I am more of a visual storyteller than a fashion photographer. Some other words that can describe my style are “vibrant” and “realistic” and “timeless.” I feel wedding photographs should transcend temporary stylistic fads so that your wedding day images are not frozen in a particular time. I prefer to tell the natural, organic love story of my couples. I remain unobtrusive but always present, not interfering with the wedding day story’s organic flow.

My style of approach is aimed to strike a balance between what people sometimes call formals (posed images stopped in time) and candid photographs. I can easily shift that balance to one side or the other based on your wishes. My strengths lie in the storytelling of your real wedding day story.  I tend toward the natural moments, adhering to the belief that act naturally is an oxymoron.  I utilize humor and a fun approach for the process of shooting both candid and formal portraits because it’s important that everyone has a good time – and that translates into much better photographs.

Over the years I have found that seven to nine hours does a good job of documenting most weddings. Some smaller weddings might not take that long. Some weddings, however, might need more hours of coverage based on the interval between the end of the reception and the start of the getting ready process. My recommendation is to work backwards from the final moment you want me there capturing things with professional camera equipment and technical expertise.

Let’s take a typical wedding day scenario and break it down. A reception might go from 7pm to 11pm with a cocktail hour beginning at 6pm. That’s five hours from cocktail hour to the end of the reception. Perhaps the ceremony is at 4pm and ends at 4:30pm. That leaves an hour and a half for post-ceremony portraits and transportation to the reception venue (if different). You’ll probably want to arrive 30 minutes prior to the ceremony, and perhaps it’s a 20 minute drive to the ceremony from where you are getting ready. That’s pretty much 3pm to 11pm, which is eight hours. Add one hour for “Getting Ready” photos, and you’re already at nine hours. If your ceremony and reception are in the same location, this can easily drop the required time by an hour or two.

Now, there are variations on this idea which must also be considered. If you want coverage from much earlier in the day, you will either need to add an hour or two to the package. To accomplish this, you might have me leave the reception before its conclusion. This all depends on what is most important to you. Considering that many wedding receptions are the same photograph of dancing after about half an hour, it is not uncommon at all to have me depart the reception before it ends. If I know ahead of time that I will be leaving the reception one hour prior to its conclusion, I make sure the venue is aware of this and we will need to be sure and schedule all of the reception “activities” prior to my departure time.

Basically, work backwards. Do you want the entire reception documented? If so, work backwards from the end of the reception time and figure out what time you want me to start.

The answer to this question largely depends on what you want covered. I know that sounds obvious, but if you think about it, what portion of your day requires the coverage of a professional photographer? Here are some things to think about when making this decision.

End Time: How much of the end of your reception do you actually need covered? Many of the dancing photos at the end look alike after about half an hour. If your reception has two and a half hours of dancing, that’s going to be a lot of redundant images. Unless you have some super-special send off planned, you don’t likely need me there for the entire reception. A common end time for me is based on about half an hour after the last “activity” is performed. Most of the time, that activity is the cake cutting. For example, if your cake cutting is at 10:00 and your reception goes to midnight, you only likely need me to be there until about 10:30.

Once you know what time I should end the day with you, you can work backwards. If my end time is 10:30 and you have a nine hour package, that means I would start at 1:30pm. Is that enough time to cover everything you want photographed?

Start Time: How much of your getting ready process do you want covered? If you want to tell the story of the entire day, you will need for my start time to be earlier. But, if you only want the last hour or so of your getting ready process captured, you can reduce the number of hours in your package. You should consider travel time to your ceremony location as well. Let’s say your ceremony location is fifteen minutes from where you are getting ready. Let’s also assume the worst and give it twenty-five minutes, just in case. If your ceremony is at 2pm and you’re planning on arriving at 1:30, that means you’re probably going to leave the getting ready location at around 1pm. If you want me to cover the final hour of you getting ready (some detail shots of the dress before you put it on, some staged hair/makeup shots, details, things like that) then you should have me start at noon.

Working backwards from the last things you need me to cover in your reception, back to when you will need me to start, will give you an idea of how many hours of primary photographer coverage you will need in your package.

