Brian C Idocks Photographics, LLC is an Award Winning Wedding and Portrait Photography Studio in Tampa, Florida, known for fun, romantic imagery.

Brian's website is www.briancidocks.com

The Studio phone number is 813-885-8855

 

Brian has been awarded:

2007 Tampa Area Photographer of the Year

2008 Tampa Area Photographer of the Year

2008 Bay Area Photographer of the Year

2008 Florida's Top Ten Photographers

2009 PPA International Photographer of the Year

2009 Florida's Top Ten Photographers


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Entries in Clearwater wedding photography (6)

Monday
19Oct2009

Tina & Mike's Wedding at the Sirata

On Friday, Derica and I photographed Mike & Tina's Wedding at the Sirata.  They were a referral from one of Mike's friends whose wedding I photographed last year.  I love that, it's so great when we get to work with friends of our couples!

 

Anyway, here's their sneak peek!



By the way, it totally poured during their ceremony, but everybody took it in stride, wonderful thing.


-B


Thursday
18Jun2009

Niccel & Jeremy's Engagement Session

Sand Key Park got just a little hotter last night!

Niccel and Jeremy are one beautiful couple!

Even though it looked stormy, we survived it and came out with some amazing photographs. By the way, the rain held off until we got back to the parking lot, perfect timing.

They both didn't realize what I mean by "You will get wet".  No, that water is not Photoshopped, it's real, and it's wet! But...... it's a lot of fun!  Poor Jeremy got completely soaked while Niccel managed to keep her hair dry.

Here's their sneak peek!

 

Friday
12Jun2009

Thursday Wedding?

Really?  A Wedding on a Thursday?

 

Believe it.

 

Dale and Karla had a beautiful ceremony on the beaches of the Clearwater Hilton.  Joanie and Nick always do a great job!  We had some hot sun and everybody got a little sweaty, but I think there's some great photos too!  Here's their sneak peek!

 

Saturday
30May2009

Getting Better All The Time......

I will not be posting much if at all for the next week or so since Derica, Melissa and I will be joining Professional Photographers from all over the state and beyond in Daytona Beach for the Florida Professional Photographers Florida School.

This is a yearly event where we get to spend a week with an instructor in a small class format to learn as much as we can.

This year, Derica and I are working with Debra Lynn Ferro to brush up (hehe) on Photoshop and Painting skills!  Melissa is spending the week with Lori Nordstrom to learn about shooting the little ones (photographically, of course).

 

Don't miss me too much, ok?

 

-B

Thursday
28May2009

Aren't Photographers just Glorified Paper Salesmen?

Yeah, right......

 

When film was king, there was more truth to that statement, but it still wasn't true.

 

We all know the actual act of producing the image onto a piece of 8"x10" paper only costs a few dollars, that's not earth shattering news.

 

But.......

 

Here's why Wal* charges $2 and professionals charge >$50 or more!

First, there's cost of doing business:  licenses, permits, insurance, rent, storage, electricity, phone, etc.

Then, there's time to get the print made:  copying files, editing files, finding files, uploading, checking the print, packaging the print, arranging for the customer to pick up, etc.

Lastly, theres Processing time:  We process or retouch and manipulate each and every file for every print made so they can print at their best.  This takes a lot of time.  Depending on the file, we may spend up to an hour on an 8"x10"!  It's very difficult to make them all perfect and put a reasonable price on prints.  The smaller the print, the more expensive it is for us to make.  For example:  You order a 4"x6" print, that shouldn't cost too much, right?  Well, add up all the costs above and up to maybe a half hour of processing, and that 4"x6" could cost us money to make for you!  Obviously a larger print will receive more work than a smaller one, but this is just an explanation.

 

Wal* isn't going to spend any time processing your image, they also won't check for consistency or quality most likely.  Professional Labs have this unique attribute, maybe you've heard of them, they're called PEOPLE and they have EYES and a BRAIN to actually look at your Photograph and make corrections if necessary.  The Wal*'s of the world don't do that.

