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    10 top tips for wedding photographers to help you get your first blog feature!

    Being a wedding photographer can feel exhilaratingโ€”yet submitting your work to a major blog is often daunting. What if you send your best images, hit โ€œsubmit,โ€ and hear nothing back? Even worse: what if you get a flat โ€œnoโ€? But hereโ€™s the truth: many of those blogs want to say โ€œyes.โ€ Theyโ€™re actively looking for photographers ready to show fresh weddings, styled shoots, and creative collaborations. So letโ€™s shift the mindset from โ€œWhat if I fail?โ€ to โ€œWhat if this is the start of something big?โ€

    Below are ten essential tips to help you confidently pitch your work and earn that first blog feature.


    1. Get to Know the Wedding Blogs

    Each wedding blog has its own identity and audience. Your style needs to align with theirs if you want a real chance of being featured. Take a little timeโ€”sip your favourite drink, scroll through posts, look at the types of weddings, and note the writing style. Does the blog lean editorial and dramatic? Or intimate and rustic?

    Using this insight, you can tailor your submission: choose images that reflect the blogโ€™s aesthetic, include a little about the couple or the reason behind the shoot, and speak to the tone the editor values.


    2. Know Your Weddings

    Similar to how blogs have distinct styles, each of your weddings or shoots carries a theme. Think: modern city-chic, dreamy fine-art, boho-casual, or elegant and traditional. Are the dress and suit minimal and sleekโ€”or vibrant and playful? What does the venue say? What about the florals, stationery, or overall styling? These elements signal both the vibe of the day and your photographic approach.

    When you identify a particular weddingโ€™s strong style, match it to a blog that celebrates similar work. Doing so increases the likelihood the blog will spot, like, and showcase your submission.


    3. Be Friendly, Professional, and Specific

    When you email a blog editor, a generic greeting rarely helps. If you start with โ€œHi there,โ€ your email may go straight to the โ€œmehโ€ pile. Instead: use the editorโ€™s name, mention a recent post you loved, and explain why your wedding or shoot fits their space.

    Alsoโ€”avoid submitting the same piece to multiple blogs at once. Many blogs operate under exclusivity agreements, and overlapping submissions can cause awkwardness or outright rejection. Choose one blog, submit your work there, and keep communication personal and clear.


    4. Follow Their Submission Guidelines

    Each blog wants things done their wayโ€”high-res vs low-res images, supplier lists, captions, etc. A single email sent โ€œone size fits allโ€ wonโ€™t resonate. Research each blogโ€™s requirements and deliver accordingly. Requests for details like โ€œsuppliers and linksโ€ matter because bloggers need them to publish complete, polished features.


    5. Donโ€™t Hesitateโ€”Submit!

    Hereโ€™s the thing: blogs are run by real people who love weddings. Theyโ€™re in their PJs, coffee in hand, browsing submissions and celebrating fresh talent. A fear of rejection or โ€œnot being readyโ€ can hold you backโ€”but it means you miss your chance for a โ€œyesโ€.

    Donโ€™t wait for the โ€œperfectโ€ moment. Get your best work ready, pick the right blog, and hit send. Youโ€™re not making a cold callโ€”youโ€™re contributing to a community that wants you.


    6. Youโ€™re Helping the Blog Too

    Itโ€™s worth remembering: wedding bloggers depend on photographers sharing their work. Without photographers submitting styled shoots and real weddings, blogs wouldnโ€™t exist. When you share your love and creativity, youโ€™re making the bloggerโ€™s world more beautiful. Acknowledging this mindset creates goodwill and improves your reputation.


    7. If You Get a โ€œNo,โ€ Donโ€™t Be Discouraged

    Sometimes, you will hear โ€œno.โ€ Maybe the wedding didnโ€™t have the detail a blog is looking for, or the editor has enough features queued up. Rejection doesnโ€™t mean failureโ€”it often means timing or fit. Good blogs often reply with encouragement or tips for next time. Keeping that in mind makes resubmission easier and less emotionally draining.


    8. The Odds Are Better Than You Think

    You might imagine youโ€™re up against dozens of submissionsโ€”but on many days, an editor may receive just a handful, or even none. This means your submission could stand out. Donโ€™t assume youโ€™re invisible; assume youโ€™re valuable. Let that confidence shine through in your email and selections.


    9. Mention Previous Features

    If youโ€™ve already been featured elsewhere, say so. Blog editors often recognise names and like building relationships with photographers who are active and published. A โ€œFeatured onโ€ฆโ€ badge creates instant credibility and can open doors to more prestigious blogs. Think of each feature as a stepping stone to the next.


    10. Planning a Styled Shoot? Be Strategic.

    If the project is a styled shoot (rather than a real wedding), treat it like a mini-brand launch. Plan ahead: choose 3โ€“5 blogs whose aesthetic matches, pick your suppliers carefully, and ensure every elementโ€”from dress to dessertโ€”is on point. For the photo pitch, send your strongest โ€œheroโ€ images first. Provide the description, supplier list, linksโ€”all ready to go. The easier you make the editorโ€™s job, the more likely theyโ€™ll publish.


    Final Thoughts

    Getting featured on a wedding blog is less about luck and more about alignment, presentation, and initiative. Know the blogs, know your weddings, tailor your submission, and reach out with friendliness and confidence. Be the photographer whose vision matches the blogโ€™s vibeโ€”and who makes the editorโ€™s job as easy as possible.

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