wedding Videography
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How To Choose Your Wedding Videographer
The
events of your wedding will flash by: your first kiss as husband
and wife; laughter and tears of joy; family and friends toasting
and dancing. Don't let these moments disappear forever -- with a
professional wedding videographer,
your wedding can be preserved for you and generations to come.
Read on for our top tips on how to find the Wedding
videographer that will suit your personality, your needs,
and your style.
Start With a Little Surfing…
Find a good selection of local professionals in our Local Resources
section, then browse each Wedding
videographer's website
and watch wedding demos. Ideally, you should watch an entire two-hour
wedding video online using StreamingDVD -- demos are always the
cream off the top of any wedding video, so it's important for you
to see an entire wedding before you commit.
Discover Your Style
If you aren't sure what videography style you want, take a few minutes
to research. Styles are diverse, including traditional, video journalism,
the short form, and cinematic styles. You'll probably know the right
style when you see it... your wedding video should fit your personality
like a glove!
Look for the Associations
Professional Wedding videographer
associations are a good way to make sure that the wedding
videographer you're considering is professional, skilled, and
reliable. Look for a local association in your area or check out
a national association such as WEVA (Wedding & Event Wedding
videographers Association).
Testimonials, References and Referrals
A Wedding videographer's
website will usually have testimonials from happy clients, but if
it doesn't, feel free to call and ask for references. They should
be happy to give you a few clients you can call for some personal
feedback.
If you know any newlyweds who had a Wedding
videographer, ask who the wedding videographer was, how
the overall experience was, and if they'd recommend that person
for your wedding. If you've already lined up your photographer,
he is sure to have a recommendation. But do beware: Referrals from
people in the industry can be commission-based, and therefore, occasionally
biased. If in doubt, ask if a commission is involved.
Meet In Person
Once you've narrowed down your list to four or five possible Wedding
videographers, call or email to arrange a meeting in person.
Make sure you ask a few preliminary questions on the phone -- see
if they're available on your wedding date!! -- and then set up a
meeting to ask the rest of your questions.
- How much experience do they have? How many weddings have they shot?
- What's their style and approach in filming a wedding, i.e., interview-style, artsy, documentary, short form, avant-garde? Do they have a standard shot/set-up list?
- What form will your final video take? Will you get an industry-standard, chaptered DVD with thumbnail image menus? Will you get to select images from your movie and have photo prints created from them? Can they deliver your entire wedding online in StreamingDVD format so you can send friends and family to look at it for a year after your wedding?
- What type of equipment will they use? Is it new and modern or old and potentially obtrusive? Will they have backup equipment should something go wrong? How will the tape be edited (so you get a feel for how technologically-advanced the Wedding videographer is)?
- Who will actually be taping your wedding -- the person you're
talking to, a colleague, or an assistant? Will an assistant be
on-hand to help out, and will that cost extra?
6. Do they have other weddings scheduled that day or weekend? - What kind of lighting will they use? If you're having a romantic evening wedding with ambient candlelight, and they need the lights on in order to get footage, there could be a problem.
- Has the Wedding videographer worked with your chosen photographer before? If so, find out if they worked well together -- and get the story from both sides.
- Have they filmed at your venue before? If so, ask to see the StreamingDVD or tape(s).
- How much and how do they charge for services? Hourly? Project-based?
Get a price list -- often prices and packages will be listed on
their website, but you may have to call for pricing in some instances.
The Deciding Factor.










