Wedding photographers: deliver albums clients actually open

Your work deserves more than a Dropbox link labeled “final.pdf.” A flipbook turns the album into something couples browse on the couch—and forward to family without embarrassment.

Wedding clients expect polish. They already saw your Instagram; the delivery should feel like the same brand. Export the album PDF from your design tool, upload it to PDF Flip, add your studio logo and a background that matches your site, and send one link instead of a multi-megabyte attachment that clogs inboxes.

Why flipbooks beat a plain PDF for albums

A PDF tab on a phone is fine for contracts—not for a 40-spread album. The flipbook viewer keeps spreads readable, gives familiar page-turn navigation, and frames the work inside your chrome. Couples stay oriented; grandparents do not have to hunt for pinch-zoom.

Sharing and privacy

Most albums go out as a public link the couple can share with wedding party and family. For preview rounds before print approval, use a password-protected link so only the couple sees the draft. When the album is final, publish the open link or embed it on your portfolio page.

Portfolio and upsells

Embed selected albums on your website so prospects see motion and pacing—not a static grid of JPEGs. Pair parent albums and add-on mini-books on a bookshelf so one page showcases your full wedding offering.

Getting started

Pick a template that fits the mood—glossy magazine for editorial weddings, binder style for classic albums. See magazine examples and the getting started guide for the upload-to-publish path.