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  • Finding Your Creative Spark Again
    2026/07/10

    After a few really busy weeks shooting weddings, I've realised something... I'm genuinely excited about photography again.

    In this episode, I wanted to chat about where that inspiration has come from because it definitely wasn't one big thing. It was lots of small things that all came together.

    Watching Toy Story 5 reminded me how powerful storytelling can be. I started adapting my vintage 1970s film lenses onto my mirrorless cameras and completely fell in love with the look they produce. I've been experimenting with Pro Mist filters, playing around with my Insta360, showing more of my personality on social media, and even filming myself reviewing a Marks & Spencer sandwich just for fun.

    None of these things have magically made me a better photographer. They've simply made photography feel exciting again.

    I also talk about why consuming creative work outside of photography is so important, why doing things purely for yourself can make a huge difference, and why sometimes the best ideas come when you stop trying so hard to find them.

    If you've been feeling a little burnt out or stuck in a creative rut, I hope this episode reminds you that inspiration is usually found away from Instagram and away from photography Facebook groups. Sometimes all it takes is trying something new, watching a great film, visiting somewhere different, or simply giving yourself permission to create for the fun of it.

    In this episode, we chat about:

    • Why watching films can make you a better photographer and storyteller

    • Using vintage Canon FD and Olympus OM lenses on modern mirrorless cameras

    • How Pro Mist filters have changed the way I look for light

    • Why buying new gear can sometimes reignite your creativity

    • My first impressions of the Insta360 Go 3S

    • Showing more of your personality on social media and why clients love it

    • My recent wedding, engagement shoot and trip to Vindolanda

    • Why creativity comes from living, not just photographing

    If you've been waiting to feel inspired again, this one's for you. Grab a coffee, come for a chat, and hopefully you'll finish this episode wanting to pick your camera up and create something just because it sounds fun.

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    37 分
  • New Gear & Fourth of July
    2026/07/03

    This week's episode is exactly what the podcast was named for. Just a good old photo chat.

    I'm catching you up on a few things I've been trying recently, including the new Insta360 GO 3S, my latest AirPods, and why I've completely fallen in love with using Pro Mist filters at weddings. We chat about buying gear with intention, avoiding unnecessary upgrades, and focusing on equipment that genuinely improves your photography rather than simply collecting the latest gadgets.

    With the Fourth of July just around the corner, we also take a little detour into some brilliantly weird facts about the US, from the shortest commercial flights in Alaska to a town with just one resident. If you're anything like me and love traveling around the greatest country on Earth, you'll probably enjoy this part.

    To finish the episode, I thought we'd do something a little different with a fun photography draft. Think of it like building your ultimate photography setup and dream wedding day by picking your favorites from different categories. Feel free to play along and see if your choices match mine.

    In this episode, we chat about:

    • Why I decided to buy the Insta360 GO 3S and how I plan to use it at weddings
    • My thoughts on Pro Mist filters and the subtle difference they've made to my images
    • Buying camera gear with purpose instead of chasing every new release
    • A few weird and wonderful facts about America ahead of Independence Day
    • A fun photography draft where I choose my favourite cameras, lenses, locations, lighting and more
    • A relaxed catch up filled with photography chat, travel, gear and a few random tangents along the way

    Whether you're editing galleries, driving to a wedding, or just looking for a laid back photography podcast to keep you company, I hope you enjoy this week's episode.

    If you enjoyed it, I'd really appreciate it if you could follow the podcast and leave a rating on Spotify. It genuinely helps more photographers discover the show. As always, thanks so much for listening, and I'll see you in the next episode.

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    43 分
  • Stop Calling It Your "Little Business"
    2026/06/28

    Whether you realise it or not, the way you talk about yourself and your business has a huge impact on how other people see you.

    In this episode of Photo Chat with Matt, I'm talking about confidence, personal branding, and why photographers need to stop making themselves smaller than they really are. From calling it your "little business" to apologising for your prices, I think far too many photographers unintentionally undermine themselves before clients even have the chance to make up their minds.

    I also dive into something that's been winding me up lately: "pick me" photographers. You know the ones. The photographers who spend more time telling everyone why they're better than everybody else than simply showing great work. Whether it's bragging about never using AI, criticising other photographers' workflows, or turning every post into a subtle dig at the competition, I explain why I think this kind of marketing does more harm than good.

    Along the way, we chat about building genuine confidence through experience, why clients want someone who feels calm and trustworthy, the difference between gratitude and insecurity, and why your pricing should never come with an apology attached. I also share one of my favourite psychology concepts, the Dunning Kruger effect, and how it applies to photographers at every stage of their careers.

