Every photographer carries two things at all times: a camera and a mental catalog of phrases that make their eye twitch. These aren’t insults. They’re worse. They’re delivered with complete sincerity by perfectly nice people who have no idea they’ve just committed a felony against your entire profession. What follows is a support group meeting in article form.
1. “You Must Have a Really Nice Camera.”
The classic. The original. The undisputed, pound-for-pound champion of photographer-annoying statements, undefeated since roughly 1987 and showing no signs of slowing down.
You could show someone a photo you spent three hours scouting, twenty minutes lighting, and another two hours editing. You could explain the lens choice, the composition, the split-second timing. You could describe waking up at 4 AM and standing in freezing rain to catch that light. And the response, delivered with genuine warmth and a big smile, would still be: “You must have a really nice camera.”
Nobody walks into a Michelin-starred restaurant and tells the chef, “You must have a really nice oven.” Nobody finishes a novel and says, “Wow, what kind of laptop do you write on?” But photography exists in this bizarre cultural blind spot where the tool gets the credit and the human holding it is just the delivery mechanism.
The correct response is a polite “thank you.” The internal response is a scream that lasts about forty-five seconds.
2. “My Phone Takes Photos Just as Good.”
It does not. But we’ve all learned that this argument is unwinnable, because the person saying it has already decided, and no amount of evidence will change their mind. You could project a 40-by-60-inch print from each device side by side and they’d squint at both and say “I honestly can’t tell the difference.”
The worst part is that in one very narrow sense, they’re almost right. In perfect daylight, shooting a stationary subject, with no need for background separation or creative lighting, sure. The phone does fine. It’s the photographic equivalent of saying “my microwave heats food just as good as your stove.” Technically the hot dog comes out warm in both cases. But nobody is plating a tasting menu out of a microwave.
You learn to nod. You learn to smile. You learn to change the subject. And later that night, you open an ISO 6,400 wedding reception photo with clean shadow detail and whisper, “Just as good,” to nobody.
3. “Can You Just Take a Quick Photo? It’ll Only Take a Second.”
No photo that has ever been described in advance as “quick” has taken less than fifteen minutes.
The request always arrives at the worst possible moment. You’re packing up your gear after a long shoot. You’re at a family gathering, off the clock, eating potato salad. You’re at a friend’s birthday, holding a drink, clearly not working. And someone materializes, smiling, and says the words that will ruin the next half hour of your life.
One on each of our phones?
“Quick” means they want you to find good light, arrange one to seventeen people who are all holding drinks and mid-conversation, get everyone looking at the camera at the same time, deal with Uncle Steve who always closes his eyes, wait for the cousin who just went to the bathroom, retake it because someone wasn’t ready, retake it again because now a different person blinked, and then do the whole thing again on four different phones, none of which are unlocked.
Then they look at the result on their phone screen, frown slightly, and say, “Can we do one more?”
4. “Can You Send Me All the Photos? Like, All of Them?”
All of them. Every single frame. Including the fourteen test shots where the flash didn’t fire. The one where you accidentally photographed your own shoe. The thirty-seven frames of the same pose where someone was mid-blink in thirty-six of them. The bracket exposures that exist solely to be merged later. The back-of-someone shot that happened because you fired while turning around. All of them.
What the client pictures when they say “all the photos” is a treasure trove of hidden gems that the photographer is selfishly hoarding. What actually exists is a digital landfill of misfires, duplicates, and images so unflattering that sending them would probably end the professional relationship on the spot.
You gently explain the culling process. You describe how the delivered gallery represents the best of the best. You mention that the unedited outtakes would actually make everyone look worse, not better. They nod politely. Then they ask again.
5. “My Nephew Has a Camera Too. He Could Probably Do This.”
Your nephew has a camera. He also has a skateboard, but nobody’s asking him to compete in the Olympics.
This one is technically a negotiation tactic disguised as casual conversation, and the disguise is terrible. What they’re actually saying is: “I believe this service should cost less, and I’m going to use the existence of a teenager with a Rebel to justify that belief.” If the nephew could do the job, the nephew would already be doing the job. The fact that they’re talking to you means the nephew cannot, in fact, do this.
The nephew will eventually learn. He might become excellent. But right now, his camera is on auto mode, his portfolio is his dog and a sunset he oversaturated into oblivion, and his backup plan if the memory card fails is “I didn’t know that could happen.” Comparing his camera ownership to your career is like telling your mechanic, “My neighbor has a wrench.”
If you are the nephew and you’re reading this, no shade. We were all you once. Consider picking up The Well-Rounded Photographer, which covers eight genres with eight different instructors and will get you from “auto mode and a sunset” to “someone people actually hire” faster than YouTube alone.
6. “You Should Shoot My Wedding! It’d Be Fun!”
