How to Spot a Fauxtographer

What is a fauxtographer?
It’s a photographer that misrepresents themselves to clients by appearing like they are a trustworthy business when their galleries are made up images that are not their own creations or they are vastly misrepresenting their experience and capabilities. This may be someone who is experienced in one form of photography and is trying to break into another side of photography (i.e. a newborn photographer wanting to shoot boudoir, or a product photographer wanting to get into weddings, etc.)

How to Spot a Fauxtographer

 

Since 2012 a wonderful fellow professional photographer in Northern Ohio, Corey Ann, has been running a great website called Photo Stealers and every day I’m more and more amazed how many photographers there are that are not using their own images to “sell” themselves to a client. Instead these faux’s are using Google Image Search and picking some of the great images on the web to put in their portfolio in hopes of getting a client and making a quick buck. While it is becoming a well known, and disturbing, occurrence in the photography industry, the people that are hurt by this are their clients. The Photo Stealers blog is dedicated to the hopes that the word gets around. I check the Photo Stealers “Wall of Shame’ often and am amazed at the gall some people have to try and make a dollar at the expense of someones cherished moments. If your reading this, hopefully, you won’t become a victim to what the photography industry calls a fauxtographer.

Here are a few things to watch for and what to ask to flush them out:

1. Ask to see an entire wedding.
ANYONE who has shot a dozen or so weddings should be able to put together a good compilation book of wedding photos. A great shot of the getting ready times, another good ring shot, a nice ceremony image, a sunset, and a toss photo. Your impressed – right?
It’s not that easy to fake an entire wedding. When looking to hire a photographer, make sure that you’ve seen at least one (if not several) example of a wedding they photographed from beginning to the end. Ask to see not just the 60-80 select images that made it to an album but an entire set that the client was presented with.
This not only will ferret out the photographers that took a few good images from a wedding online but also will show you if they have the skillset to photograph under the various lighting conditions they will be presented with throughout the day. If possible, ask to see a wedding that was at the venues that you plan to be using the day of your wedding.
You can take a look at dozens of my past weddings, in their entirety on my proofing website HERE

2. Ask for references.
Reviews on the photographers own website could be fabrications. While reviews on the Knot and Wedding Wire are a decent representation of one work, it is best to ask for emails and/or phone numbers and names of past couples and follow up to see what their views were of working with the photographer you are thinking of booking. Of course the best way to find a photographer is by word of mouth! Ask your friends and co-workers who they recommend.

3. Look for growth and change in their images.
Photography is an organic beast – things change over time. I look at my weddings from a decade ago and think “All those filtered images (that were all the rage on Instagram at the time) are down right ugly. If you look at the progression of my galleries (link HERE again) you will see me getting away from that to a much more contemporary, clean look, but it didn’t happen from one wedding to the next, it was a gradual thing over time.
If you take a look at a photographers work and one wedding is one style and the next is a drastically different style – chances are that they may be stolen images. Fauxtographers notoriously will also use stolen images in ads for mini sessions or for a new branch of photography they are trying to go into i.e. weddings or boudoir.

4. Facebook comments.
When looking around on a Facebook Page you should see comments from clients on the images shown, keep a keen eye out for people being tagged in the image. While my clients don’t tag themselves very often, others do and if they don’t, they still generally share the gallery and friends and family comment below about the image(s). One that can tip you off about a fauxtographer is if they have a lot of really great images on their Facebook Page, but there are little to no comments beneath the images, especially missing is a comment that is from the pictured client or loved one.
A link to my Wedding Photography Facebook page HERE.

5. Too good to be true.
If the price for their services is too good to be true often there’s usually a reason for it! Most fauxtographer’s rarely charge market standard prices, typically they start around $500 for entire wedding coverage (or $50 for portraits) yet are showing images that are simply breathtaking. The old adage “you get what you pay for” rings true more often than not in photography.
Im not the cheapest photographer in Columbus, but Im not the most expensive either. My price list can be found HERE. Compare it with the top 10 photographers that come up on Google for Central Ohio.  I think you will find we are all in the same neighborhood of pricing.

