Reasons to Hire a Film Wedding Photograper
What Is Hybrid Digital / Film Wedding Photography?
It’s simply the idea of a wedding photographer mixing analogue film with digital photography on a wedding day.

But why use any film at all when digital cameras are so incredibly capable? The digital format is malleable to an absurd degree. The data captured by a modern full-frame sensor is monstrous. You can do anything with it—add sprocket frames, light leaks, dust specks, simulate expired film stock, all in post-production.
But just because you can do all those things, doesn’t mean you should. Which light leak? Which dust speck? Which faux film grain and why? The choices are endless. It can be unmooring. And in the end, the thing that is so heart-stoppingly beautiful about your own wedding photos is that they are a true document of the people you love the most in the world, and their convergence to celebrate the formation of your new family.

My digital cameras can fire off 20 frames per second. A wedding day might last nine hours.
Nine hours × 60 minutes × 60 seconds × 20 frames = 648,000 potential images.
Yes, it’s an exaggeration—but the point stands. The sheer volume of data is overwhelming. Choosing between all those moments—big and small, sweeping and intimate—is a responsibility. Decision fatigue is real, especially in our data-saturated era.

At once, film changes the paradigm. It slows everything down: the focusing, the composing, the timing of the shutter press, the winding of the film, the reloading of the roll. Each photograph develops a striking gravity as a result of the time and space that fills in all around it. A film photograph is afforded the room to breathe. It demands to be embraced just as it is, gorgeous imperfections and all.
This isn’t to celebrate missed focus or camera shake per se, a photograph can be authentic without those particular imperfections. The chemical reaction, the baked-in color science of each film stock, the unpredictable magic of light playing over photosensitive emulsion—it’s all so much more forgivable. So much more lovable.

Digital photography cannot afford that luxury. A digital photograph is always the result of a series of decisions. And because of digital photography’s deep malleability—its uncanny ability to see in the dark, to be anything you want it to be—its mistakes can feel unforgivable.
The problem with digital photography is that its perfection is often too perfect.
And yet, there are very real limits to what can be achieved with analogue film photography. Film is in love with light. It’s like bougainvillea craning its neck towards the sun. Stuck in a dark place, it wilts, it loses all color and fidelity. Digital is agnostic when it comes to the sun. Digital can find happiness in the nooks and crannies of a restaurant, under bistro lights, even with just moonlight as a companion.

Digital is a gossip. It immediately tells you when you have burned the highlights. Even before you press the shutter, an onlooker may gasp at what they see on the rear screen of your camera. This immediate feedback can lead to some show-stopping files. This feedback is wildly advantageous for flash photography.
Flash, which is necessary at the great majority of wedding receptions, is at least 20 times easier to master in digital photography as a result of the instant feedback on the camera’s rear screen. I do not recommend hiring an all film photographer for a wedding that includes many hours of nighttime reception. There might be film wedding photographers who are masters of flash, but they are rarer than a lizard reciting Neruda.

The lightning speed of contemporary autofocus and FPS (frames per second) from a digital camera body can make capturing action delightfully easy. Children are particularly tricky to photograph on film. I know from deep experience with my own children. They move quickly and with remarkable unpredictability and thus, you need at least one or two phds to fully master manual focus while photographing children. Often it is exactly the speed of digital photography that allows me to react quickly enough to tell the myriad small and lovely stories that unfold on a wedding day.

Which of my clients respond to my analogue film work and why?
Some of my clients are avid film photographers themselves. They love documenting their daily life with a point and shoot, and then delight at reliving their days months later when they process the film. Some of my clients are serious about using a large format camera to precisely photograph architecture. To them, it feels natural and meaningful to have a professional photographer use film to document their wedding.
Some of my clients know very little about analogue film cameras, and haven’t used a film camera, but they understand the appeal. It feels like an entry into an appealing world that they are beginning to understand little by little. Maybe they have an Instax, and they love the chemical nature of photographing a friend’s birthday, and the late-night hijinks that follow.

Others are drawn to film for its emotional resonance. They aren’t interested in technical specs, but they respond instinctively to the look and feel. They can’t always put it into words, but something about the softness, the grain, the imperfect magic of film makes them feel something they don’t get from digital. It reminds them of old family photo albums, or the grainy candids of their parents’ wedding. It’s not nostalgia exactly—it’s texture. Soul.
Then there are the aesthetes. These are the clients who treat their wedding as an opportunity to make something beautiful—deeply, personally beautiful. They appreciate the way different film stocks respond to color and light, even if they don’t know the names of those stocks. They recognize when something looks elevated, painterly, cinematic. They care about detail. They choose handmade paper for their invitations. They select flowers for their shape and tone. For them, film is another way to build intentionality into the day.

Finally, some clients are simply romantics. They believe in slowing down. They write love letters. They collect records. They like the idea that film can’t be checked on the back of a camera—that it asks you to trust the moment, to move forward without seeing the result. When they see a medium-format portrait of themselves, composed and luminous, it feels like seeing their love through a different lens—one that says: this mattered.

















































