It’s a question that people often ask: if you can buy a print of one of your own shots for under R100, why does a professional portrait session cost so much? Let us offer something of an explanation.

If you want to have your hair cut for a special occasion, or need the wiring in your house replaced, how confident would you feel in taking on the task and doing it yourself? Your wouldn’t? Well, professional portrait photography is not so different. There is more to taking a good portrait than pointing a camera at someone and clicking the shutter. So why should the skill of a professional photographer be valued less than that of a hair stylist or qualified electrician?

Part of the problem is that in this digital age everyone has a digital camera and either a computer or a home ‘photo printer’. And because of that, everyone thinks that it’s easy to be a photographer. After all, isn’t that what the adverts tell us? Well, yes they do. But actually it’s not that simple. Maybe it would be useful to look at what goes into the production of a professional portrait. Wrapped up in the cost are three main ingredients: time, equipment and expertise.

Time

Let’s look at the number of hours involved for a typical portrait session:

  • any travel time to and from the session two hours plus of shooting
  • Time dedicated preparation with the client, getting to know them, finding out what they want & don’t want from their session.
  • Additional time dedicated to post production and getting the photographs ready for clients viewing experience. This includes downloading the images, editing & cropping them and any additional manipulation and adjustments to the image.
  • Time spent to view the photographs with a client and answer any potential questions or feedback.

So, what begins as the initial session usually becomes multiple hours of work for the photographer.

Equipment

The cost of equipment is a major ongoing expense for most professional photographers as they are constantly updating their cameras and lenses as the technology improves. And a quality camera body – one that will give you those portraits big enough to hang on your wall – now costs upwards of a couple thousand rand. But the camera with its lenses and accessories is not enough. The photographer also depends on a sophisticated computer system and a mountain of software use to edit and view photographs.

Expertise

Shooting professional photography is a skill. And just like being a hair stylist, or an electrician, it is a skill acquired through years of experience. It’s so much more than just a good camera and a nice lens: it demands the ability to deal with the skills of making people comfortable in front of the camera. And furthermore, the knack of posing people and capturing the results as they unpose themselves whilst making them look their best in the finished photograph. All professional photographers spend years practising these skills. Many of us invest in regular training seminars to stay up to date in this rapidly changing environment, not only in our camera and people skills, but also to master that mountain of other equipment and software that I’ve already mentioned.

So is Professional Photography good value for money?

Think of it this way – the next time you book your R550 haircut, would you consider the free “do it yourself” version. Why not? Styling your hair can’t be that difficult, can it? And do it is with that special portrait: the new baby; the grandparents’ wedding anniversary; graduation from university. These are all events that need to be recorded: children grow up so fast, and it is a time you can never revisit. Families are important and spending money and time on professional photography is an investment – a way of preserving your memories and your family history so that they can be shared again and again. Can you really put a price on that?

DLPHOTO is a professional photography company & educational institution that specializes in portrait photography shoots. Shoots can be done in studio or using the outside real world as a backdrop- Harnessing the natural light and using beautiful settings such as parks, beaches or gardens, to create stunning, contemporary portraits which will provide a lifetime of pleasure.