6. When in doubt, Google!
If you think you’ve found a fauxtographer, you are welcome to email me or you can easily search yourself. Go into Google Images and click on the camera icon where you can either upload the image or insert the URL and Google will show you all the places where that image shows up online. It doesn’t always work but it usually gives you a pretty good idea if the image is stolen or not. There is a really great extension in Google Chrome that allows you to right click and search most images with Google Image that I highly recommend.
If you email me, Im not going to bash anyone, especially any of my fellow pro’s – there are dozens of wonderful photographers in Columbus, all with varying experience and talent, but I will tell you if I have never heard of someone and a few more things to look out for 🙂

7. Are they hiding behind a big company?
There are a number of nationwide and regional companies that offer wedding photography services. They typically have a heavy advertising budget and are typically at the very top of the Knot and Wedding Wire searches.  They have hundreds of reviews and stunning images. Typically these companies charge less than $1000 for an entire wedding. How do they do this, when other pros are charging many times that – easy, they are hiring a weekend warrior who is happy making an extra $250 for the weekend shooting a wedding. But those weekend warriors come without the needed equipment and the needed experience and can hide behind someone else in another city.  You don’t get to meet them until the day of your wedding, and you never get to see them again, instead dealing with a customer service rep in another state who has no vested interest in your day or your overall experience.
Sure I understand, everyone has to start someplace, and if you don’t mind putting the most treasured memories from your special day in their hands, go for it. Don’t get me wrong – you may hit the jackpot. I know a number of starting photographers that are simply AMAZING (and sometimes I use them as seconds), but for every one of those, I also know dozens more that are struggling with composition and basic technical abilities.

I hope that you never stumble across someone you suspect is a fauxtographer and have to use this post! Sadly though in the digital age it is all to easy to fake-it-til-you-make-it in photography with a few choice right clicks and a new SLR.

Here are a couple of other articles and websites on pseudo-photographers:

The Plague of The Fauxtographers

Ken Rockwell – The Fauxtographer, The “pro” with a blog but no portfolio

You Are NOT A Photographer

 

The Millenial Marriage Proposal with John Crist and Megan Batoon.

Because what’s the point of getting engaged if you don’t post it on Instagram?

 

Paparazzi Wedding. (© James D. DeCamp | http://www.OurDreamPhotos.com | 614-367-6366)

Unless you’re having an unplugged wedding, we’re betting that shortly after getting engaged, you started thinking of the perfect wedding hashtag. We don’t blame you—it’s one of the first fun things to start planning! Heres how to create a successful hashtag.

Making The Perfect Wedding Hashtag

(© James D. DeCamp | http://www.OurDreamPhotos.com | 614-367-6366)

Start with your names.
Maybe a bit obvious, but let’s start with the basics. Use your first, last and nicknames as your starting point. Remember that cutesy mashup name that your friends gave you guys in college that stuck for some reason? Well, this may be the time you actually want to embrace it.

Use numbers for a simple way to set your hashtag apart.
If your names are common or you can’t come up with anything quirky, using the year or date of your wedding is an easy way to make it your own. There might be a lot of #JackandJill in the world, but you’ll probably be the only #JackandJill121314.

Get punny.
This is one part of your wedding you can really have fun with, especially when it comes to word play. Look for alliterations, rhymes, synonyms and puns for a hashtag that’s both clever and memorable.

Avoid easy misspellings.
Read over your hashtag for any obvious ways it could be misspelled by your guests. For example, you may want to shorten longer last names or move words around if there are two of the same letters in different words next to each other. It could be as simple as flipping #saraanddave to be #daveandsara instead.

Capitalize the first letter of each word.
Capitalizing the first letter of each word can help with readability if guests can see where each word starts and ends. Doing this will also make it more likely that everyone will get your joke or pun. With or without the capitalization, your hashtag will work the same either way.

Check the hashtag.
Before you hit print on your save-the-dates, go ahead and do a quick check of the hashtag to see if there’s already been something tagged to it and, if so, how many photos. If there’s only a handful of other photos that don’t seem wedding related you should go ahead and use it, but if there’s an entire other wedding with the same exact hashtag, you may want to switch a letter to a number or pick a different rhyme to avoid getting the photos mixed up.

Spread the word.
After you’ve decided on a hashtag, it’s time to get the word out. Start early by telling your bridal party and putting it on your save-the-date and wedding website. At the wedding you should also have reminders in case they forget. Pyle suggests using a cute sign that matches your decor. “Putting it on the menu is nice too,” she says.

Don’t overthink it.
Will you remember your wedding hashtag forever? Probably. Will you love the photos everyone took forever? Definitely. So if it turns out that your couple nickname happens to be the word for a delicacy in another language and you start seeing food photos that aren’t on your catering menu, just roll with it. At the end of the day, it’s the photos you’ll really care about having, and that everyone had fun with it.

If all else fails 🙂
Here are a few links to hashtag creators:

E-Weddings Hashtag Creator

WeddingWire Hashtag Creator

 

Please - No Paparazzi!. (© James D. DeCamp | http://www.OurDreamPhotos.com | 614-367-6366)

So there you are at the altar, gazing into the eyes of your beloved, saying your vows. You turn to sneak a glance at your wedding guests, all your favorite beloved friends and family and are greeted by a sea of down-turned faces staring at their LCD screens.

When your photos come back from your wedding photographer, all your guest shots include your favorite people staring at their favorite devices. People are smiling, but they’re all staring at little screens.

