Intake Forms for Photographers, Videographers, and Creative Professionals: Scope, Rights, and Client Vision
A bride tells you she wants “natural but polished” wedding photos. A startup founder says the brand video should feel “authentic, not corporate.” A restaurant owner wants food photography that looks “editorial but warm.” Every one of those briefs sounds reasonable. Not one of them is actionable without follow-up questions, documented answers, and a paper trail that both sides can reference when the final deliverables arrive.
Creative professionals face an intake challenge that most service businesses never encounter. You are not just capturing contact details and scheduling a job. You are translating subjective aesthetic preferences into concrete project parameters, negotiating intellectual property rights that have real monetary value, and locking down logistics for work that often cannot be redone if something goes wrong. A missed detail on a plumber’s intake form means a return visit. A missed detail on a wedding photographer’s intake form means a moment that is gone forever.
Here is how to build an intake process that captures the client’s vision, protects your rights, and eliminates the ambiguities that turn creative projects into disputes.
Photography Intake by Session Type
Photography is not a single service. It is a category of services that happen to share a camera. The information you need from a portrait client has almost nothing in common with the information you need from a commercial product client, and treating them the same on your intake form guarantees you will miss something critical for at least one of them.
Portrait and Headshot Sessions
Portrait intake is about the person. You need to know how many subjects will be in the session, their relationship to each other, and whether there are children or infants involved (which changes everything about timing and patience requirements). Style preferences matter here more than in any other session type — light and airy versus dark and moody, heavily directed versus candid, indoor studio versus outdoor location. Wardrobe guidance is part of the intake conversation: does the client plan to change outfits, do they want a wardrobe guide sent in advance, and will they need hair and makeup referrals? Backdrop preferences, prop availability, and any physical limitations that affect posing should all be captured before the session date.
Wedding Photography
Wedding intake is its own discipline. The timeline alone requires a dedicated section: ceremony start time, first look timing, cocktail hour coverage, reception events (first dance, cake cutting, bouquet toss, sparkler exit). You need the venue addresses for both ceremony and reception, the name and contact information for the venue coordinator, and whether there are any photography restrictions at either location — some churches prohibit flash during the ceremony, some venues restrict drone use, and some reception halls have lighting conditions that require advance planning.
The must-have shot list is non-negotiable. Family groupings should be documented in advance — not improvised while 200 guests wait for cocktail hour. The bridal party size determines whether you need a second shooter. The vendor list (florist, DJ, planner) tells you who else will be competing for the same timeline. If you also work with event planners, wedding and event planning intake forms address the coordinator side of these details.
Commercial Photography
Commercial intake is about the usage, not the aesthetics. The first question is not “what style do you want” but “where will these images appear?” Social media use, website banners, print advertising, product packaging, and billboard placement each carry different licensing values and different technical requirements (resolution, aspect ratio, color profile). You need the client’s brand guidelines if they exist — specific hex colors, logo placement rules, fonts that must appear in styled shots. Deliverable specifications must be exact: how many final images, what resolution, what file format, and whether the client needs layered files or just flattened exports.
Event Photography
Event intake revolves around logistics and identification. You need the event schedule with specific times for key moments — keynote speakers, award ceremonies, ribbon cuttings, group photos. A VIP list with names and photos prevents you from spending the evening photographing the caterer while the CEO goes undocumented. Venue layout matters: where are the stages, where is the lighting adequate, where are the exits you should not block? Media restrictions — whether from the venue, the event organizers, or specific attendees who do not want to be photographed — need to be flagged at intake, not discovered mid-event.
Videography Intake: A Different Set of Details
Videography shares some intake territory with photography, but the production variables are different enough to require their own sections. A photographer delivers still images. A videographer delivers a time-based, multi-sensory product with audio, motion, pacing, and narrative structure.
Your videography intake form should capture:
- Video length and format: A 30-second social media clip and a 10-minute brand documentary are different projects with different pricing, and your intake form should make that distinction explicit
- Distribution platform: YouTube (16:9), Instagram Reels (9:16), TikTok (9:16), LinkedIn (1:1 or 16:9), broadcast television (specific technical specs) — the platform determines aspect ratio, resolution, and maximum file size
- Music preferences and licensing: Does the client want specific songs (which may require expensive sync licenses), or are they comfortable with royalty-free music? Who is responsible for securing the music license?
- Interview subjects: If the video includes interviews, how many subjects, where will they be filmed, and do they need media training or talking points in advance?
- B-roll locations: Supplemental footage locations, access requirements, and whether those locations need advance scheduling
- Editing style reference: Ask for links to videos the client admires — this is the video equivalent of a mood board, and it communicates more about expectations than any verbal description
- Voiceover and narration: Will the video include narration? Who provides it? Who writes the script?
- Versions and cuts: Does the client need one final video or multiple versions (a 60-second cut, a 30-second cut, and a 15-second cut for different platforms)?