The second photographer’s start and end time don’t have to be same as the primary. The second photographer is rarely needed for the same amount of time. Typically speaking, the second photographer covers the tail end of the getting ready process at the ceremony location (if applicable). They then cover the ceremony, cocktail hour (while your portraits might be happening), and the start of the reception. They help with documenting your guests at the tables and around the reception. They also help with the grand entrance, first dance, and perhaps parent dances. After that, they are not really needed.

This amount of time can fluctuate based on how many weddings I have in a given time of year. The standard “safe” answer is four to six weeks.  In the winter months and early spring it is frequently much faster than that. The printed case and USB with your images sometimes takes a little longer due to the printing process of the case itself.  However, if the images are in the online gallery and you want an “unofficial” set prior to the really nice USB case getting to you, I am always happy to turn on the download feature in your online gallery so long as all payments have been made. Wedding albums can take longer, due to the design phases plus my efforts to get other wedding photographs processed as quickly as possible.

That’s a rather broad question and difficult to answer definitively, because the number of photos I take depends on many factors including the various activities and the overall environment.  I take multiple photos of any given shot (people blink, scratch, get distracted by a shiny), so what you get is a culled set of your day with only the best shot from each moment.  In other words, if I take three shots of a couple posing for the camera on the dance floor, I’m going to give you the best one of those three.

For a typical seven hour shooting day, I will usually deliver anywhere between three hundred and five hundred photographs.  But, there is no hard and fast rule and there is no guarantee of a certain number.  It all depends on how much actual shooting time there is, how much activity is taking place, and other restrictions sometimes beyond my control. Each wedding is different, and a Saturday night party with lots of dancing and activities is probably going to result in a higher number of photographs than a Sunday afternoon brunch wedding where people are mostly eating (since no one likes pictures of themselves stuffing food in their mouths). Ultimately, I am going to give you many photos for you to enjoy, telling a complete story of your wedding day journey.

Once we have discussed your wedding needs and determined which package is best for you, I will send you a booking proposal.  A 1/3 retainer is due to hold the date.  This can be paid online with any major credit card (get those reward points!) or by sending in a check.  The second 1/3 is due one month before the wedding date.  The final 1/3 is due one week before the wedding date. Alternative arrangements may be requested, even including having the final 1/3 due after the wedding.

There are a few things to keep in mind when figuring this out:

    1. How many iterations (versions of photos) will you want to have done? I will work this list out with you prior to the wedding day and I will advise you how long I believe that process will take.

    1. Will all of the people you wish to be involved in those photographs be present and cooperative? It is strongly advised that you inform the people on the list that these photographs will take place at a specific place and time, and that they should be present and on time for it. Having to chase people down for photographs interrupts and delays the process significantly. Having to pull them out of cocktail hour is even more difficult and time consuming.

    1. How long do we have in the church (if applicable)? Some churches, especially Catholic churches, might have activities coming up shortly after the wedding ceremony. You need to be aware of the church’s schedule and we must work within that time frame. If, for example, you only have twenty minutes in the church before it opens up for other uses, that might dictate whether or not you do any or all of the family photos there. It also might eliminate that lovely receiving line for 150 guests you’ve been thinking about.

    1. Are you seeing each other beforehand? If you are doing a first look, or otherwise seeing each other before the ceremony, you can knock out some of the family photos at that time. This will lessen the amount of time required to get specific shots after the ceremony has taken place. This can mean the difference between losing your cocktail hour completely and getting to enjoy it.

This process, as with most everything else in your wedding day, should be scheduled with the assumption that it will take longer than you think. It is highly advised that you build in “flex” time throughout the day so that if something gets delayed, it does not throw the entire day into a stressful logistical tailspin. If, after figuring out your family/wedding party photo shot list, the estimated time for facilitation is 20 minutes, give it 30 or 35. It’s better to have too much time than too little.

