Funeral Photography

Funeral Photography Across the UK — Paul Hands Photographer

Funeral Photography — An Honour, Not a Novelty

People often raise an eyebrow when they find out I photograph funerals. I understand why. It sits outside what most people expect of a photographer, and for a lot of people, a camera at a funeral feels uncomfortable at first thought.

Gathering at the Graveside

But here is what I have come to know after more than fourteen years behind a lens: funeral photography is among the most meaningful work I do. Being chosen for it — trusted with it — is something I treat as a genuine honour.

It takes a specific kind of photographer to work in this space. Not because the technical demands are extraordinary, but because the emotional ones are. Pointing a camera at people who are deep in grief, who are raw and present in a way they rarely are at any other moment in their lives, requires stillness. It requires a quietness of spirit that goes far beyond pressing a shutter.

I say this not with ego. I say it with precision, because I know exactly what it demands.

The Procession

A Multi-Faith Ceremony in Bedford

Last month I was invited to document the funeral of Dr Joy Matheiken in Bedford — a multi-faith ceremony for a man who, from everything I witnessed and learned that day, had lived an extraordinary life. A surgeon of international reputation, loved deeply by family and friends who had travelled from across the world to be there.

The Blessing

His daughter summarised the day better than I could:

"We are immensely grateful to Paul for his work during a painful and emotive event. As we had extended family abroad who couldn't attend the funeral, we wanted to have some visual memories to keep. Paul not only rescheduled a training event to accommodate our date, but also did a fantastic job taking all my requests to be non-intrusive for family and friends of different cultural backgrounds, some of whom were not accustomed to having a photographer at a funeral. Finally, the actual photos were beautifully candid and a wonderful collection for us to remember Dad and the day. Thank you Paul, and would highly recommend your services."
by Shevonne Matheiken

That review means everything to me. It describes exactly what I aim to achieve every single time.

The Last Journey

Almost Unseen

When I work a funeral, I operate almost invisibly. There is no directing, no staging, no intrusion. I move through a ceremony the way a documentarian moves through real life — present, observant, respectful of every moment without ever interrupting it.

The photographs that emerge from that approach tell the true story of a day. The quiet gestures between people. The light falling through a window at the right moment. The expression on a face that nobody else in the room noticed, but the camera did.

This is storytelling. It just happens to take place under the most difficult of human circumstances.

Coming Together

Why Families Commission Funeral Photography

The most common reason is geography. Families are spread across the world, and not everyone can make it to say goodbye in person. Photographs bridge that gap in a way that words rarely can.

The second reason is time. Grief changes memory. The details of a day — the people who were there, the flowers on the coffin, the expressions of love on the faces of the people who mattered most — begin to soften and shift within weeks. Photographs hold those details still.

The Committal

Held

Funeral Photography Across the UK

I offer funeral photography anywhere in the UK. Every booking is handled with complete discretion, and I work closely with families in advance to understand what they need from the day — and what they don't.

If you are considering commissioning funeral photography, I'd welcome a quiet conversation about how I work and what you are looking for.

Petals

Red and White

Documentary Funeral Photography Service

Documentary Funeral Photography

Friends and family usually gather together for a funeral and is usually viewed as a celebration of one’s life.

I’ve now designed a new service to offer a visual story of your loved ones final day on Earth.

Horse drawn funeral carriage

Who wants to remember a funeral?

When it’s your dear loved one’s final day on Earth, why wouldn’t you want to remember it? All thoughts about them passing will be sad but if you can flip your emotions to one of happiness and celebration for knowing them, you’ll be able to appreciate the coming togetherness and the warm feelings of love and solidarity.

The love that’s left behind to continue growing is as important. The big groups of friends and family that never get opportunities to be together like they do at a funeral or a wedding.

What does funeral photography look like?

It’s very similar to wedding photography except there’s more tears and sadness but also with the glimmer of a smile and some laughter at the good days gone by. When I make photographs at a funeral, my camera is silent, I’m silent and I stand back without being intrusive. The photographs I get are always quite thought provoking and powerful with emotion and I tend to mix the styles between colour and black and white, depending on the level of emotion and style of picture. I create documentary style photography, so there’s no posing or standing around looking at the camera.

I make the work telling real stories of how the funeral went.

What’s the point of funeral photography?

Family and friends might travel great distances to say their final goodbyes. The deceased could have a very large group of friends and be very popular. Perhaps the deceased was a vibrant human being and their final day is going to be one heck of a party! Whatever the reason, it’s your choice on whether you’d like to hire me to document the final day for your loved one.

Summary:

Funeral photography is a taboo subject that many have just never considered as an option. It wasn’t until I was approached by a loving Mother that wanted to record her Son’s final day that I ever thought about doing it. At first I felt a bit strange but my style actually really suits a funeral because I make natural candid photographs and tell stories with my camera, so it’s become a natural transition. I managed to create a wonderful collection of photographs for the Mother and family, so I’m happy to now be offering my skills as a funeral photographer.

If you’d like to make an enquiry for funeral photography, then please visit my website.