Video Package in Brooklyn
Navigating video package choices for Brooklyn weddings
Video Package in Brooklyn searches often return a mix of wedding-focused videographers and broader video studios, which can make it difficult to see which options are truly designed around a wedding day. Map results and organic listings may emphasize different things — some focus on location, others on pricing or storytelling language.
For couples planning a wedding, the main question is usually what each video package actually includes and how it will fit your schedule, venues, and priorities. This page is structured to help you evaluate Video Package options with Photographer and Videographer – Brooklyn – Vera Starling in mind, understand what you are comparing across providers, and identify which points to confirm directly before you reserve a date.

On this page you will find an overview of what “Video Package” usually means in a Brooklyn wedding context, how to compare options, what a typical process looks like, local logistics around the Sheepshead Bay studio, and practical FAQs you can use when you reach out for more precise details.
What a Brooklyn wedding video package can cover
In this context, “Video Package” refers to a service under the Wedding photographer category that focuses on wedding-related video coverage. Most couples using this type of service are looking for a structured way to capture their wedding day in motion, from short highlight films to longer edits that document key events.
Depending on the provider and the specific Video Package, a wedding-focused option may include:
- Coverage of particular parts of the day (for example, ceremony only, ceremony plus reception, or a broader portion of the day).
- Filming at one or multiple locations, such as a getting-ready space, ceremony site, and reception venue.
- Different styles of filming, from more documentary and candid coverage to more directed or posed moments, or a hybrid approach.
- Various edited outputs, such as a short highlight film, a longer feature-style film, or more documentary-style edits of the ceremony and speeches.
- Audio capture of vows, toasts, and ambient sound, which can be incorporated into the edited films.
- Delivery through online links or downloadable files, with optional physical media such as a USB drive, depending on what is agreed.
Because inclusions and formats can vary significantly, the exact structure of any Video Package should be confirmed during inquiry with the studio before you make a final decision.

Some couples prefer to keep photo and video planning connected when they think about their overall wedding coverage. The studio’s Wedding Photography page provides more detail on still-image options that may sit alongside a video package.
Regardless of which package level you consider, it is useful to clarify early which parts of the day are in scope, what kinds of edited films are included, and how the final files will be delivered so expectations are aligned on both sides.
How to compare video package options for a Brooklyn wedding
When you look at Video Package choices for a Brooklyn wedding, you are usually weighing a set of practical trade-offs rather than just a name or price. Based on how wedding videography is commonly structured in this market, couples often compare:
- Hours of coverage vs. schedule – How well the package’s coverage window aligns with your ceremony time, travel between locations, and reception events.
- Number of videographers – Whether a single operator is sufficient or you prefer two people to cover different angles during the ceremony and reception.
- Types of edited films – If the package includes only a short highlight reel, or also longer films and documentary-style edits of the ceremony and speeches.
- Access to raw footage – Whether you receive unedited clips, and under what conditions or formats.
- Style and audio use – How much real audio (vows, speeches, ambient sound) is woven into the films versus primarily music-based edits.
- Backup and contingency planning – How the provider typically handles equipment failures, illness, or major schedule shifts.
- Coordination with venues and photographers – How the videography approach fits within your venue’s rules and works alongside any separate photography team.
- Budget structure – Whether pricing scales mainly with hours, deliverables, or add-ons such as extra shooters, teasers, or longer films.
Once you have a shortlist, it can be helpful to note these criteria in a simple comparison table so you can see where packages differ in ways that matter for your specific wedding day.
Some couples also want to understand how package-level decisions relate to the broader video work offered on the site. The Wedding Video Production page describes wedding video work in a more general way, which can provide additional background while you compare different packages.
Whichever provider you choose, asking direct questions around coverage length, deliverables, and how changes are handled can reduce surprises and make it easier to align a package with your plans.

How a wedding video package is typically delivered from inquiry to files
A Video Package for a Brooklyn wedding usually follows a set of predictable stages, even though each studio may structure the details differently.
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Initial inquiry and fit discussion
Couples typically start by sharing their date, venues, and rough schedule. At this point, you can ask how different package levels line up with your timeline, what types of films are available, and what information the studio needs to hold a date. -
Planning and coordination
Once there is general alignment, a planning step often covers the rough shot list, important moments (such as speeches or specific traditions), venue rules, and how video will coordinate with other vendors. This may happen by phone, video call, or, by appointment, at the Sheepshead Bay studio. -
Wedding day coverage
On the day itself, videographers commonly arrive before the first key event they are contracted to cover, set up cameras, and perform basic audio checks. It can be useful to confirm in advance how many cameras are used during the ceremony, who is typically mic’d, and how discrete the filming style is during the reception.

