A lot goes into preparing for a photoshoot — coordinating schedules, getting the right people in the room, making sure everything reflects your brand. Once the session wraps, the work moves behind the scenes. Here's what that process looks like, and how it's designed to get your images into your hands and ready to use.

Image Selection

Once the shoot wraps, every image gets reviewed and culled down to a focused collection of the strongest shots. Rather than handing over thousands of unfiltered images, the goal is a curated gallery — the best moments, the best compositions, the most accurate reflection of your people and environment. It gives your marketing team something they can work from right away.

Proofing + Retouching

From there, each of the selected images is edited for color, contrast, and cropping — and more precise retouching is carried out on any images that need it. The approach keeps things polished without losing the natural, authentic quality that matters most, especially in industries where trust and credibility are part of the brand.

Final Delivery

High resolution, finished images are delivered through a downloadable online gallery, making it easy for teams to access, share, and pull what they need, whether for an immediate deadline or a project down the road

Support for Marketing + Media Use

Images often need to travel further than a website or social media. Billboards, magazine features, digital ads, and other placements each come with their own sizing and formatting requirements. When that's part of the picture, I work directly with clients to make sure every file is sized and prepared for wherever it's going.

Why It Matters

The process after the shoot is just as important as the session itself.

A clear, thoughtful process after the shoot means your images don't just look good,  they're practical, accessible, and ready to work across your marketing. When the workflow is smooth, your team can skip the logistics and focus on putting the images to use.

If you're thinking through an upcoming project, I'd love to hear about it.

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What Questions Marketing Professionals Should Ask Their Photographer