    If you've ever struggled with imposter syndrome, worried about charging what you're worth, or found yourself comparing your business to everyone else's on social media, I hope this episode gives you a fresh perspective.

    In this episode:

    • Why calling it your "little business" might be doing more damage than you realise

    • The difference between confidence and arrogance

    • Why photographers should stop apologising for their prices

    • What I mean by a "pick me photographer" and why this style of marketing never sits right with me

    • Why putting other photographers down isn't a business strategy

    • How clients actually choose photographers and what really builds trust

    • The difference between gratitude and insecurity

    • How experience creates real confidence over time

    • The Dunning Kruger effect and why it's one of my favourite psychology concepts

    • Why you should be proud of everything you've built as a photographer

    If you enjoyed this episode, I'd really appreciate it if you could leave a rating or share it with another photographer. It genuinely helps the podcast grow and allows me to keep making new episodes.

    You can also find me on Instagram @mattdoddphoto, where I share wedding photography, behind the scenes content, and plenty more photography chat.

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    38 分
  • Things Wedding Photographers Pretend To Care About
    2026/06/18

    In this episode, I'm talking about something I think photographers spend far too much time worrying about: things that clients simply do not care about.

    From camera gear and social media metrics to editing labels, photography awards, website tweaks and pixel peeping, there are so many things photographers obsess over that make little or no difference to the actual client experience. Meanwhile, the things that genuinely matter often get overlooked.

    I also share stories from a recent wedding at St Paul's Cathedral in London, navigating the chaos of Trooping the Colour, shooting a wedding almost entirely on film for the first time, and why I'm currently refreshing my inbox waiting for film scans to arrive.

    If you've ever found yourself comparing camera specs, stressing over Instagram engagement, debating editing styles in Facebook groups, or endlessly tweaking your website instead of serving your clients, this episode is for you.

    In this episode:

    • Why most clients couldn't care less what camera you shoot with
    • The danger of creating content for photographers instead of potential clients
    • Why social media likes don't always translate into bookings
    • The truth about photography awards and industry recognition
    • How photographers become obsessed with technical details that clients never notice
    • Why editing styles and photography labels matter less than we think
    • The problem with chasing website perfection
    • What couples actually value when choosing a wedding photographer
    • My experience photographing a wedding at St Paul's Cathedral
    • Shooting a wedding primarily on film and why it was both exciting and terrifying

    Whether you're a wedding photographer, portrait photographer, family photographer or creative business owner, this episode is a reminder to focus on the things that genuinely move your business forward and stop worrying about impressing other photographers.

    Because at the end of the day, your clients aren't booking your autofocus settings. They're booking you.

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    43 分
  • The Responsibility Of Being A Wedding Photographer
    2026/05/22

    Being a wedding photographer comes with a huge amount of responsibility, and in this episode of Photo Chat with Matt, I’m talking about the standards I think our industry should be holding itself to.

    Lately, I’ve seen more and more stories about photographers missing weddings, forgetting bookings, turning up late, gear failing with no backups, and blaming things like calendar apps or poor organization. And honestly, I think too many people are becoming comfortable making excuses for things that should be avoidable.

    This episode is a very honest chat about professionalism, reliability, preparation, and what it actually means to be dependable as a wedding photographer. I talk about the systems I personally use to make sure nothing slips through the cracks, why I still physically write down every wedding I book, and why I believe there’s almost never an excuse for missing a wedding day.

    I also get into the personal side of the job, including missing family events because of weddings, shooting through difficult periods in my own life, and the mindset I think you need if you’re going to work in an industry where there are no second chances.

    This is probably one of my more controversial episodes, but I think it’s an important conversation to have.

    In this episode, we chat about:

    • Why reliability matters more than trends or social media
    • The importance of backups, organization, and preparation
    • Why missing a wedding should never be treated casually
    • The responsibility wedding photographers have to their clients
    • Personal sacrifices that come with the job
    • Why professionalism is about showing up even when life gets difficult
    • The systems and routines I use to stay organized
    • Lessons photographers can learn from elite athletes and performers under pressure

    Whether you agree with me or completely disagree, I hope this episode makes you think a little deeper about standards within the wedding photography industry.

    If you enjoy the episode, make sure to follow the podcast and share it with another photographer who’d enjoy the conversation.

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    1 時間 1 分
  • The Wedding Day That Nearly Went Wrong and Changed Everything
    2026/05/18

    Nearly missing a wedding ceremony because of a parking mistake was not how I planned to start my photography career.

    In this week’s episode, I’m sharing some of the biggest mistakes, funniest moments, hardest lessons, and most chaotic experiences I’ve had as a wedding photographer over the years. This episode is much more of a relaxed conversation than a structured teaching episode. Just real stories, honest thoughts, and the kind of stuff photographers usually end up talking about over coffee after a wedding.