I laugh and have a fun time with guests while working so that they will all feel comfortable around me and will be themselves when I am shooting.  I am professional, unobtrusive, friendly, and helpful. I work very hard to make sure you don’t even have to think about me during your wedding day.  I plan ahead in order to avoid problems and to know as much as possible going in. Behind the humor and seemingly cavalier façade during the actual wedding day is a fierce professionalism that is dedicated to making your experience as perfect as it can be.  I do sincerely have a good time with you, but it’s all business on the inside. I act and dress in a professional way. During weddings and other shoots I do not drink or act inappropriately. Outside of shoots I can’t make any promises on that one.

My business style is modeled after a company which many people hold dear to their hearts: Disney.  I love the business model they have developed in terms of customer service and experience, and I feel it is vital to your satisfaction that I follow that same model.  When my wife and I honeymooned at Walt Disney World, we came back and told everyone about how wonderfully we were treated and what a magical experience it was.  I will always provide the same unbeatable customer service and love to all of my couples.

Photographic still images you are given are high resolution jpg files and vary in file size from 8 to 20 MB depending on the color content in the photograph and any cropping I might have done.  If you wish to have a different resolution, you must let me know prior to your wedding day. There are no watermarks on the full-size set of photos, though on the online gallery photographs a small watermark appears on each photograph (but again, not on images you download from the gallery or get from your USB drive!). Your photos will easily be high enough resolution to get good sized prints up to 11×14 or larger before seeing any reduction in quality.  While I encourage you to go through me for any prints or products requiring even higher resolution files, I am always happy to provide my couples with large format individual files when necessary.

You get personal use printing and publication rights to your photographs.  That means you can do just about anything except sell them or publish them without permission.  Permission to publish them electronically and in print is granted in your contract so long as they have a photo credit such as “Chadwick Weddings” included.  Any commercial use of the photographs is not permitted without specific written permission.  If you wish to use any photograph for commercial (trade) use, please contact me to work out the commercial rights. Editing the .jpg images is not recommended, and technically not within the rights your contract provides to you. While I cannot realistically stop you from editing the .jpg files, I do ask that you respect my work enough not to modify it on your own. Please ask me for assistance with modification to any of your images.

I understand the importance of documenting the guests who celebrate with you at your wedding reception, and I do my best to get photographs of everyone. I even recommend two photographers whenever your guest list exceeds 125, partially for that reason. I prefer a more organic approach to documenting your guests’ presence at your wedding, but I will happily do more traditional table shots if you specifically request it. If you do not specifically ask for shots of each and every table, I will do my best to get who I can but will continue to focus on telling the story of you and your wedding celebration. If you do ask me to document each and every table, I will do my best but I cannot account for those people who are not at their tables during the times which are most appropriate for getting table shots within the flow of the day.

I shoot with the intention of documenting everyone at your reception, either at a table or on the dance floor, but I make no guarantees due to the unavailability of certain guests during the course of the reception. If getting a good amount of documentation of your guests both at their tables and elsewhere (such as the dance floor), I highly recommend adding a second photographer to your package.

That’s actually a tricky question, and the answer depends on what you are referring to by a “shot list.” Some wedding blogs out there will publish an exhaustive list of 259.3 “must have wedding photographs” that are okay for getting ideas, but not for copying and pasting into your wedding worksheet questionnaire. I have actually had this happen more than once, and I know some of those couples didn’t even bother to read it because it listed shots with people who, in their cases, either didn’t exist or were dead.

Saddling me with an over-zealous shot list, typing out absolutely every single photograph you might want, greatly increases the risk that I will spend the entire wedding day worrying about the list instead of telling your wedding day story. While I do ask you to be precise with your information, and not to make me try and read your mind, I certainly don’t need to be told to photograph things like the procession, or the kiss, or the first dance. That said, don’t assume I know what are the most important photographs/moments to you. In the (fortunately) few instances where a couple or their family members have expressed displeasure with me over not getting a particular shot they assumed that I would know was important (and therefore didn’t specifically ask me for), it has invariably been something most other couples don’t express as important to them.

There is no such thing as “the usual” and if you tell me that, I am likely going to press you for more information so that I can meet your expectations. So, do list the things which are truly important to you, but keep it within the bounds of moderation. Otherwise, I might spend your entire wedding day with my face buried in your list, and could possibly miss some really great and creative shots that might have been much better!

