How far in advance should you book a wedding videographer?

Timing can make a big difference when it comes to booking a wedding videographer, particularly if your wedding falls within peak season. Videographers have always often been booked a little later than lets say a photographer.

Most couples in the UK tend to book their videographer around 12 to 18 months in advance. Popular dates - especially weekends between May and September - can fill up quickly, sometimes even earlier than that. However, there can also still be a few peak dates available late due to people make late decisions on videographers.

That said, availability can vary. There are always occasional gaps due to rescheduled weddings, smaller celebrations, or more flexible plans. So even if your wedding is approaching sooner, it’s still worth reaching out to check.

Beyond availability, booking earlier also gives you more time to build a relationship and feel comfortable with whoever is capturing your day. That connection can make a noticeable difference, particularly if you prefer a more natural, documentary style where trust and ease are important.

It also allows for a more considered approach to planning. Whether that’s discussing timelines, understanding what matters most to you, or simply having space to ask questions without pressure.

If you’ve found someone whose work genuinely resonates with you, it’s usually best not to leave it too long. The right fit tends to matter more than anything else, and availability is often the only thing that stands in the way.

If you would like to find out my availability click here to go to my contact form :)

What is cinematic or documentary wedding videography?

The terms “cinematic” and “documentary” are used a lot in wedding videography, but they don’t always mean the same thing to everyone. I however, would call myself a cinematic documentary wedding videographer.

At its core, cinematic wedding videography is about storytelling. Rather than simply recording events as they happen, the focus is on capturing moments in a way that feels intentional, emotive, and visually considered. It’s about creating a film that has flow, atmosphere, and a sense of narrative.

Documentary wedding videography leans slightly differently. It’s less about directing or staging moments, and more about observing what naturally unfolds throughout the day. The aim is to capture genuine interactions, real emotions, and the subtle details that make each wedding unique.

In practice, the two approaches often overlap.

A cinematic style can still be completely natural and unposed, while a documentary approach can still be crafted into a film that feels polished and immersive. The balance usually comes down to how much direction is involved and how the story is shaped afterwards.

For couples, the most important thing is how it feels. Some films are more structured and stylised, while others feel quieter and more observational. Neither is right or wrong - it simply depends on what resonates.

A more documentary-led cinematic approach tends to prioritise authenticity, allowing moments to happen without interference, and then shaping them into something that feels both honest and beautifully put together.

To learn more you can contact me to book in a chat here :)

Is having a wedding videographer really worth it?

It’s a question almost every couple considers at some point—especially when balancing budgets and priorities. I am probably the least impartial person in the world to answer this question. I'm a wedding videographer. Of course I think you should have a wedding videographer.

The honest answer is that it often becomes one of the most valued parts of the wedding, but usually only after the day has passed.

Photography captures moments beautifully, but film brings everything back in a completely different way. It’s the sound of voices during speeches, the way people move and interact, and the atmosphere of the day as a whole. It allows you to experience it again, rather than just look back on it.

One of the most common things couples say afterwards is how quickly the day went. There are moments you don’t see, conversations you miss, and parts of the day that pass almost without realising. A well-made wedding film fills in those gaps and gives you a fuller picture of what actually happened.

There’s also something to be said for how your perspective changes over time. What might feel like a luxury in the planning stage often becomes something far more meaningful years later, especially as relationships evolve and people around you change.

That said, it’s not just about having a videographer - it’s about the style and approach. If the filming feels intrusive or overly staged, it can take away from the day. A more cinematic documentary-led approach allows everything to unfold naturally, without pressure or performance.

For couples who value authenticity and want to remember how their day truly felt, videography tends to be one of the most worthwhile investments they make.
If you would like to here more please contact me via my contact form here :)

How much does a wedding videographer cost in the UK?

When couples start looking into wedding videography, one of the first questions is always around cost - and understandably so.

In the UK, wedding videography typically ranges anywhere from around £1,500 to £5,000+, depending on experience, style, and what’s included. At the lower end, you’ll often find shorter coverage or more basic highlight films, while at the higher end you’re usually investing in a more considered, story-driven approach with a strong focus on filmmaking.

The difference in price isn’t just about hours on the day - it’s about how the story is captured and crafted afterwards. A large part of the work actually happens after the wedding, shaping everything into something that feels natural, emotional, and true to how the day unfolded.

