Pro vs Amateur – Photoshots – the web folio of Tony Stewart.

Pro vs Amateur

If you’ve ever stood on the Port Hills with a camera in your hand, or wandered the laneways of Christchurch down along the Strip looking for that perfect light, you’ve probably wondered what separates an amateur from a professional. Spoiler – it isn’t just the camera!

Passion is where we all start. Whether you’re an amateur or a pro, you fall in love with light, composition, and the tiny moments that tell a story. Amateurs often shoot for the joy of it — experimentation, learning, and capturing memories. Professionals love those things too, but we’ve added a few more layers – consistency, reliability, and a responsibility to deliver.

Gear matters to an extent, but it’s overrated in conversations. (We hardly ever talk gear when we get together at NZIPP meetings or conferences). An amateur with an entry-level mirrorless can create jaw-dropping images, and a pro with top-tier lens glass still needs good technique. The difference is knowing why you choose a lens, shutter speed, or focal length for a specific job, not simply having the fanciest kit. Professionals make deliberate choices every shot.

One big gap is workflow. Amateurs often jump straight from shutter to social feed, which is great for sharing and fast feedback. Pro’s have a repeatable process – scouting, shooting with intention, careful backup, disciplined culling, and consistent editing. That workflow isn’t sexy, but it’s what keeps clients happy and images deliverable under pressure.

Reliability and communication are huge. An amateur might be perfectly happy to turn up and see what happens. A pro turns up on time, armed with contingency plans — bad weather, gear failure, or tricky lighting. We try and communicate clearly with clients about expectations, timing, and usage. People pay us not just for photos, but for the peace of mind that the job will be done well.

Problem-solving under pressure sets pro’s apart. Weddings, corporate shoots, editorial deadlines — these force you to be calm, quick, and creative on demand. Amateurs often learn in relaxed settings. Or they produce great work with family and other willing participants. Professionals learn to adapt when the unexpected happens and still walk away with images that tell the story, with whoever, whenever.

Then there’s the business side. Amateurs may spend money on gear. Professionals do the same, and invest to keep on learning — camera tech, post-processing, legal stuff — because running a sustainable photography practice is its own craft. That business discipline lets us keep doing what we love.

But let’s not romanticize either side — being an amateur is wonderful. It frees you to experiment and shoot purely for pleasure. I still go out in my own time, to take photos because I want to. Being a professional is rewarding in different ways however. You get to solve creative problems for clients, earn a living, and refine a craft until it sings. If you’re an amateur dreaming of going pro, keep shooting, build a workflow, learn to communicate, and treat each job like a promise you intend to keep.

If you’re around Christchurch and want to talk more, feel free drop me a line.

Tony