SignedShoot
Model release forms that get signed on the spot — on the camera operator’s phone, before the session is over. Built for wedding, portrait, and commercial photographers who’ve spent too many evenings chasing PDFs by email.
The workflow that wasn’t working.
For most working photographers, the model-release flow is a small problem that compounds. You shoot a wedding. You shoot a family portrait. You shoot a brand session. Every one of them generates a release form or two, and every one of those gets handled differently — emailed as a PDF later, signed on an iPad in the studio, scribbled on paper and photographed.
The version of that workflow that actually works is: pull up the release on a phone, sign it with a finger, save it to the project, move on. SignedShoot is that flow, productized: a release-form tool that fits the way photographers actually work, with templates for the situations that come up most.
If you shoot people, you need this.
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Wedding photographers. Couple releases, vendor releases, sometimes a guest release for an editorial pull. SignedShoot handles them all at the venue, on the same phone you’re already using.
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Portrait and family sessions. Quick release at session start, signed before the shoot. Every signed release is saved to that project so portfolio and stock use is covered later.
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Commercial and editorial shoots. Talent releases, location releases, crew releases — the bundle that has to be airtight when the brand asks for proof.
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Bilingual events and clients. Templates are available in multiple languages so a Spanish-speaking subject signs Spanish-language consent, not a translated PDF.
Three steps, on the same phone you’re shooting with.
Pick a template
Wedding, portrait, commercial, location, talent — the categories photographers actually need. Edit the boilerplate once, save as your default.
Sign on the spot
Hand the phone to the subject, get a real signature in seconds, capture a photo or ID if the shoot needs it. No app install.
Filed automatically
The signed release lands in your account, attached to the project. Searchable later. Exportable as a PDF if a client or licensing agency asks.
More on use cases, pricing, and the form library at signedshoot.com.
A friend asked. Then everyone asked.
A photographer we know mentioned the release-form mess offhand — how much of every wedding weekend evaporated chasing signed paper, and how many shoots she’d quietly under-documented because the process was awkward. We built a first version in a weekend so she could test it at a wedding.
It worked. Word got around. Other photographers asked for access. We turned it into a real product at signedshoot.com with templates for every category photographers actually shoot — weddings, portraits, commercial, bilingual — and a backend that keeps every signed release organized and exportable.
Try it at your next shoot.
Sign up takes a minute and the templates are ready to use out of the box.
Open SignedShoot