Welcome to the era of the over-documented wedding, where, even if you’ve hired a professional to take your photos, every guest has a camera in their iPhone and is tweeting and facebooking the entire event. They’re there with you, but are they really present?

 

An Unplugged Wedding

(© James D. DeCamp | http://www.OurDreamPhotos.com | 614-367-6366)

 

Be nice, turn off your device!

In this digital age, it is so difficult to shy away from a screen for a few moments, but I think it’s critical to be truly present. Smell the air, look around, feel the texture of the world around us. A wedding ceremony is exactly the kind of fleeting, important moment when it’s especially valuable to really be present, rather than relating to the world through a small screen.

When you discourage devices at your wedding, you encourage your guests to look up and drink in the world. Let’s call it “in-the-moment matrimony.”

While many churches have no camera policies, I’m hearing more and more from nontraditional secular couples that they’re considering an unplugged wedding — at the very least, asking guests to turn off their devices during the ceremony.

Now, let’s acknowledge that a fully plugged-in, hyper-documented wedding makes perfect sense for some couples. Micro-budget brides sometimes skip professional photography, opting to rely on guest photographs — so of course guest cameras make perfect sense in that context. If you’re hyper digital literate and announced your engagement via Facebook, had an iPad-wielding officiant, read your vows off an iPhone, and live-streamed your ceremony, then there’s no reason you should unplug your wedding.

If, however, you and your partner are looking for a few less beeps and a bit more face-to-face connection with your guests, an unplugged wedding could be a good fit for you.

So how to tell your guests to stuff the phones :-)?

“Please let our professional photographers be the only PAPARAZZI during our ceremony . . .
Our amazing team of professional photographers will capture every aspect of our ceremony.  We invite you to sit back, relax, and enjoy the moment with us.  We respectfully ask that you leave your cell phones and cameras locked away.  We will happily share all of our images with you afterward!!”

or

“We want you to be able to really enjoy our wedding day, and feel truly present and in the moment with us.  We’ve hired an amazing wedding photographer who will capture every aspect of the way the wedding looks – and we invite each of you to sit back, relax, and just enjoy how the wedding feels.  We respectfully ask that everyone leave all cameras and cell phones off and pocketed during the wedding ceremony and the ‘ceremonial part’ of the reception, including the first dance, parent dances and cake cutting.  We ask this of you so that we can see your face, and you can see ours both now and forever in in the photos that out photographers will capture.  Of course we will be happy to share our wedding photos with you afterward!”

or just simply:

“The bride and groom have asked that you share in their wedding fully and not through the lens of a camera or cell phone.”

Appoint a member of your wedding party to help encourage other guests to put down their devices at the wedding. It doesn’t have to be high-drama: all they have to do is sidle up to their fellow guest and say quietly, “The bride and groom have asked me to respectfully suggest guests to put down their electronics and just enjoy the day. Can I ask you to put your camera/phone away?” Whatever you do, don’t rely on your photographer to be the heavy; it’s not their job to make your guests behave. Plus, when the request to put away the camera or phone comes from a fellow guest, it’s less likely to be seen as a grumpy encounter.

Wording ideas for officiants

The easiest way to remind your guests to power down their devices is to have your officiant make a brief announcement before the ceremony. A few ideas, ranging from the sacred to the silly:

Spiritual:
The couple respectfully requests that all guests honor the sanctity of this moment by turning off cell phones and cameras.

Emotional:
I invite you to be truly present at this special time. Please, turn off your cell phones and put down your cameras. The photographer will capture how this moment looks — I encourage you all to capture how it feels with your hearts, without the distraction of technology.

Ridiculous:
Ladies and gentlemen, prior to wedding take-off, all seat backs and tray tables must be in their upright and locked positions, all bags properly stowed, and all portable electronic devices turned off and stowed. This includes cell phones and cameras.

Goofy:
As Shakespeare once said, please turn off your cell phones.

Or

Have the officiant ask the bride to turn around and face the audience after her parents walk her to the alter. At this time they say, “Everyone, get the photo you really want now, because we ask that your cameras remain off for the remainder of the ceremony.”

and another:

“Good afternoon! It is my pleasure to welcome you to the wedding of Bride and Groom. Please take a moment to silence any cell phones or other noisy electronics. If you would also take a moment to put your cameras away, Bride and Groom have requested that no photos be taken during the ceremony today — thank you so much for your understanding. The ceremony will begin shortly.”

2017 Wedding Wire Couples Choice Award

Winner - Wedding Wire Couples Choice Award 2017

We are so honored to have been chosen as a winner of the 2017 Couples Choice Award from Wedding Wire!

This is such an amazing way to start 2017!

We cannot wait to continue to grow and capture some amazing memories this year for all of our brides!