The platform question is the one that catches the most videographers off guard. A client who asks for “a video for social media” has not given you a usable specification. Social media is five different aspect ratios, three different ideal lengths, and a dozen different autoplay and caption considerations. Your intake form should force the specificity that casual conversation skips over.
The Intellectual Property Conversation
This is the section that separates professionals from hobbyists who happen to own equipment. Intellectual property rights in creative work are not a formality — they are a financial instrument with real monetary value, and getting them wrong at intake costs you licensing revenue, portfolio rights, or both.
Under copyright law, the photographer or videographer owns the images and footage by default. The client is purchasing a license to use those images, not ownership of them (unless the contract explicitly transfers copyright, which is a different and more expensive arrangement). Your intake form should document the scope of that license before any work begins.
The key fields:
- Intended use: Personal display, social media, website, print advertising, broadcast, packaging, editorial publication
- Usage rights versus ownership: Is the client licensing specific uses, or purchasing full copyright transfer?
- Geographic scope: Local market, national, international
- Duration: One-time use, one year, perpetual
- Exclusivity: Can you license the same images to other clients, or does this client want exclusive rights?
- Photographer’s portfolio rights: Can you display the images on your website, social media, in competition submissions, and in advertising for your own business?
A headshot used on a personal LinkedIn profile and the same headshot used on a highway billboard are the same file with wildly different commercial value. If your intake form does not capture intended use, you are quoting for one scenario and delivering for another. The intake form is not a contract, but it documents the intent that the contract formalizes — and when a client later claims they “assumed” they could use your images however they wanted, the intake form is the first piece of evidence showing what was actually discussed. For more on how missing intake fields create legal exposure, see our guide to the liability gap in missing intake fields.
Model Releases and Property Releases
Model releases are not optional paperwork. They are legal documents that grant permission to use a person’s likeness for commercial purposes, and operating without them exposes both the photographer and the client to liability.
Your intake form should flag when releases are needed and track whether they have been obtained:
- Commercial use: If images will be used in advertising, marketing, or any revenue-generating context, every recognizable person in the frame needs a signed model release
- Minors: If anyone under 18 will be photographed, a parent or legal guardian must sign on their behalf — the minor cannot consent for themselves
- Third-party subjects: Employees, models, or other individuals who are not the client require their own separate releases
- Property releases: Some private properties, recognizable buildings, and trademarked interiors require a property release before images of them can be used commercially
- Editorial exception: Newsworthy or editorial use generally does not require model releases, but your intake form should document whether the use is editorial or commercial to avoid ambiguity
Wedding and event photography create a special problem. You cannot realistically obtain a signed model release from every guest at a 200-person wedding. The intake form should flag this issue so the conversation about guest photography, social media posting, and portfolio use happens during onboarding — not after the client’s relative sees their face in your Instagram ad.
Deliverable Specifications: What Exactly Are You Providing?
“I thought I was getting all the photos” is a sentence that has ruined more photographer-client relationships than any other. Your intake form should make the deliverable scope so explicit that this sentence becomes impossible.
- Number of edited images: The package includes X final edited images, selected and edited by the photographer from the full session
- Turnaround time: X business days or weeks from the session date (or, for weddings, X weeks from the wedding date)
- File format and resolution: High-resolution JPEG, TIFF, PNG, or RAW files — and whether web-resolution versions are included separately
- Delivery method: Online gallery with download access, USB drive, cloud storage link, or prints
- Gallery expiration: How long the online gallery remains active for downloading
- Number of revisions: How many rounds of editing adjustments are included, and what constitutes a revision versus a reshoot
- Raw file policy: Will you provide unedited RAW files? Most professional photographers do not, and the intake form should document this explicitly
The raw file question generates more client friction than it should. Clients who ask for RAW files usually do not understand what they are — they assume “raw” means “all the photos, unfiltered.” Your intake form is the right place to clarify that RAW files are unprocessed data, not finished images, and that your package includes professionally edited deliverables.
Capturing Client Vision: From Vague to Actionable
Every creative professional has heard some version of “I want something natural but also polished.” That sentence contains no actionable information. Your intake form needs to convert subjective aesthetic language into concrete, referenceable preferences — and the most effective way to do that is to stop asking what people want and start asking them to show you.
Effective vision-capture fields include:
- Reference images: Ask the client to provide 3–5 images (from your portfolio, Pinterest, or anywhere) that represent the look they want. Five images communicate more than five paragraphs of description
- Pinterest board or mood board link: If the client has one, it provides a visual vocabulary that verbal briefs cannot match
- Anti-references: Images the client specifically does not want — overly saturated, heavily filtered, too posed, too casual. Knowing what to avoid is as useful as knowing what to aim for
- Color palette preference: Warm tones, cool tones, muted, vibrant, black and white, or “match our brand colors”
- Editing style: Film-like grain, clean digital, heavy retouching, light touch-up only
The reference image field is the single highest-value question on any creative intake form. A client who sends you five images from your own portfolio is telling you to keep doing what you already do. A client who sends five images that look nothing like your style is telling you there is a mismatch — and discovering that before a deposit is paid saves both parties time, money, and frustration. This is one of the ways a well-designed intake form functions as a sales qualification tool, filtering for clients who are genuinely a good fit.
