Before I do so I want to preface it with saying that you, Hertz, and the original poster are coming off as extremly arrogant, and quite honestly sound rather mean... but most amazing is that the OP did weddings. Not once, or even twice... but for EIGHT YEARS!
If that is the case then why do you even need to ASK this question? YOU DID IT...what reasons did you have? I bet they are similar to mine. You make it sound like Wedding Photography was part of your "evolution" as a photographer
Well, I can't speak for Hertz, so I will just speak for myself. I am sorry if I sound arogant to you in my post. It was not my intent, but intent and execution are often totally different things.
I did wedding to pay the bills. I did weddings to put my wife through undergraduate and graduate school. When she got done, I quit too.
As to why I asked the question, I did it strictly for the money, as I stated in my post. But... I know there are other reasons, and I wanted to hear them.
You said the following:
I like people, and I really get along with most people... I am friendly, and am not shy to get up and talk in front of a large crowd. I feel this helps me tackling large groups, like you see at weddings.
Moreover, wedding photography is one type of photography that MOST people enjoy. I mean, some people could give a poopie about seeing the most beautiful picture of a wolf lapping water from a still pond at sunset, but most people love their kids getting married and proudly post those pictures on the wall.
So why do I shoot weddings, and hope to do it more in the future? Because I ENJOY IT...
I thank you for posting that... WHY people do it, even with all of the difficulties that both of us know exists. If I had already known your answer, I wouldn't have asked, and I am glad to see your view is here to counterbalance mine. I never said I was right, I just gave my observations from my experience.
You also said:
and you did it for 8 years and hated EVERY MOMENT OF IT? I really feel sorry for you... I can't imagine doing something I hated for 8 years just because the money is good. There are more important things in life buddy.
I was working 60 hours a week on my "day" job, and frankly I can't think of a single thing using my skill set that I could do to make as much money as I made shooting weddings in that amount of time... and on weekends. Sometimes you do what you can to make a living in this world. Wedding photography was something I was good at, I could make money at, and that didn't interfere with my "day" job which I dearly loved but which paid squat. I had a family to take care of, and that means that sometimes we have to do things we don't really want to do work-wise.
If someone wants to feel sorry for me about that, then that's fine. At least I wasn't clerking in a WalMart all weekend long, making a quarter of what I could earn by shooting a wedding.
There ARE more important things in life... like being able to keep my "day" job, where I was actually doing GOOD for the community that I lived in, and paying for my wife's education so that she could become the outstanding college professor that she is today. I did it eight years, because that is how long the goal took to achieve.
Also, I'd like to address this line in the OP's post: "I knew what I was doing, a full set of lights, pro cameras and lenses (Hassy) with backups of everything, liability insurance, etc."
So here we are, always wanting to dispel the myths of photography and you are perpatuating the belief that EQUIPMENT = SKILL.... and yet you go on later on to argue that point with yourself. Silly.
Personally, I'd rather have ONE GOOD photographer with a point and shoot then 3 equipment heavy ones that have no idea what they are doing. I did my wedding with a D50, a few lenses and one flash. Sure, more equipment could've come in handy, but I think the results were good... and it was me or the 10 disposables on the tables for this bride. I'm not trying to pretend that quality equipment is not important, but I think too much emphasis is placed on it, especially in wedding photography. Even with unlimited money my Wedding Kit would only consist of a decent body and bakcup, a wide angle, a fast Prime and a decent zoom, and two/three flashes. I don't see the need for much more."
Respectfully, I was talking about 1983-92... that was a long time ago, and it was an entirely different world. The quality difference between somebody shooting Hassys with pro lenses and somebody shooting 35mm was astronomical. You don't get to crank your ISO up to 1600 with film... I shot 100 ISO film that wasn't even temperature stable (you had to keep the stuff refrigerated. I am not kidding).
I realize that pro equipment doesn't make a good photographer, but in the world of the 1980's it sure helped.
There were no point & shoots of the quality of the cameras today, so somebody showing up with a P&S in 1985 REALLY wouldn't have worked... and even if there were, 35mm film was not adequate to capture the images in a professional way. Yes, there were 35mm wedding photographers who just carried a single flash... but frankly, their work was pretty well across the board awful. The 1985 SLR was not wedding equipment, and I used an SLR at work every day so I am pretty darned sure I know what I am talking about on this one. There was no photoshop, you had to get it right the first time, in the camera... and you also had to shoot with crop lines in mind (different aspect ratios for 5x7, 8x10, 11x14) because you were going to have to mask the negatives (literally, with these funky little cardboard masks).
As far as the dispelling the myths of photography, you can go ahead and call me silly but leave me out of the royal "WE" you use there. I think that professional wedding photographers (i.e. people who get paid to take wedding pictures and who make some and/or all of their income from wedding photography) SHOULD have the best equipment, along with the best skills they can aquire. Equipment may not = skill, but skill plus the best equipment means better pictures for the client... and isn't that what the whole idea of wedding photography is all about? The simple fact is, by and large, better equipment in the hands of a skilled photographer will give you better pictures. The equipment doesn't make up for skill, but to me the obvious answer is to have BOTH.
And lastly, you wrote:
Anyway, go ahead and bash us... the "wedding photogs" consider us "beneath you", but remember, some of us ENJOY doing what we do.
I am not bashing anybody. I just see a LOT of people who have the goal of taking wedding pictures, and I think that since wedding photography is such as small and extremely specialized niche, it is rather difficult (for me at least) to see why such a large number of people want to do it...
I have a lot of respect for the people who do wedding photography well, and who know what they are doing (people who act professional, who have back-up equipment and have back-up arrangements made with other photographers to fill in on an emergency basis, who carry the proper insurance, who use signed contracts with their customers, etc.).
Sorry if you felt like I was disrespecting professional wedding photographers... that certainly wasn't my intent.