For couples who are drawn to cinematic or documentary-style films, pricing tends to sit somewhere in the mid to higher range. This reflects not only the experience behind the camera, but also the time and care taken in editing, sound design, and storytelling.

It’s also worth considering what you actually want to come away with. Some couples prefer a simple record of the day, while others are looking for something more immersive - something that brings back the atmosphere, the voices, and the small moments that might otherwise be forgotten.

Ultimately, the investment tends to reflect the importance you place on having your wedding preserved in motion, not just in stills. And for many couples, it becomes one of the few things that grows in value over time.
You can check my guide prices here or send me a message via my contact form and I will send my full brochure over :)

Wedding Videographer vs Wedding Content Creator: What's the Difference?

If you're in the process of researching wedding videography, there's a good chance you've come across the term "wedding content creator" and wondered what the difference is. It's a question that comes up a lot — and it's worth being clear about, because the two things aren't interchangeable.

The content creator model is built around social media — short clips, reels, something formatted for a phone screen that you can share quickly after the day. The assumption is often that speed is the main advantage: get something out while it's still fresh. What's worth knowing is that a good wedding videographer doesn't make you wait as long as you might think either — I typically have a trailer back with couples within a week of the wedding. The difference isn't really about speed. It's about what you're actually getting.

What a wedding content creator actually does

A wedding content creator is there specifically to shoot short-form social media content throughout your day. Think Instagram reels, TikToks, behind-the-scenes clips. The whole model is built around speed and virality - most content creators promise to deliver edited clips within 24 to 48 hours so you can post while the day is still trending.

If you have a large social media following - or you're an influencer, a blogger, or someone whose online presence is genuinely important to you - this makes a lot of sense. You have an audience that wants to see your wedding, and you want to give them something fast, formatted for a phone screen, edited to a trending sound. A content creator does that job.

What it isn't

It isn't a wedding film. And that distinction matters more than it might seem.

Content creation is designed for consumption - quick, scrollable, disposable in the best possible way. The format demands it. You're making something for an algorithm, for a feed, for people watching on their phones at 11pm. That shapes every creative decision: the shot selection, the pacing, the music, the length.

A wedding film is made to be kept. It's made to be watched properly, on a proper screen, ten years from now - by you, by your parents, eventually maybe by your children. It holds the sound of your vows, your dad's speech, the moment everyone cheered when you walked back down the aisle together. It's edited with care over weeks, not hours. The music is chosen specifically for your day, not because it's currently trending. The whole point is that it feels like yours - not like everyone else's wedding reel.

The part I find interesting

As social media has grown, I've noticed weddings increasingly being treated as content opportunities. There's a version of a wedding day that's essentially produced for the feed - the flat lay, the mirror selfie, the staged first look designed to go viral. I understand the appeal, and I'm not here to judge it.

But my aim is the opposite. The further the world tips towards content and trends, the more deliberately I move away from them. What I'm trying to capture is what's real - the authentic moments, the things that happen when nobody's performing for a camera. The detail that makes your day feel like yours and nobody else's. You can't get that by chasing a trend. I love doing what I do - I truly love cameras, the art, the creativity, the desire to improve, to see how I can get better even after 10 years at using tools to bring your day to life - to make it feel like you. To make it feel authentic.

Can you have both?

Yes - and some couples do. If you want same-day clips for your social media and a proper film to keep forever, booking both is completely valid. They're doing entirely different jobs and won't get in each other's way. I work happily alongside content creators, just as I work alongside photographers.

What I'd gently push back on is the idea that one replaces the other. A reel is not a wedding film. And a wedding film - a real one, made properly - is not something you can produce in 48 hours.

What I actually make

I'm there from bridal prep through to around an hour after the first dance - usually 10 to 12 hours - and in that time I capture everything. All of it goes into a film that's edited over the following weeks and delivered as something that looks and feels cinematic. Not content. A film.

The couples who message me months or years later - and they do, regularly - aren't saying they loved the reel. They're saying they watched their film again last night. That they put it on when they needed cheering up. That it made them cry all over again. That's what I'm making it for.

About Ben

I'm Ben - a cinematic, documentary wedding videographer based in Salisbury, Wiltshire. I've been doing this for 10 years across the UK and all over the world. If you'd like to see my work or have a conversation about what I do, I'd love to hear from you.