    I talk about the time I ended up sprinting into a church on one of the hottest days of the year carrying two cameras because I parked in the wrong place, why preparation matters far more than people realise, and how little mistakes can completely change the way you approach weddings moving forward.

    We also get into:

    • Why so many photographers obsess over the wrong things
    • The biggest mistakes I made when I first started shooting weddings
    • Photography trends I’m already tired of
    • Why social media can completely mess with your creativity
    • Imposter syndrome and pressure at weddings
    • Why personality matters just as much as photography skill
    • Learning to stay calm when everything feels chaotic
    • Gear purchases I definitely regret
    • Why I think most photographers massively overshoot weddings
    • The importance of preparation, backups, and knowing your equipment properly

    This episode is basically a big honest photo chat about what wedding photography actually feels like behind the scenes. The good parts, the stressful parts, the funny parts, and the moments that teach you the most.

    If you’re a wedding photographer, portrait photographer, second shooter, or someone trying to find your footing in the photography world, I think you’ll really relate to this one.

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    54 分
  • Why I Don’t Charge For Every Little Thing
    2026/05/11

    In today’s episode of Photo Chat with Matt, I’m chatting about a recent trip to the dentist that randomly turned into a much bigger thought about photography businesses, client experience, and the way we treat people.

    I went in for what turned out to be a tiny issue that took less than a minute to check. I paid the consultation fee, completely understood why there was a charge, but I still left thinking… that felt a bit unnecessary. And that tiny feeling stuck with me more than the money itself.

    It got me thinking about how some businesses have become so focused on squeezing every possible penny out of clients that they forget how important the actual experience is. As photographers and creatives, I think there’s a balance to be found between valuing your work properly and making every interaction feel transactional.

    I talk about why I’ll happily stay an extra 10 minutes at a wedding, why I don’t stress about every tiny add-on or upsell, and why some of the best things you can do for your business don’t directly show up on an invoice.

    We also chat about:

    • Why people remember how you made them feel
    • The difference between healthy boundaries and overcharging
    • Building trust and long-term client relationships
    • Why generosity can lead to more referrals and repeat bookings
    • Modern business culture and the obsession with monetising everything
    • Creating experiences people actually talk about afterwards
    • Why some photographers accidentally make clients feel like transactions
    • Playing the long game in creative businesses

    This episode is for photographers, creatives, freelancers, and anyone trying to build a business that feels personal, sustainable, and genuinely enjoyable to run.

    As always, thank you for listening to Photo Chat with Matt.

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    46 分
  • My Top Wedding Photography Tips That Actually Matter
    2026/05/01

    I'm chatting through my top tips for photographing a wedding, straight off the back of this season and honestly just years of figuring it out the hard way.

    This one is basically me pulling apart everything that actually makes a wedding day feel calm, controlled, and creative without you spiraling or trying to micromanage every second of it. Prep before the day, reading the room when you get there, and learning when to just step back and let moments happen.

    We go into how much of this job is decided before you even pick up a camera. Timeline work, Google Maps scouting, knowing where you’re parking, understanding the flow of the day so nothing catches you off guard. That alone changes everything.

    There’s a big focus on anticipation too, not reacting late to moments but already being in position for them. It’s the difference between getting the shot and watching it disappear. Same with making people feel comfortable, because if people feel weird around you it always shows in the photos, no way around that.

    We also get into shooting with intention instead of just blasting frames all day, why I don’t really pose couples at all and how prompts and natural movement beat stiff setups every time. Plus gear confidence, knowing your settings without thinking, and why backups are completely non negotiable in 2026.

    I talk through group shots as well, how I keep them fast, organized, and not draining the life out of the day, and why the small in between moments are usually the ones that end up meaning the most.

    And yeah, energy matters more than people think. If you’re running on empty, it shows. If you’re calm and present, that changes the whole atmosphere around you.

    If you’re into wedding photography, documentary work, client experience, or just want a more relaxed way of shooting weddings without overcomplicating everything, this one’s for you.

    What you'll learn today:

    • How to prepare properly before a wedding so you arrive calm, know the timeline, the venue, travel, parking, and nothing on the day catches you off guard
    • Why letting go of control and working in a documentary way leads to better photos, less stress, and more real moments
    • How anticipation and reading the room helps you consistently be in the right place at the right time without missing key moments
    • Why making people feel comfortable, using natural prompts instead of posing, and shooting with intention creates more honest, emotional images
    • Why backups, gear confidence, efficient group shots, and looking after your own energy are non-negotiable for a smooth wedding day
    • ...and so much more!
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    51 分