The “I Didn’t Know It Would Cost That” Problem
Every photographer has at least one story about a client who was surprised by the final invoice. The session was $500, but the final bill was $1,200 because nobody discussed the overtime, the travel fee, the additional location, and the rush delivery surcharge until after the work was done.
Your intake form should document every potential add-on cost before the client agrees to proceed:
- Travel fees: Mileage rate beyond your standard radius, tolls, parking, hotel for destination shoots
- Overtime: Rate per additional hour beyond the booked session time
- Additional editing: Per-image cost for edits beyond the package count, composite images, or heavy retouching
- Rush delivery: Surcharge for faster-than-standard turnaround
- Prints and albums: Cost for physical products beyond digital delivery
- Second shooter: Flat rate or hourly rate for a second photographer or videographer
- Drone or aerial footage: Equipment and operator cost, plus insurance and permit fees
When these line items appear on the intake form, the pricing conversation happens at the beginning of the relationship — when both parties are making a rational decision — not at the end, when emotions are running high and the work is already done. This is particularly important for high-ticket creative services, where a single project can easily exceed several thousand dollars once add-ons are included.
Cancellation, Rescheduling, and Date-Dependent Work
Photography and videography are date-dependent services in a way that most businesses are not. A missed plumbing appointment can be rescheduled for next Tuesday. A missed wedding cannot be rescheduled at all. This makes your cancellation and rescheduling policy a financial protection mechanism, not just an administrative convenience.
Your intake form should reference and document:
- Deposit amount and refund conditions: What percentage of the total is collected as a non-refundable retainer, and under what circumstances (if any) is it refundable
- Cancellation windows: How far in advance the client must cancel to receive a full refund, a partial refund, or no refund
- Rescheduling limits: How many times the session can be rescheduled, how far in advance rescheduling must happen, and whether rescheduling fees apply
- Weather policy: For outdoor sessions — who makes the call to postpone, how far in advance, and whether the rescheduled date is treated as a first reschedule or a courtesy
- Photographer cancellation: What happens if you need to cancel — backup photographer, full refund, or priority rebooking
The weather policy deserves its own section on every outdoor photographer’s intake form. Without a documented policy, you will inevitably end up in a standoff: the client insists light rain is fine, you know it will ruin the images, and neither of you has an agreed-upon standard for what triggers a postponement. When the policy is documented at intake, the decision takes thirty seconds instead of becoming an argument. Documenting these policies at the start of the relationship is one of the most effective ways to set client expectations before work begins.
Equipment Liability: Who Pays When Things Break?
Creative professionals bring tens of thousands of dollars in equipment to client locations. Clients provide venues that range from pristine studios to construction sites. The question of who is financially responsible when equipment is damaged — or when client property is damaged by a photographer’s equipment — should be answered at intake, not after a light stand falls on a marble countertop.
Your intake form should address:
- Client venue hazards: Is the location under construction, does it have uneven terrain, are there pets or small children who might interact with equipment?
- Equipment insurance: Do you carry equipment insurance, and does the client need to be named as additional insured for their venue?
- Liability for venue damage: If your equipment damages client property, what is the liability framework?
- Client-provided equipment: If the client is providing props, backdrops, or products for a shoot, who is responsible if those items are damaged during the session?
Venue hazard documentation protects both parties. A photographer who knows in advance that the reception venue has a cobblestone walkway can bring appropriate equipment stands. A client who discloses that their home studio has low ceilings prevents a lighting rig disaster. The intake form surfaces these practical details before they become expensive problems.
Bringing It All Together
A creative professional’s intake form does more work than most people realize. It is simultaneously a project brief, a licensing framework, a logistics checklist, a pricing document, and a risk management tool. Every section described above exists because a real photographer or videographer discovered — usually the hard way — what happens when that information is missing.
The photographers and videographers who run the smoothest operations are not necessarily the most talented artists. They are the ones who ask the right questions at the right time, document the answers, and make sure both sides are working from the same set of assumptions before a single frame is captured.
Our photography and videography intake form set includes every section covered in this guide — session type, client vision capture, location logistics, IP and usage rights, model release tracking, deliverable specifications, pricing and add-ons, cancellation terms, and equipment liability — in a structured, fillable PDF that works in any PDF reader. If you serve multiple creative disciplines, browse all 164 matched intake form and questionnaire sets, starting at $12.99.
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