Most photographers who want to shoot weddings already own a camera and know how to use it. What stops them is not knowing which gear actually matters, not having a portfolio, and not knowing what to charge. This guide’ll let you know how to start.
Almost all weddings happen on Saturdays. That one fact is everything. The average wedding photographer in the US charges between $2,500 and $4,000 for full coverage and there’s a gap in that market that newer photographers fill faster than most expect. Couples who can’t pay $5,000 won’t hand their wedding to someone with zero portfolio. At $1,500 to $2,000 with clean work and fast replies, you’re the obvious choice for that bracket.
Most photographers recommend booking 12 to 18 months out for peak Saturday dates. Start building your portfolio now and you’re filling next year’s calendar, not scrambling for last-minute gaps.
You don’t need to buy everything at once. Here’s what matters and what can wait.
Two camera bodies. Not because failures are common, but because there’s no recovery when one happens mid-ceremony.
For lenses, a 35mm or 50mm prime lens for the ceremony and reception. Fast apertures, f/1.4 or f/1.8, let you shoot in dim church or hall light without pushing ISO so high. A 70-200mm telephoto for the aisle walk, ring exchange, and first kiss from a distance. Bounce flash with a diffuser for receptions, double the batteries you think you need, and that’s your kit.
Medium format, cinema lenses, and $3,000 zooms can all wait. At your first ten weddings, couples just check if their faces are sharp and whether the emotion reads.
Styled shoots are the fastest way. You plan a shoot that looks like a wedding: bridal attire, a location that reads as real, subjects who commit to the look. Two or three of those, shot well, are indistinguishable from real wedding coverage in a portfolio. Most couples aren’t studying your portfolio for documentary authenticity. They want to see lighting, framing, and emotion.
@svitlana.usa photographed by @jaymejiaproductions at French Loft Studio Loft 1
For intimate couples portraits and styled bridal work with warmth and lived-in character, this interior photo studio gives you more variety per hour than most locations in DTLA. French Baroque Loft photo studio in Los Angeles is located at 656 S Los Angeles Street, Unit 900, Los Angeles, CA 90014.
This 900-square-foot studio is styled in French Baroque with hand-selected ornate furniture throughout: a plush, studded bed, chaise longues, a large full-body golden mirror, and a prop door frame. The door frame alone creates framing and depth that push a standard portrait into something more considered. The light stays steady all day, which means less guesswork about when to rent. Try shooting with a sunset light – the most magical light at this studio.
Get an actual wedding shooting experience. Reach out to photographers already booking weddings and offer to assist. Pay is low, or there’s none at first. What you get is a real wedding day, real pressure, and images. Even two-second shots change how you handle the chaos of the actual thing.
A deeply discounted first wedding rounds it out. A $500 to $700 first booking is uncomfortable, but it buys you a real wedding in your portfolio and a real couple to reference. Frame it honestly as a portfolio-building rate. Deliver your best work, and it pays back fast.
For styled shoots, you need a space that actually looks like a wedding could happen there. That’s where renting the right studio earns its value.
For styled shoots and couples portrait practice, you need a space that actually looks like something could happen there. A blank white wall works for headshots. It does not work for a bridal portfolio.
FD Photo Studio is a go-to for photographers in Los Angeles and New York who need fully equipped, privately rented studios by the hour. No permits, no insurance, and no shared spaces.
Photo by Whiskers and Willow Photography and @xeniapark.photography at Daylight Photo Studio Art 1
For couples portraits with architectural detail and strong natural light, this is the go-to in downtown LA. White Steps studio Art 1 is a daylight photo studio with corner staircase, a 10×15 ft concrete wall, a 10×15 ft grey wood wall, and a prop grand piano in Los Angeles. It’s located at 1048 Santee Street, Los Angeles, CA 90015, 5th Floor.
The studio is 1,390 square feet. Windows face northwest and southwest, bringing soft diffused light in the morning and warm direct afternoon sun later in the day. The white grand piano is a photography prop, not a working instrument, but it’s beautiful on camera.
All studio rentals come with three flash units, wireless triggers, C-stands, sandbags, v-flats, a makeup station with mirrors and seating, and free WiFi already included. No need to bring your own lighting rig for a first styled shoot.
Continuous lighting is available for rent. Paper backdrops are available at an additional price: $29.99 for up to 6 ft on the floor, $59.99 for more than 6 ft, and $75 for a full 36 ft roll. Check the FD equipment list for all available and rentable items.
FD Photo Studio offers 4, 8, and 12-hour discount packages to give you better rates than renting single hours, with up to 30% savings compared to hourly rates. Package hours can be split across days and never expire. You can still book as little as one hour for a quick test shoot.
See all Los Angeles studios or New York studios to find the right look for your shoot.
Most new photographers go too low and exhaust themselves, or they price at market rate without a portfolio to back it up, and wonder why no one books.
A starting range of $800 to $1,500 for 6 to 8 hours with a full edited gallery is realistic for a beginner with a small portfolio. Below market, yes, but high enough that clients take the commitment seriously. Couples who pay almost nothing tend to be the most demanding.
Raise by $200 to $300 after every three to five weddings. Keep going until bookings slow slightly. That’s where your market rate sits. Don’t bundle albums or prints into your base rate at first. Sell those as add-ons once your editing workflow is solid.
1. Browse Available Studios: Visit our studio rental page to explore all 62+ locations
2. Check Equipment Lists: Review our completed equipment list
3. Rent Your Studio: Use our 24/7 online booking system to secure your preferred date and time
4. Receive Your Check-In Code: Get your self-check-in code to access your studio seamlessly
Call us at +1 (323) 454-2323, or email us at info@fdphotostudio.com. We also have a live support chat on our website where you can get directions, request help, or ask questions.