Are you wondering if you need a videographer at your wedding since you already have a photographer? Let me help you answer that!
I recently sat down with Rachel of Olive Ewe Productions, an amazing professional videographer in New England. (Go watch some videos on her website and cry your eyes out. I’ll wait here.)
Rachel and I share a love of cheese and of capturing your authentic wedding memories. Today I’m sharing our conversation all about wedding photography and videography, how they differ, and how they complement each other.
Let’s do it!
Shaina: What are some of the things that make videography different than photography?
Rachel: The biggest difference is that Im recording audio. You get to hear yourselves say your vows. And you get to hear your favorite people ever doing your toasts. And you get to hear what was actually said during your ceremony, versus just vaguely remembering it or having a copy of the program. You can relive the moment.
Rachel: You end up accidentally capturing a lot more little moments that maybe dont make the highlight cut, but you go back and watch the whole thing and its hilarious. You forget those little things that happened, especially over a number of years. Like at my best friends wedding – we were just talking about it the other day. She didnt get a video and I completely forgot that one of her groomsmen passed out in the middle of the ceremony!
Shaina: Oh no!
Rachel: If she’d had a video, I think I would have remembered that. Were always rolling.
Shaina: At my wedding, I forgot to write in the ceremony script to tell everyone to sit down after I got there, so everyone was standing for like, several minutes, which was obviously awkward, but it was kinda hilarious and we totally would have forgotten if we didnt have the video.
Shaina: Even a documentary style photographer is going to curate what they deliver to you. But with video, its all there.
Rachel: And I do think that photo and video complement each other in that way. In that, you get those amazing curated moments. But for everything else in between – those unvarnished things that make the day feel more real… Its because we were filming at the time. Its not possible for a photographer to be clicking all the time.
Shaina: Right. Our entire goal is to freeze the critical moments.
Rachel: But we do compliment each other very well because we cant photoshop a video. We cant make them look perfect. So theres
Shaina: Honesty.
Rachel: If the grass was brown, its gonna be brown.
Shaina: Yeah. As a photographer, I have the opportunity to, sort of, make the world as beautiful as I think it is. And its not that Im not being honest. But I get to curate the memory a little bit. I can easily crop out that ugly bush or brown grass as I’m shooting. So as much as I strive to be honest, its a totally different medium and goal. I agree that they are complementary.
Rachel: When youre doing your portraits, that one second when you get that great picture is great for the photo. But for the video, its when everyones getting set up for it. And laughing. And being weird. So its everything in between.
I mean, for the critical moments, like the first dance or your kiss at the end of the ceremony, of course we will both capture that. But for everything else, Im looking for the things that are happening in between.
Shaina: I love that.
Rachel: Another thing thats very different about photo and video is, you sit down and watch a video from start to finish. Whereas with a gallery, you can look at it and come back to it and kind of take as long as you want. With video, it kind of sweeps you up for a moment and then its over.
Shaina: Exactly. I mean, I cry every time I watch a wedding video, but I dont cry every time I look at wedding photos. Theres something about being totally swept up – some sensory piece.
Rachel: I think its a common misconception that you wont watch your video again. I still get e-mails from people I filmed like five years ago who want a new dvd because they broke theirs from watching it too much.
Shaina: Aww. We watch ours every year on our anniversary and also go through our wedding album.
Rachel: There you go!
Shaina: And Im trying to figure out how to articulate why its so meaningful to have both.
Rachel: Because they do fit together!
Shaina: Our video doesnt have the whole day, just the ceremony and a little bit of getting ready, so there are pieces where we have that full story and pieces where we dont.
Rachel: Having both can help you form a bigger picture in your mind because sometimes the photographer and videographer arent in the same spot at the same time. So the more cameras you have, the more chance you have to remember everything.
Shaina: What do you think about sharing photos vs. videos?
Rachel: It depends on the couple. Not everyone wants to share their video online, but social media has definitely made it easier to share your wedding day with both photos and video. Its nice for people that werent there to watch things as they happen.
Shaina: Often photos are shared one at a time, like on Instagram, for example.
Rachel: And one photo can capture a lot, but theres something a little bit different about – this is going to be a morbid example, but Ive had a lot of clients come back with deceased friends or family and they say its so special to be able to see them laughing. Or even just walking. Because you might forget how people lived their lives and what they sounded like. So it can capture a persons essence just a little bit more.
Rachel: For an elopement, video is essential. You dont have many people there and you dont have any witnesses to what you said. You wont be able to reminisce with people. Even if your ceremony is like 15 minutes long, its pretty dang important that you capture all of that!
Shaina: Youre the only memory keepers.
Rachel: Yeah, exactly! It is super important to have both photos and video, if youre eloping.
What do you think? Will you have photography and videography at your wedding? Did this conversation help steer you one way or the other?
Find out more about Rachel’s work and book her for your wedding at:
Website: www.oliveeweproductions.com
Instagram: @oliveeweproductions
Facebook: /oliveeweproductions