You may have purchased your first digital SLR and have been shooting almost everything in sight to learn everything about your camera. You may have even attended a photography class. You are now attending a friend or relative’s wedding and you feel you want to prove that you can also do what the official photographer can do.
I’m here to give you some tips on how to become an effective (UN)official photographer.

First, I have to remind you that the couple has made a considerable investment on their photographer to capture everything according to their style and budget. Scrambling for position with the official photographer would be a bad idea. The couple also intended you to enjoy their wedding. So, just enjoy the wedding.
Tip no. 1 – Shoot the things or moments that the photographer is not shooting. We can’t be in all places at all times, so you have many choices on what to shoot.
Tip no. 2 – Wait and watch the photographer move and position. That alone is a learning experience. Shoot the photographer while at work. Most couples can’t see how we work and it would be nice to document it.
Tip no. 3 – Shoot at a different angle. Different from usual eye-level shot.

We, photographers shoot at low level or we use a chair to get a high level shot.
Tip no. 4 – If the photographer is doing the pictorial with the couple, better not shoot there. But if you insist, concentrate more on in-between poses. Those are natural moments most couple would love to see.
Tip no. 5 – Use one fixed lens. A 50mm/1.8 is a very cheap lens and is very good. Your natural instinct is that you may feel you are limited a certain angle. Most photographers use zooms during weddings. No zooms have 1.8 aperture, so you have an advantage already. Work within the limitation of a fixed lens and you’ll discover that it has no limitations after all. :)
For photo journalistic shots, fixed lens has its advantage. For moments that happen in split-second, we don’t have the time to zoom and recompose. If we do that, we miss the moment already. Our eyes are trained already in different focal length which means if we feel a moment is about to happen, even if we are not looking at the viewfinder, we know already how to compose. Zooms gives us too many decisions to make, which are unnecessary for split-second moments.
Tip no. 6 – Shoot the people around you. Have fun with the camera with your friends. Do your own pictorial. We are mostly concentrated on the couple and we just do a few poses of other guests. All guests prepared a lot for the wedding and they would want as much pictures as possible. It would also be nice to put those on facebook! :)
Tip no. 7 – Shoot a lot of details. Shoot the flowers, decorations, everything you think the couple have spent on. We also shoot that but it would be a nice practice should you become the official photographer in the future.
Tip no. 8 – Invest a lot of time in selecting and post production. This is the hard part but even if you have the best camera and best lens, you still have to push a little to reveal the real impact of your photos.
Tip no. 9 – Print it. We are in the digital world and most pictures are left unprinted. Have them printed or at least a few favorite ones.
Tip no. 10 – Seek critique from friends. This is the only way to learn. Seeking critique from professional photographers is a good option. For weddings, it is more valuable to hear the opinion of friends and relatives.


Thanks for sharing those tips. I’m at the exact stage you described (1st DSLR, shooting everything in sight, trying to learn everything about camera)and I find this very helpful.
Now if I can only find someone to take me under his wings and teach me some real skills :D
No need to be under someone’s wing. That’s one of the objective of my post. You can discover your talent on your own with minimal influence from any photographer.
If you need inspiration, there’s so much pictures in the web right now to know what wedding photographers are doing.
Keep on shooting. :)
nice post you have dino. just so you know i’m a fan of your blogsite. am always looking forward for your posts. thanks for sharing ideas sir, this helps a lot. as they say keep shooting and you will learn. :)
Thank you! Thank you! for the tips! =)
Being an assistant photographer to official photographers, that will surely help me in my upcoming photogigs with them =)
Thank you for the tips :)
Wow!!! Thanks for the tips!!! I agree with what you said to give space for the Official photographers… I once felt ashamed when one photographer noticed me taking pictures at their back and called me to take more pictures… I somehow felt embarrassed but at the same time I felt privileged!
But really, thank you for these tips!! I will keep that in mind!
Thanks :)
Margarette, most official photographers would normally let guests to shoot or we even have you shoot first. Although, during ceremony and reception, we do some far-out shots that most guests won’t notice us.
Hi Dino :) nice blog… :) will take note of these tips… I actually wish though that I got to read this BEFORE our wedding.. hehehe… anyway, thanks again to you and your team for a job well done.
Wow! love this post sir Dino! =) Very interesting and right on the money =)
thanks for thecontinued inspiration =)
-oly
hello.
your pictures inspire me to be a great photographer. I’ve just started taking pictures with my new dslr and your tips were very helpful. Keep up the great work!
Do you offer classes for photography? =).
Nice post sir! I’ve been thinking recently of buying a fixed lens, but primarily the “zoom” factor is the one critical factor holding me to buy the “fixed” lens. I cant decide what to buy whether fixed or a zoom, but thank you for posting a wonderful advice and tip, you made all that clear now for me! Overall, all are helpgful tips! More power to you!
Great tips. Thanks!