The goal of creating the shot lists in the Wedding Worksheet is so that 1) no one gets forgotten, and 2) we make an “order of operations” designed to help me facilitate those photographs as quickly and efficiently as possible for you. In the question about the formal group photos this is where, either before or immediately after the ceremony, family pictures are usually taken. These are often at the ceremony location (such as a church altar) but can be just about anywhere. It’s advised that you start with the largest groups such as extended family, and work your way down to just the two of you. Be also mindful of anyone who might need to be captured first, such as an officiant, an elderly or ailing relative, and small children. The wedding party knows they are going to take longer, so put them last. It also helps to reduce people coming in and out and back and forth as much as is reasonably possible.

The second shot list in the questionnaire will consist of people who might not be part of these set group family formals. This is frequently things like “work colleagues” or “college friends” or some random guest who you haven’t seen in fifteen years and who flew all the way in from Guam for the wedding. There are no wrong answers here, just let me know who to make sure I get shots of you with at some point. These shots are frequently done at cocktail hour and/or during the reception. One thing to bear in mind is, the larger you make this list, the more of your reception I am going to spend pulling you aside from your celebration to get photos with people. So, keep that in mind when making this part of your shot list.

The final shot list question in the questionnaire is about you, specifically. This is an opportunity for you to convey to me any particular photographs you want taken. Some people have researched wedding photographs on sites like Pinterest and want to re-create one or two they really like. I’m perfectly happy to do that. I do recommend that you choose pictures which tell your story. This is also an opportunity to specify images you do not want me to take. You might absolutely hate some pose that I sometimes do with my couples. Please don’t be afraid to let me know. This isn’t a dictatorship, it’s a collaboration. 🙂

I am so very glad that you asked. Nearly every family now has at least one person with a pretty good camera. That’s fantastic, and I’m all for it. However: Owning a nice baseball bat does not make you Bryce Harper. A professional photographer is not just someone who happens to have a nice camera.  There are years of practice, education, skill, and expertise required as well.  Wedding photography is so much more than just pointing a camera at something and pressing a button. It’s even more than just knowing how to take a great photograph.

Wedding photography is a rare combination of photographic artistry and skill, experience, logistics and troubleshooting, psychology, specific styles of social interaction, and concierge service. Your wedding day is not going to be reproduced for the sake of going back for a retake if something goes wrong. There are no do-overs.  Additionally, you will spend months, if not years, planning your wedding day. Your photographs are what will remain when the day is over, telling the story for you to have and share for the rest of your lives. On your wedding day, there is only one chance to get the photographs you will be looking at forever.

If that much pressure was being put on a basketball player to make a free throw to win the big game, who would you rather trust to shoot that free throw: a top-level NBA star with years of training and experience under pressure, or your niece who just bought a nice new basketball?

While I shoot every photograph in a RAW format, I do not provide the original RAW files to my clients. The jpg images you receive are art which I have created for you. The RAW files are the tools I use to create that art. Asking for the RAW files is like buying a house and asking the builders for the tools they used to build that house. If you wish to have the RAW files as well as the provided .jpg images included in your package, you will need to purchase them separately and a different agreement must be drafted transferring the entire copyright and intellectual property of the photographs over to you. Having the RAW versions of your pictures would give you the ability to change the META data (which contains the copyright information) on the photographs. This is a costly difference in your package price (as in, several thousands of dollars) so it is not recommended unless you have a very good reason to have the RAW files.

If you simply wish to have a modification done here or there, I do not charge for post-processing requests like that unless the requests take longer than an hour to facilitate (which is extraordinarily rare). As for editing the photographs yourself, I respectfully ask that you let me do it. Most edits you might need are things I do at no charge to you, as part of the overall service you are receiving. Your photographs are my art work, so I want to make sure anything with my name on it is actually something I created. If you need help formatting a particular photo for placement into a product you want to have printed, or if you need them altered for any other reason, please ask me to do it for you. As long as the request is something which takes less than an hour, I don’t charge you. I will very likely do it faster and better. I cannot stop you from editing a .jpg image, but I do ask that you refrain from doing so. No matter how good a job you think you might do, please leave such modifications to the professionals.