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Post-production and editing
After the event, footage is typically backed up and organized before editing begins. Editing steps may include selecting key moments, syncing audio, creating a highlight film, and building any longer or documentary-style edits that are part of your chosen package. Timelines for each stage can vary and are best confirmed directly with the studio. -
Review and delivery
Final films are commonly delivered via online links or downloadable files, and sometimes through physical media such as a USB drive, depending on what has been agreed. At the time of booking, it is helpful to clarify how long links will remain active, whether files are optimized for streaming, and what happens if you need the files re-sent in the future.
If you are researching video primarily for non-wedding purposes, the Video Production Company page on this site covers that broader context separately from wedding-focused packages.
How to reduce risk and check trust signals when booking
Before committing to any Video Package, many couples want to minimize uncertainty around reliability, logistics, and deliverables. This section outlines what can be verified directly and which points typically require follow-up questions.
Verifiable business facts (Tier 1)
The following details about Photographer and Videographer – Brooklyn – Vera Starling can be checked directly from published information:
- Business name: Photographer and Videographer – Brooklyn – Vera Starling
- Primary category: Wedding photographer
- Additional listed categories: Commercial photographer, Photographer, Photography service, Video production service
- Street address: 2483 E 22nd St, in the Sheepshead Bay neighborhood of Brooklyn
- City and region: Brooklyn, New York
- Phone number: +1917-386-8509
- Website: https://video-nyc.com/
These facts help confirm that you are dealing with a wedding-focused entity that also lists related photo and video services.

What buyers should confirm during evaluation (Tier 2 / Tier 3)
During calls or emails with any wedding videography provider, couples often ask for clarification on:
- Coverage structure – How many hours are included, how overtime is handled, and whether additional hours can be added on the day if the schedule runs late.
- Deliverables and formats – The number and type of edited films, whether full-ceremony or speech edits are included, and in what formats files are delivered.
- Audio capture approach – Who is typically mic’d, whether there is backup audio, and how audio from vows and speeches is incorporated into the final films.
- Backup and contingency planning – How many cameras are usually in use, what happens if a piece of equipment fails, and how files are backed up.
- Insurance and venue requirements – Whether the provider can supply documentation a venue may request (such as proof of insurance or compliance with sound and lighting rules).
- Travel and logistics – Any additional fees or timing considerations for venues outside the immediate neighborhood, heavy traffic times, or complex loading situations.
Because policies differ across studios, these points are best treated as questions to be answered during your evaluation rather than assumptions built into any Video Package.
Sheepshead Bay studio location and Brooklyn service area
Photographer and Videographer – Brooklyn – Vera Starling is located at 2483 E 22nd St in Sheepshead Bay, Brooklyn, within walking distance of the Sheepshead Bay subway station that serves the B and Q lines. For many couples, this makes it feasible to visit the studio by appointment from other parts of the borough or to coordinate logistics for weddings that involve multiple Brooklyn neighborhoods.
Video package inquiries can typically come from many parts of Brooklyn, and couples may ask about coverage for venues or events in areas such as Williamsburg, Greenpoint, Park Slope, Bed-Stuy, Carroll Gardens, DUMBO, Bay Ridge, and Bensonhurst. These neighborhood names usually function as service-area examples rather than strict limits, so it is useful to confirm availability and any travel considerations for your specific locations.
In practical terms, couples often check transit and parking options when planning an in-person meeting or a wedding that spans several sites. It can be helpful to discuss factors such as parking or loading at your venue, typical traffic patterns on your date, and the timing needed to move between locations, especially if you are coordinating both photography and videography on the same day.

For many Brooklyn weddings, planning conversations include both creative questions and straightforward logistics, such as how long transit between locations might take from the Sheepshead Bay base and whether any building rules could affect setup or teardown times.
Using visual examples when evaluating video packages
Sample visuals are a practical way to understand what a wedding-oriented Video Package can look like in real use. Couples often review highlight reels, longer films, or documentation-style edits to see how a provider typically frames ceremonies, handles reception lighting, and balances candid moments with any posed or directed segments.
Visuals can also reveal workflow details that may not be fully described in text, such as how gear is set up on-site, how audio is checked before key moments, and how multiple camera angles are used during the ceremony or speeches. Still images showing studio space, on-location crews, and equipment layouts can support your sense of how organized and consistent a provider’s approach appears to be.

