this post was submitted on 21 Nov 2023
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Photography

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Apologies if this isn’t allowed, it’s more of a rant. Just wondering how everyone deals with the whole family asking for free photos thing.

For context, I’m a professional fashion/commercial photographer so family portraits aren’t going to help my portfolio or anything. My schedule is incredibly busy year round, even more so during the holidays, and I’m also a mother of two young kids. So if I’m not in parent mode, I’m working- often until midnight, and then I’m awake around 5:30 with the kids. I know it sounds like I’m complaining and… well, I kind of am, but want to give an accurate picture of how little time I have available to be doing free photos.

So every year, my in-laws want a family session. Not just a quick snap but like a full session. And every year I do it because they’re my in-laws and I don’t want them to think badly of me. The one time I hinted at being annoyed at this yearly request they were flabbergasted, saying “I thought you liked photography? It doesn’t take much time, does it?” This year I feel like I might snap. I’ve been racing to meet deadlines for huge clients that I’ve worked hard to get and I keep getting sidetracked with all of these family shoots (it is also happening with friends, other relatives). It’s not just the shoot- it’s deciding a location, responding to lengthy texts about what to wear, doing the editing- you guys know. It’s never “just a few pics”.

How can I deal with this?! Do I need to just suck it up and be a nicer person? I’m just burnt out af. Help.

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[–] Charlie_1300@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

I feel your frustration. I am an art documentation/archival photographer and have a mother-in-law that is an artist. I learned to say "No" after she asked me to document for prints "a few" paintings for free. Specifically, she told my wife to tell me to do it for free. A few paintings became over 50! I mentioned that a job of this scale would cost $2500 and be about 20 hours of work. I got the simular, "You like photography", "Is this really a job or a hobby?" I no longer shoot for family. (I'm also hanging on to the images until I see some compensation.)