It sometimes seems easier hiring someone on-site, but hiring someone closer to your normal residence ensures that your customer service experience is much better.  It helps ensure you already know and are comfortable with your photographer, and it is also quite helpful during the planning process. If your photographer is closer to your residence, you will have the chance to discuss your needs in advance and communicate your style preferences, hopes, and expectations. You will be able to have an engagement session or portrait session with the same photographer who will shoot your wedding. You will also be able to establish a relationship and level of trust with your photographer, and that trust is a definite asset on your wedding day, one well worth the cost of transportation.

Destination wedding photography packages can be put together for wedding destination shoots around the world, or here in the good old U.S. of A.  Actual travel and housing costs get built into the photography package, and depending on availability, can be for multiple days of coverage. I handle all travel arrangements and work hard to keep them as affordable as possible. I am close to Philadelphia and New York, so I have easy access to several major international airports.

The contract spells it out in more specific terms, but essentially if you cancel your wedding photography package at least ninety (90) days prior to the wedding date, your retainer fee (minus any actual expenses incurred) will be returned to you if and as soon as another wedding photography package is booked for that same date.  Once the ninety day threshold has passed, any payments made are not refundable. I understand that the unexpected can happen, and while I try to be understanding, I lose a significant amount of my livelihood income when a wedding is cancelled. Wedding photography often books months, if not years, in advance. I also do not book more than one wedding photography job in a day. For that reason, if you cancel your wedding, you might feel slighted in losing that 1/3 retainer – but please bear in mind I just lost the other 2/3 of livelihood income I will not likely be able to replace. For this and many other reasons, I highly recommend purchasing wedding insurance through your favored insurance provider.

Many couples are now performing was is commonly referred to as a “first look” in order to accomplish getting many of the group portraits out of the way. This enables them to get pictures while they’re still fresh, especially for outdoor summer weddings where you might get sweaty and gross. It also enables couples to eliminate some of the lost time between the ceremony and the reception where portraits would be taken, during cocktail hour.

There is a lot of “grip and grin” that you will be doing in order to greet as many of your guests as possible. If you are able to knock some of that out during cocktail hour, that means you will be able to enjoy more of your reception knowing that the obligatory greetings are out of the way. If you are not going to see each other until the ceremony, be sure to leave a plentiful window of time between the ceremony’s estimated end time and the beginning of cocktail hour. This way you will not be stressed trying to fit an hour’s worth of family photo taking into 15 minutes.

The engagement session is a photo session that is meant to tell a story about how you love each other, and to document this exciting time in your lives. The subject of the photographs is that relationship, not the place where you take the photographs, or what you are wearing. You want those things to be secondary in the photographs (if not even lower on the totem pole), so while it is nice to have a location that is photographically advantageous, it isn’t critical to the story being told. That said, I can offer the following advice:

Where to Go for Pictures
f there is a location that has sentimental value to you which will help tell your love story, it will be an excellent location to take photographs that tell that story. Some people are shy showing affection in public places. If that sounds like you, perhaps find a place which will remove you from the public as best as possible. I’m not going to force you into public displays of affection if that’s not your style, but shyness in general will be avoided if there aren’t a lot of people walking around nearby in the first place. Parks and nature trails are good for that.

