Very good questions, Achal. You can't re-shoot an entire wedding. What can be done is to get back as many people as possible and redo the groups and portraits. Amazingly enough, it was the bride and groom's portraits that escaped the damage, being on the one roll that came back perfect. The photographer eats this expense. We did have a contract. But never having gone through this problem before and not being business savvy myself (now having learned very much about wedding contracts and fine prints - fine prints as well) I made some very big mistakes. Good thing for me I'm not a block head and I do learn new things though I am an old dog! VBG (very big grin) I'd like to come away from all this with the attitude that I have learned much and hoping that others on this group who have followed this thread will not make the same mistakes I've made. This having been said: I do thank EVERYONE here for ALL their comments, even the scriptural ones though I was beginning to feel a bit bashed. I'm over it... Love to all and very many -- many thanks!!! Keeping my smile on... Shyrell ----- Original Message ----- From: "Achal Pashine" <achalpashine@xxxxxxxxx> > > Just technically, how does one 're-shoot' a wedding? who pays for the > re-arrangements [read: restaging] to be made to shoot a wedding. > I am not implying Shyrell is at fault, but, I think reshooting a wedding is > next to impossible