The word “fun” is doing an extraordinary amount of heavy lifting in this sentence.
Here’s what they’re actually proposing: wake up at 5 AM, carry 20 to 30 pounds of gear for twelve straight hours, manage large groups of strangers (several of whom are drunk), anticipate moments that happen once and can never be recreated, shoot in lighting conditions that range from “beautiful church with stained glass windows” to “reception hall with flickering fluorescent tubes and a DJ running a fog machine,” and accept full responsibility for preserving the most important day of someone’s life.
And if you miss the first kiss, there is no retake. That moment is gone. The couple will notice. And it will haunt you at 2 AM for the rest of your natural life.
“Fun” is go-karts. “Fun” is karaoke. Wedding photography is a high-wire act performed without a net in front of an audience that will review your work frame by frame for decades. Also, nine times out of ten, “you should shoot my wedding” is code for “you should shoot my wedding for free because we’re friends,” which adds a beautiful layer of financial insult to an already exhausting proposition.
7. “Why Does It Take So Long to Get the Photos Back? You Already Took Them.”
This statement reveals a beautiful, almost enviable misunderstanding of the job. In their mind, the shutter clicks and a finished photograph tumbles out of the camera like a Polaroid, fully edited, color-corrected, and ready to frame. What a world that would be.
What actually happens: you sit at a computer for hours. Days. Sometimes weeks. You cull. You color correct. You adjust exposure on every single frame. You make skin look natural without looking untouched. You clean up backgrounds. You maintain consistency across an entire set so image number 47 doesn’t look like it was shot in a different dimension than image number 12. Then you export, upload, build the gallery, and deliver.
“You already took them” is the photographic equivalent of telling an architect, “You already drew the building. Why isn’t it built yet?” The shutter click is the halfway point, not the finish line. But try explaining that to someone who’s been texting you “just checking in!” every three days since the shoot.
8. “I Found a Photographer on Groupon for $50.”
You did. And somewhere out there, a photographer just felt a disturbance in the Force and doesn’t know why.
The $50 photographer exists in one of two states: they’re brand new and don’t yet understand that $50 doesn’t cover the gas to drive to the shoot or they made a catastrophic business decision they’ll regret the moment they sit down to edit 400 images for what works out to roughly eleven cents per hour.
The photos might be fine. They might even be good. But the moment anything goes wrong (a corrupted card, a missed shot, a scheduling conflict) there is no backup body, no insurance, and no contingency plan beyond “oh no.”
There’s nothing wrong with shopping for value. But when someone offers a professional service at ninety percent below market rate, the question isn’t “what a deal!” The question is “what’s missing?” The answer is usually “everything that matters when something goes wrong.”
9. “Wait, You Have to Edit Them Too? I Thought They Came Out Finished.”
Pretty similar to seven. This is the most forgivable item on the list, because smartphones have spent fifteen years training the entire population to believe that pressing a button produces a finished image. The phone captures, processes, sharpens, tone-maps, and color-corrects in a fraction of a second, so it’s not unreasonable for a non-photographer to assume that all cameras work this way.
They don’t. On purpose. What comes out of a professional camera looks like a photograph that’s been left out in the rain: flat, desaturated, and deeply underwhelming. That’s by design. All of that missing pop is headroom, latitude for the photographer to shape the image instead of letting an algorithm decide.
But explaining this makes you sound like you’re bad at your job. “Yes, the photos look terrible right now, but trust me, they’ll be great after I spend six hours on them” is not a sentence that inspires confidence at a client meeting. So you just smile and say, “That’s part of the process,” while quietly dying inside.
10. “Can I Get the Raws?”
Saving the worst for last. This is the photography equivalent of going to a restaurant, enjoying your meal, and then asking the chef if you can take home the mise en place to “just play around with it.”
Clients who ask for raws almost never know what raws are. They’ve heard the word somewhere (probably from a friend who has a nephew with a camera) and they’ve concluded that raws are the “real” photos and that the delivered JPEGs are somehow the lesser version. In reality, the delivered files are the meal. The raws are the raw chicken.
But the real nightmare scenario isn’t confusion. It’s what happens after. They open the raws if they somehow figure out how to do that. They don’t understand why they look flat. They crank every slider to the right. They add a filter. They post the result on social media. Your name is still attached. And now you’re getting credit for a portrait that looks like it was edited during an earthquake by someone who just discovered the saturation tool.
Some photographers release raws for an additional fee. That fee isn’t a punishment. It’s hazard pay.
If you’ve heard all ten of these, congratulations: you are a photographer. If you’ve heard all ten in a single conversation, you were probably at Thanksgiving.
Now if you’ll excuse me, someone just asked if I can “just quickly” take a group photo of forty-seven people on six different phones. It’ll only take a second.