Some of the more common places I have done engagement shoots include:

Smithville Mansion, Mount Holly, NJ
Historic Smithville, Smithville, NJ
Wineries with vineyards
Batsto Village, Hammonton, NJ
Cooper River Park, Camden, NJ
Grounds for Sculpture, Hamilton NJ (parking fee required)
NJ Shore (travel fee may be required if out of your package range, and beach tags may be required for certain beaches in certain times of year)
Elfreth’s Alley, Philadelphia
Philadelphia Art Museum (permit required for front of building, but not for back)
Race Street Pier (permit required), Philadelphia
Philadelphia riverfront area
Washington Square Park, Philadelphia (permit required)
Longwood Gardens, Kennett Square, PA (park admission required)
Central Park (travel fee may be required if out of your package range)

What do I wear?
Keep it simple. Don’t wear things which are distracting to your love story. The more neutral, the better. Avoid stripes or patterns which will grab the viewer’s attention. Keep your clothes in contrast to the environment around you. If you are going to be photographed in a forest in the spring, don’t wear something that is forest green. If you are being photographed on the beach, avoid sand-colored clothing or dark blue tops. If you are doing a winter session with snow all around, don’t wear white. You don’t want to blend into the background.

Yes, I carry a commercial liability insurance policy and am happy to provide appropriate documentation to your venue upon request. If your venue requests basic documentation, or “Additional Insured” documentation, please let me know at least a week prior to the event date. On certain weekends during the year I am often photographing multiple events, so getting these requests to me during the week is much better.

I highly recommend getting wedding insurance. Many weddings cost more than $30,000 to produce, which is more than some brand new automobiles. You insure your car, right? Well, you should insure your wedding as well.

Why would I need insurance? What could possibly go wrong?

I have had multiple people tell me about situations that have arisen where wedding insurance would have proven helpful. One couple told me about having to find a new florist at the last minute because they found out the florist they paid in full for the service suddenly went out of business and disappeared. Another bride had a nightmare situation with her dress. She paid for the dress in full, and then found out the shop went out of business. The designer said they could send the dress to another retailer, but that she would have to buy the dress again! Can you imagine? Well, one of my brides didn’t have to imagine it, this actually happened to her

These are relatively minor ‘disasters’ in the realm of what is possible. Some are much more tragic and disastrous. I have had weddings cancelled due to family illness or even death. What if you booked a reception venue that went out of business? What if the venue has to reschedule your wedding due to a city-wide event such as the Pope coming to town? What if on the day of your wedding, there was a huge blizzard or hurricane? What if the reception venue burns to the ground? These are all things that have happened to some of my wedding clients! If there were some legitimate emergency that required you to postpone your wedding, wedding insurance would cover that as well.

How much does wedding insurance cost?

It varies from policy to policy based on what you are covering and which provider you go with. It is typically going to be a couple to a few hundred dollars, but while that cost might seem high, it is a tiny fraction of what you are putting on the line with your wedding day planning.

If you want more information about why wedding insurance is so important, here is an excellent article from The Knot on the subject. I highly recommend reading it. https://www.theknot.com/content/wedding-insurance-101

Whoever your primary package’s photographer is will be the one performing that service for your wedding unless there is serious injury or debilitating illness. In that case, one of our capable team members will step in, and in the event that is impossible, I have a network of experienced and talented photographers available to me to serve as a backup. I would trust any one of them to photograph my own wedding.

The very first thing I recommend people book is the venue. Often times the venue books so far in advance that it can have an impact on your actual wedding date. Once you have secured the venue, the next two steps are typically photography and music/DJ. I sometimes book weddings as far as two years out if it is for a popular time of year such as Spring or Fall. More often my bookings fall between the one year and one and a half year window. Other vendors such as florists, invitations, and transportation can be booked less far out from your wedding day. However, if you have a specific vendor in mind, you should always contact them as soon as possible to ensure they will be ready to provide you with service for your wedding.

Some people consider this a luxury and think it’s a good place to save money. However, I would counter that argument by saying two things. First, time is money. Planning weddings takes lots of time, energy, and can be quite stressful because you are dealing with a process with which most people are unfamiliar. Second, don’t reinvent the wheel. Planners and coordinators do this for a living. They are well experienced in dealing with the challenging logistics of a wedding day, they do an excellent job assisting you with finding the right vendors, and they allow you to sit back and enjoy the ride when the wedding day finally arrives. Unless you are experienced with producing events, a wedding can be a daunting and stressful project to undertake. It consumes your time and energy, and there are people out there whose jobs are specifically to take that stress off your shoulders.

I am happy to answer any of your questions by email or phone, which can be found in the contact page.