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Editorial VS Commercial: Which Photography Do You Need For Your Story?

Oct 6, 2025 | By: Brian Lahiere

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If you are staring at a brief and wondering whether your project is editorial or commercial, you are not alone. The distinction affects licensing, creative direction, deliverables, approvals, and budget. This guide breaks down the differences with real scenarios and clear next steps so you can commission the right work, set expectations with stakeholders, and keep your timeline on track.

What is editorial photography?

Editorial photography supports a narrative. It illustrates reported stories, features, interviews, essays, and cultural coverage. The intent is to inform or enlighten an audience, not to sell a specific product or service. It often involves a lighter footprint, smaller crews, and access driven by journalism or cultural relevance. Usage is typically tied to a publication or platform that publishes the story.

An editorial photographer works closely with editors, art directors, and producers to translate an assignment brief into images that feel authentic and timely. Expect a mix of portraits, environmental details, and moments that show context and atmosphere. Brian approaches editorial with an organic, observational style that captures real life with sensitivity and clarity.

What is an editorial license?

An editorial license grants permission to use images in non-commercial contexts such as magazines, newspapers, books, podcasts, news sites, and documentary programming. The license usually covers specific placements, territories, and durations. It does not allow images to be used to advertise, endorse, or directly promote a product or service. If your team later needs promotional use, you can request an expanded or new
license.

What is the difference between editorial and commercial?

Purpose

  • Editorial informs, explains, or tells a story.
  • Commercial promotes a brand, product, or service, including advertising, paid social, billboards, and brand campaigns.

Creative direction

  • Editorial favors authenticity, location-driven moments, and nimble setups.
  • Commercial often includes comprehensive previsualization, brand guidelines, layouts, talent casting, styling, and approvals.

Deliverables

  • Editorial focuses on narrative coverage, hero portraits, and supporting images that fit page or layout needs.
  • Commercial requires precise aspect ratios, variations for every channel, and retouching aligned with brand standards.

Licensing

  • Editorial licenses are limited to non-commercial storytelling contexts.
  • Commercial licenses cover promotional usage and are priced by media, geography, and term.

Budget

  • Editorial rates reflect shorter pre-production, smaller crew, and narrow usage.
  • Commercial budgets account for expanded usage, production design, talent, permits, and retouching.

What does an editorial photographer do?

  • Interprets briefs into visual narratives, from character-driven portraits to quiet details that make a story feel lived-in.
  • Coordinates access, clearances, and releases as required by the publication.
  • Works with available light when possible, adds minimal lighting when needed, and moves efficiently within real environments.
  • Anticipates the beats of a reported story and builds sequences that support headlines, leads, and pull quotes.
  • Delivers edited image sets that slot cleanly into layouts and digital templates.

Brian brings more than fifteen years of experience across editorial features, portraits, and production stills. He is fluent in French, Italian, and Spanish, and manages assignments worldwide with sensitivity to culture, schedule, and access.

How many pictures are in an editorial?

It varies by outlet and format, but a typical magazine feature might publish 6 to 12 images, with a delivered edit of 60 to 200 selects for the photo desk to choose from. Short digital stories may run 3 to 8 images, while photo essays can publish 12 to 25. Brian aligns the delivered count with page count, aspect ratio needs, and any gallery or slideshow plans.

How much do editorial photographers charge?

Editorial fees vary by scope, region, and usage. Common structures include day or half-day rates plus expenses, with licensing limited to editorial use by the commissioning outlet. Rates increase with complex access, travel, lighting packages, assistants, and rush deadlines. For campaigns or advertorials, fees and usage shift into commercial territory. If you need a quote tailored to your brief and regions of publication, it is best to share scope, locations, and timelines upfront so Brian can provide a precise estimate.

Real-world scenarios and how the approach changes

Magazine feature

  • Goal: report a human-centered story with context.
  • Approach: lean crew, environmental portraits, detail-driven sequences.
  • Deliverables: cover try, opener, double-page options, support frames, and verticals for digital.

Brand content

  • Goal: promote a mission or product while staying true to real moments.
  • Approach: pre-production with marketing, targeted shot list, controlled moments that still feel authentic.
  • Deliverables: multi-channel assets, layered licensing, consistent look across formats.

Nonprofit report

  • Goal: document impact with dignity and clarity.
  • Approach: consent-first workflow, cultural sensitivity, minimal intrusion, caption accuracy.
  • Deliverables: stills for print, web, fundraising decks, and board presentations with clear usage terms.

TV key art and unit stills

  • Goal: create promotional images of cast and scenes without disrupting production.
  • Approach: coordination with ADs, department heads, and publicity, quiet shutter solutions, hero moments staged between takes when approved.
  • Deliverables: key art options, character portraits, episodic stills, and press kits aligned with network specs.

Editorial vs commercial budgets and timelines

Editorial

  • Pre-pro: 1 to 3 days for research, access, and logistics.
  • Shoot: 1 to 3 days typical.
  • Post: 1 to 5 days for edits and captions.
  • Budget: lean crew, travel expenses as needed, limited licensing.

Commercial

  • Pre-pro: 1 to 3 weeks for creative, casting, permits, and approvals.
  • Shoot: 1 to 5 days or more.
  • Post: 1 to 3 weeks for selects, retouching, and versions.
  • Budget: expanded crew, talent, art department, and broader usage fees.

A simple intake checklist

Share these essentials to get an accurate estimate and a smooth production:

  • Objective and audience
  • Editorial or commercial usage, territories, and term
  • Deliverables, formats, and aspect ratios
  • Locations, travel, and access needs
  • Talent, releases, and any union or network protocols
  • Schedule constraints and decision-makers
  • Visual references or mood boards
  • Security, safety, or sensitivity guidelines

Timeline expectations and coordination

Brian collaborates with your production schedule, whether that is a one-day magazine feature or a multi-week series. He can embed with crews, travel on short notice, and adjust to changing call sheets. Expect clear communication on holds, weather or permit contingencies, and delivery milestones. Rush turnarounds are available when dead lines demand it.

Worldwide availability

Based in Southern California and available globally, Brian takes on assignments across time zones and languages. He coordinates visas, carnets, and local support when needed, and maintains a low-profile footprint to respect locations and schedules.

When to choose each path

  • Choose editorial when the story is the priority and usage is non-commercial.
  • Choose commercial when you need promotional rights, broader distribution, and brand control.
  • If your project sits in the middle, such as sponsored content, Brian will scope a hybrid approach with clear licensing language.

Summary and next steps

Editorial and commercial are distinguished by intent, licensing, and production scale. Editorial informs and documents. Commercial promotes and persuades. Define purpose first, then match the license, deliverables, and budget to fit. Brian brings a documentary mindset to both, tailoring portraits, production stills, and story sequences to your goals, schedule, and audience. If you are ready to move forward, you can explore editorial photo shoots for examples and context, review portrait photography if you need a strong environmental portrait for your feature, or reach out to book a photographer for your next assignment.

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