When you look at examples of delivered work, it can be useful to confirm how files were provided (for instance, via an online gallery, direct download link, or physical USB), whether multiple versions of a film were included, and how long clients were able to access the online materials.
Frequently asked questions about Brooklyn wedding video packages
1) How many hours of videography do we really need for a Brooklyn wedding?
In the Brooklyn market, couples often choose shorter coverage for very small or single-location celebrations, and longer coverage for full-day events that include getting-ready, ceremony, and reception at different venues. Common patterns include a shorter block of time focused on the main events, a mid-length day that covers most of the schedule, or an all-day option from preparation through the final formalities. It is helpful to map your own timeline and ask which package length matches it most closely.
2) Can we customize or mix elements from different video packages?
Many studios are open to some level of customization, such as adding hours, changing which parts of the day are filmed, or upgrading the type or number of edited films, but the details vary. When you speak with the studio, you can ask whether elements from different packages can be combined and how that would affect pricing and timelines. Some couples also add pre-wedding coverage, and the Engagement Sessions page on this site explains how pre-event shoots may fit into an overall plan.
3) Do video packages usually include the full ceremony and speeches, or just a highlight film?
In this market, it is common for packages to distinguish between highlight-style edits and more documentary coverage. Some options focus on a short, shareable highlight film, while others add separate edits of the full ceremony, speeches, or “main events.” Because approaches differ, it is important to ask explicitly whether your chosen package includes these longer edits or whether they are treated as add-ons.
4) Do we receive raw video files, and in what format?
Some providers include raw footage as part of certain package levels, while others treat it as a separate product that may carry an additional fee or specific conditions. If having access to unedited clips matters to you, it is worth confirming what is available, how files would be delivered (such as via download, drive, or other methods), and in which file formats they would be supplied.
5) What should we expect for editing and delivery timelines?
Editing timelines can vary based on the season, complexity of the edit, and the number of films included in your package. Commonly, couples receive an initial highlight or shorter piece before any longer films, but the exact order and timing differ across studios. The safest approach is to ask for typical ranges for each deliverable and to have those expectations noted clearly in your agreement. If you are also planning printed keepsakes, the Wedding albums page shows how still-image work can translate into physical products.
6) What happens if our schedule runs late on the wedding day?
Because weddings do not always run exactly on time, it is useful to ask in advance how overtime is handled. You might want to know whether additional coverage can be added on the day itself, how overtime is billed, and whether there are hard cut-off times that cannot be extended due to other commitments or venue rules. Clarifying this ahead of time can prevent rushed decisions late in the evening.
7) How does videography coordinate with our photographer or photo team?
Most couples want video and photo teams to work together smoothly rather than compete for the same space. During planning, you can ask how videographers typically position themselves relative to photographers during the ceremony and key reception moments, whether they coordinate timing for portraits or first looks, and how they handle situations where multiple teams are present. If you are considering using one provider for both services, it can be helpful to compare how their still and motion work are described.
8) Are travel or parking fees common for venues outside Sheepshead Bay?
For weddings in other parts of Brooklyn, Queens, or Manhattan, some providers account for additional travel time, parking, or bridge/tunnel tolls in their pricing. It is reasonable to ask whether there are any extra costs for your specific venues, especially if they require paid parking or complex loading procedures. Clarifying these details early can help avoid last-minute surprises.
9) Where do planning conversations usually take place — at the studio or remotely?
Initial planning is often handled by phone or video call for convenience, with in-person meetings by appointment at the studio when needed. You can ask how the studio prefers to handle timeline reviews and shot priorities, whether evening or weekend calls are possible, and whether there is an option to walk through the Sheepshead Bay space if you want to see it before booking.
10) What should we clarify about deliverables before signing a contract?
Before you sign, it is helpful to have a written summary of what you will receive: the types and approximate lengths of edited films, whether full-ceremony or speech edits are included, how and where files will be delivered, and how long they will remain accessible online. You may also want to ask about backup and re-delivery policies in case you lose files later, so you understand what is feasible and whether any fees would apply.
How to proceed with video package inquiries and appointments
If you want to discuss Video Package options in more detail, you can contact Photographer and Videographer – Brooklyn – Vera Starling by phone at +1917-386-8509 or through the website at https://video-nyc.com/. When you reach out, it can be useful to have your date, venues, and an approximate timeline ready so the studio can indicate which package structures might align with your plans.
In-person conversations are typically arranged by appointment at the Sheepshead Bay studio, rather than on a walk-in basis. If you are still clarifying whether you need photography, videography, or both, the Wedding photographer page provides a broader view of the studio’s wedding-focused category on the site.
You can then decide whether to keep photo and video with the same provider or separate them, depending on your preferences for style, logistics, and budget.
For image needs beyond weddings, such as business or branding work, separate resources are often more appropriate. In those cases, the Commercial photography page offers a dedicated reference point for non-wedding photography services listed for this business.
