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DPChallenge Forums >> Business of Photography >> Event photography - advice after the fact, please!
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06/07/2011 10:27:04 PM · #1
I was hired to do photography for an event.

Because of the setup of the room, and the lighting, I have some problem shots. There is a series of 4 shots that there's too much motion, so parts are blurry -- a hand moving, things like that. It doesn't artistically add to the photo -- it's just a blurry hand.

Here's my conundrum:

Do I include these photos? The are not the quality that I would like to show the world. However, as a parent, I would rather have a flawed picture of that part of the event, than no picture at all.

What do I do? Do I leave them out so I'm pleased with the quality I'm offering (though they might be irritated that I missed that part)

Do I include them in the batch of photos?

Do I put them in a separate folder and give those away for free or at a discount, admitting that I am not satisfied with them, but I thought they still might like to have them.

What would you do?
06/07/2011 10:42:49 PM · #2
Event photography is one of the things I do. I include blurry photos if I don't have enough good ones. Which means the environment probably was very bad, I wasn't let use flash or other lights, so they know they will get some bad blurry photos. I hate it, but I still include them. However, if I do have enough amount of good photos, I either don't include any blurry photos into my batch or have to include a few because they are unique, meaning I don't have a clear photo of the same shots (of person or item or action)

I hope this helps.
06/09/2011 12:56:04 PM · #3
i don't include anything that doesn't meet my standards, which are ridiculously high. why? because you never know who's going to see them...

i landed a major client this year because the client wasn't really thrilled with last year's vendor. after a couple meetings and a test shoot, they were satisfied to hand me some significant work. in planning for their main event, i asked them for some sample collateral, just to get some ideas of how they used their images. what i got was a set of cd's that had been delivered by the previous vendor! and holy cow, it was mind-blowing! the thumbnails and previews were fine, but when you looked at them at 100%, they were nothing short of terrible. soft, out-of-focus, and noisy as all get out. when i inspected the exif, i could see why. these were hired professionals who have been around for quite a while and their work really just didn't cut it. at least half the images shouldn't have been delivered.

is that what you would want said about you?
06/09/2011 01:48:21 PM · #4
yup, like Skip I never include anything that doesn't meet my standards. Sometimes a blurry photo works artistically and/or can serve as a memory so I include it. Of course, I let the client know that I choose the best photos, edit them, and they choose from those. It's how I like to do things but I am upfront from the beginning so they don't expect to get every single photo (they've always been fine with that).
06/09/2011 03:26:42 PM · #5
Originally posted by vawendy:

I was hired to do photography for an event.

Because of the setup of the room, and the lighting, I have some problem shots. There is a series of 4 shots that there's too much motion, so parts are blurry -- a hand moving, things like that. It doesn't artistically add to the photo -- it's just a blurry hand.

If you get blurry photo (including face), it's your fault. If you get dark photo even at ISO 3200, it's client fault.

Here's my conundrum:

Do I include these photos? The are not the quality that I would like to show the world. However, as a parent, I would rather have a flawed picture of that part of the event, than no picture at all.

you need to summit all part (edit to presentable level). Refer to below .

What do I do? Do I leave them out so I'm pleased with the quality I'm offering (though they might be irritated that I missed that part)

It's same as OP for school graduation event, if you missed few out of hundreds, don't expect to get the job next year.


Do I include them in the batch of photos?

Do I put them in a separate folder and give those away for free or at a discount, admitting that I am not satisfied with them, but I thought they still might like to have them.

No

What would you do?


try to release as much tension as possible and do my best to edit it.

Sometime hand blurry is ok to me: 2008 champion.
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