βΆFull-frame vs APS-C cameras, which should I start with?
Full-frame (Sony A7IV, Canon EOS R5, Nikon Z6) has larger sensors, better low-light, shallower depth-of-field, and larger lens ecosystem. APS-C (Sony A6700, Fujifilm X-S20) is lighter, cheaper ($400-800 vs $2000-3000), and for hobbyists or travel enough. Start APS-C if budget-constrained or traveling; upgrade to full-frame once you land paid gigs (clients notice lens quality more than body). Lenses are more important than bodies, a Β£200 full-frame body + Β£1500 lens will outshoot a Β£3000 body + kit lens.
βΆShould I shoot RAW or JPEG?
RAW = unprocessed sensor data, 14-bit depth, massive post-processing latitude (recover blown highlights, lift shadows by 4+ stops). JPEG = compressed, 8-bit, limited recovery range. For professionals: RAW only. RAW files are 40-80MB each (storage cost), require Lightroom/Capture One to view, and take 2-5 minutes per image to edit. JPEG is instant, no editing required, used only for client proofs or social media. Best practice: shoot RAW, deliver JPEGs after editing. Wedding/commercial work = RAW mandatory (client pays for perfection, not speed).
βΆWhat is a fair day rate for freelance photography?
Wedding: $2500-8000 (varies by market, experience, package). Commercial/product: $500-2000/day (regional variation). Headshots: $300-1000/hour. Model test shoots: free or $200-500 to build portfolio. Influencer/content: $1000-5000/day (depends on client budget, usage rights). Pricing formula: (hourly rate Γ hours worked) + equipment/mileage + licensing for usage rights. Day rate β₯ $500 is rookie minimum; $1500+ is experienced. Never undercut to win work, clients assume cheap = low quality. Raise rates annually by 10-15%.
βΆHow do I choose a photography niche (weddings vs product vs editorial)?
Weddings: high-stress, 12-16hr days, emotional stakes, repeat clients (referral-based), $2500-8000 per event, but feast/famine seasonal. Product/e-commerce: lower stress, studio-based, $500-1500/day, consistent year-round, but needs studio setup (lighting, backdrop, $2k-10k initial). Portraits: flexible scheduling, $300-1000/session, portable, but requires personality and client confidence. Commercial/editorial: highest rates ($2000-5000/day), but requires portfolio and agent. Pick by lifestyle + market demand: start with what your local market pays for (check Instagram bios, ask wedding photographers in your city). Niche down after 100+ clients.
βΆHow do I build a portfolio that wins clients?
Portfolio = 15-30 images (not 200; people stop looking). Curate ruthlessly: only your top 10%. Organize by niche (weddings gallery, product shots, portraits) to show consistency. Include behind-the-scenes (your setup, team, process), builds trust. For no-paid-work bootstrap: shoot test sessions with friends (free or discounted), offer style shoots to models (TFP, Time For Prints, mutual benefit), shoot at events (weddings, conferences, galas, community events) for portfolio fill. Post 1 image/week on Instagram, tag locations/hashtags. After 50 followers, clients will approach. Website (Squarespace, Wix, Cargo) is necessary; Instagram is your portfolio now. Physical portfolio (leather binder, 8x10 prints) = backup for client meetings.
βΆSocial media strategy for photographers, how do I grow and get clients?
Instagram: post 1 curated image weekly, use location tags (#LondonPortraiture), hashtags (mix of 5-10 high-volume like #portraitphotography with 20 niche like #londonweddingphotographer). Engage 15min/day (like competitor posts, comment genuinely). TikTok: 30-60sec reels (behind-the-scenes, before/after edits, 'photo ideas you can steal') = fastest growth. YouTube: long-form (10-20min how-to, gear reviews) positions you as educator β higher rates. Email list: every client = repeat client if you stay in touch. Monthly newsletter (3 images + process breakdown) costs nothing, pays dividends. Referrals: ask satisfied clients to refer friends (offer discount for successful referral). The #1 driver of new clients = existing clients + referrals (word-of-mouth), not Instagram. Build relationships, not followers.
βΆHow much should I invest in gear as a beginner?
Minimum to start: camera body ($300-800 used APS-C), one good lens ($200-500, 18-135mm zoom or 35mm prime), tripod ($50-200), basic lighting ($0 if outdoors, $200-500 for one speedlight). Total: $600-1500. You don't need $5k gear to start, consistency and skill beat equipment. As you level up: second lens ($400-1000), lighting kit ($1000-3000 for 2-3 lights + modifiers), backup body ($800-2000), fast cards + drives ($200). Only invest in expensive gear (studio lights $10k+, tethering software $800/yr, rental equipment) once you're earning from it. Break-even rule: wait until gear is paid for by one job before upgrading. Don't finance gear, buy used, sell when you upgrade.