 

Soooo, next time you are looking at purchasing professional photography, and see what you might consider high print prices, think again, they are saving you a bundle!

 

-B

Wednesday
27May2009

What are "Rights" to "reproduce"?

In the next installment of my ongoing series (well, it is, since yesterday), we will talk about "Rights" and "Copyright" and "Reproduction".  Nasty, nasty stuff.

 

Many people don't realize this, but if you hire a photographer for your portraits, wedding, etc., they OWN your photographs.  That is US copyright law, no two ways about it.  In the old days, the photographer would charge a small fee for the capture of the photographs and larger amounts for the prints from those photographs.  Today, there are more options available.

Yes, even if you purchase a print, the photographer still owns it!  If you scan it, it's illegal!

Today it's much easier for someone to reproduce a photograph illegally, thus we have the new pricing system.  Photographers tend to charge for their time up front and less for reprints.  If a print is simply a reprint, the print charges shouldn't be very high, however, many photographers retouch and manipulate the photographs they print (as they should) and charge for that time and skill.

That brings me to an interesting point:  Just how good are most photographers at retouching and image manipulation?  Isn't that something else you should look for in a photographer?  I mean, sure, they can capture a decent image, but can they make it shine?  This is something that can really set photographers apart.

OK, back to the doom and gloom.

Especially with Weddings, today many photographers offer a disk of images.  There are two basic types.

One is a small file suitable for E-mail, websites, Facebook, etc.  You don't want to print from it, there's just not enough information and that's not what they are intended for.  We've all tried printing a photo from a web site and it came out horrible, right?  same idea, looked great on the monitor, but not so much on paper.

The other is a high resolution file suitable for printing and this usually comes with usage rights.  These usage rights explain what you are allowed to do with these images.  Usually anything you want short of selling them, but this may vary from photographer to photographer.  The term "high resolution" is rather vague though, isn't it?  You may see some people calling them "Originals", unless you paid slightly over minimum wage for your wedding photographer, be wary of that word.  Remember we talked about retouching?  Originals have none of that, or even any work done.  Digital is much harder than film since we don't have a lab to make all the images perfect in color, contrast, and exposure.  Even slight differences image to image are quite noticable.  If the photographer doesn't take the time to correct for this, your images suffer for it.  A better word is "Proof", a proof is a working image, with some adjustments to it.  There are some photographers that offer "Edited" photographs.  This is a play on words.  The customer would take "Editing" to mean "retouching", guess what, it doesn't!  Editing is the act of sorting out the good from the bad, choosing the "keepers" so to speak.  It's a good thing to do, but it's not the same as retouching at all.  I'm sure there are photographers that offer fully retouched images from a wedding.  If they do, jump on it now because they likely won't be in business next year.

Yesterday I showed how a single wedding can use up most of a week's time, now imagine that photographer is going to spend a half hour to an hour retouching every single one of those 500 to 600 images?  Let's see, that's about 400 hours, or just over 2 weeks of utilizing every minute of the day for retouching.  Put another way, it keeps them busy equivalent to a full time job for 2 and a half months!  Not very realistic for a business model unless they charge the equivalent of a BMW for their services.

What does all this mean to you, the customer?

You have choices, lots of them.  Choices in Photography Style, Price Range, and Products Received.

Do you really want 800 high resolution photographs?  Do you know what to do with them?  Can your computer deal with it?  Do you WANT to deal with it?  Many people want the disk to keep for posterity, or "just in case".

Or, are you looking for QUALITY reprints?  An album with the best of the best in it?

Maybe you want all three?

The point is you can get what you want, how you want, at pretty much whatever price you want to pay.

In Tampa Bay alone there are over 600 Wedding Photographers, that's a lot to choose from.  Knowing a little bit about the industry helps narrow that field down a bit.

Hope this helps!

 

-B