Most couples end up with hours of raw wedding footage scattered across phones, cameras, and a friend's DSLR — and no plan for what to do with it. Two paths forward: edit it yourself, or hand it off. Here's how to decide.
Edit it yourself if...
- You already know your way around editing software (even something simple like iMovie or CapCut counts).
- You have a clear favorite moment or two you want to build around — a vow, a first dance, a toast.
- You're not in a rush. Editing takes longer than you think, even for a 3-minute cut.
- You want full creative control over music choice, pacing, and what gets left on the cutting room floor.
Self-editing is genuinely rewarding when you have the time and the footage isn't a mess. It also means you can revise it endlessly, which is either a feature or a time sink depending on your personality.
Hire someone if...
- Your footage is unorganized, spread across multiple devices, or shot by well-meaning guests with shaky hands.
- You want a polished result — color grading, music sync, pacing — without learning software.
- You'd rather spend a free Saturday doing literally anything else.
- You know that once you start editing your own wedding, you'll get emotional and never finish.
That last one is more common than people admit. Editing your own wedding footage means re-watching your wedding day, alone, on a laptop, over and over. It's not always the relaxing task it sounds like.
The middle ground
If you already have a finished, edited video — from a videographer, or one you cut yourself — you don't need an editing service at all. You just need a good way to watch it, easily, without hunting for a file or a cloud link every time. That's what a Self-Load Edition video book is for: you upload your finished film, we load it onto a device with a screen, and it plays the moment you open the cover.
If your footage is still raw — unedited clips from your phone, guest cameras, whatever you can gather — that's when a professionally Edited Edition makes sense. You upload everything, we cut it into a real film, and it arrives ready to play.
Either way, the goal is the same: get your wedding footage out of a folder you'll forget about and into something you'll actually watch again.