In both photography and videography, there's a learning pattern that everyone goes through.
Everyone starts out the same way. You go out on their first shoot, you’re very excited, you come back and look at what you’ve shot and realize how much you’ve missed and how badly you messed up.
So, you learn. You go out, determined to not make the same mistakes again. And you come back and look at what you’ve shot and realize that you’ve made entirely new mistakes this time.
You go out again, determined to learn from these mistakes, and this time you come back and discover still other mistakes that you have made, and also that some of the original mistakes have snuck back in when you weren’t looking.
This goes on for a while.
Eventually, things level off. You find that you’re able to come back from your shoots and you have everything you need. You can enter into your edits comfortably, knowing that you’re leaving your shoots with what you needed.
Then, you start to notice that these edits are getting exhausting. You have so much footage or so many photos that it’s incredibly time-consuming to edit everything. Why do you have forty-six exposures of the bride, all from the same angle and with the same expression? Why did you shoot six minutes of footage of this band playing when you know you’re only going to use an 8-second clip? Just scrolling through all of this is taking way too much of your life.
So, you get better by getting thriftier. You learn what you don’t need, and your edits become faster, and your life becomes easier.
And now, here is where I start to diverge from a lot of other photographers and videographers I run into. Because I just don’t run my shoots that way.