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Marketing Yourself as a Greener Wedding Photographer

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As seen in Professional Photographer!

By Thea Dodds, Authentic Eye Photography 

Four years ago, I said to some wedding colleagues, “I want to shoot only green weddings.” Everyone laughed as if I were making a joke. My friendly colleagues told me, “There aren’t enough green weddings.” And I agreed they were probably right … at least for now.

The thing is that eco-aware brides are my kind of people. So by marketing myself to a subset of the wedding market who are more likely to book me, I am able to maximize my advertising dollars. Green brides are college or post-graduate educated; they are working professionals; they are smart and savvy shoppers; they will spend more for a product that is of superior quality and has a minimal impact on the environment.

Today, 50 percent of the weddings I photograph are “green” weddings. In just a few years the industry has gone from a single green wedding magazine to many websites and books dedicated to green weddings sites, even a green wedding section in The Knot’s Real Weddings. I’ve met wedding planners who exclusively plan green weddings, so why can’t I exclusively shoot green weddings? I’m not there yet, but like most things in business, I put a plan in place and am following the steps to success in marketing myself as a greener wedding photographer and photographing more green weddings. Here are a few simple ideas that you can use to help you market yourself to the eco-aware bride.

 

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Use the carrot, not the stick

My first idea was to set green criteria for weddings that I would photograph. I bounced this idea off a colleague, and they advised me to give clients a “carrot” for going green, not “the stick” for not having a green wedding. That is when I instituted a 10 percent discount for using two vendors on my green vendor list. This incentive was such a success that I have scaled back the discount and tightened the criteria to make it more exclusive.

Network

Developing a green vendor list was a great way to build relationships with other eco-minded wedding professionals. The discount program gave me an excuse to approach these vendors, furthering their interests as well as mine. The reciprocal links that followed are key to bringing in some of my best pre-qualified clients.

Get Accredited

Obviously, your studio needs to be as green as possible before you can market yourself as such. Greener Photography is the best resource to help you understand how green your business is, and then help you promote your green photography business. The certification program gives credibility to your claims as well as a pretty logo for your advertising material.

Take Risks

I pitch ideas all the time to conventional wedding professionals. I suggested a green section to our local Wedding Book. I worked with a green wedding planner to put together a green wedding show. I suggested the wedding show have an educational aspect to it to educate brides about the benefits of going green. I received a positive response to most of these ideas.

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Follow Through

See your green weddings through to completion by offering greener wedding albums, packaging, and frames.

• All of my packaging is 100% recycled. I love ProDPI’s Green Executive drop ship.
• I deliver images on reusable, wooden flash drives from Photo Flash Drive 
• I offer the greenest album’s available from reputable companies such as Cypress, White Glove and Wild Magnolia Design  
• I offer canvas prints from Simply Canvas. Canvas is one of the “greener” ways to print photos with fewer chemicals.

Many more Green photography suppliers can be found on Greener Photography’s Green Guide

Resources

Greener Photography  
Portovert
Green Bride Guide 
Eco Wedding - Green Wedding Resource Guide - Free listing 
Ethical Weddings  
Green Elegance Weddings

Reexamining the Greener Print

Reexamining the Greener Print

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By Dawn Tacker
Images by Mark Pawlyszyn

Whether your do your own printing or task that to a competent lab, Greener Photography recommends using natural fiber paper in place of traditional RC/silver halide paper for printmaking as a greener option. Read more about that in our Greener Photographic Prints article. But which natural fiber paper to choose? One important factor to consider: the use of OBAs, or optical brightening agents.

OBAs are used to make paper look more uniform, and more white. But at what cost? As OBAs break down, their effects do as well—and they don't break down uniformly. A paper that is made unnaturally white through the use of OBAs will start to yellow—it is a matter of the paper returning to its "natural" color. However, when OBAs break down they can cause irregular yellowing. OBAs call into question the longevity of a photographic print—what good is a lightfast rating of 200 years if your print will yellow sooner than that? The greenest options for printing are also those that will withstand the test of time.

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What's a photographer to do? To avoid color shifts and yellowing of your fine art prints, chose papers with zero or very low levels of OBAs. How do you find out if your paper has OBAs? Check out the manufacturer's website, and look for information on OBA content. Click on "Continue reading 'Reexamining the Greener Print'" to find our list of a few examples of papers that have zero-to-low levels of OBAs:

Epson

Hahnemuhle Matte Digital Fine Art Paper: smooth

Hahnemuhle Matte Digital Fine Art Paper: textured

Moab Paper (Moab by Legion Paper)

Red River Paper

PPA and Greener Photography member Mark Pawlyszyn is known for his beautiful images and printmaking skills. He has worked with nearly all the Hahnemuhle papers. In his experience, "The Hahnemuhle Bamboo paper is a great paper. It is in no way inferior to their other papers. It just has a different look. And it's a quite distinctive look, too. The paper has a very nice tooth, or texture, like a watercolour art paper. The texture is in between their Photo Rag and Museum Etching papers. There is a warmth to the paper that really works well with warm images. It's not yellow, though. It's more like the rich cream of an old writing paper. It takes the ink very well, though like with all matte papers the blacks are not as deep as with gloss papers. I like it more for images with a vintage look to them, though you could really use it with any image that didn't require really bright whites or deep blacks."

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Want to read more?

How do OBAs effect longevity of fine art prints?

Print permanence ratings for specific papers at the Wilhelm Imaging Research website.

How does your favorite paper rate? Leave us a comment below and let us know! Greener Photography is working on compiling a comprehensive list of recommended papers.

Dawn Tacker is a San Diego-based portrait photographer and co-founder of Greener Photography.

New Marketing Greener Portraits Article in Professional Photographer magazine

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Leadership Circle and co-founder Dawn Tacker's article, "Marketing Yourself as a Greener Portrait Photographer," was published in PPA's Professional Photographer magazine. Check it out and tell us what you think in the comments section!

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