What's the tech etiquette for #wedding photos?

A wedding photographer's rant about camera phones went viral, but tech etiquette is still evolving.

LG Electronics Inc. unveiled a new smartphone with an additional screen and a camera that can capture a wider scene when taking a selfie, as debate over camera phone use in situations like weddings remains.

Lee Jin-man/AP/File

November 7, 2015

A photographer's post ranting against wedding guests who insist on taking endless photos has gone viral. Just how ubiquitous should technology during key family moments?

"Look at this photo," wedding photographer Thomas Stewart wrote on his business Facebook page. "This groom had to lean out past the aisle just to see his bride approaching. Why? Because guests with their phones were in the aisle and in his way." 

Mr. Stewart went on to say that such guests can get in the photographer's way, ruin good shots, and generally spoil the special moment for a bride and groom who want to see their loved ones' faces – not their phones – at their wedding. He suggested couples announce to guests that a wedding would be "unplugged."

Smartphones and selfies are everywhere, but that doesn't have to mean that Americans hold nothing sacred. At least 88 percent of Americans say they want phones out of sight during family dinners, and even more don't want them in movie theaters and churches, according to a Pew Research study released in August.

"For many Americans, cellphones are always present and rarely turned off, and this constant connectivity creates new social challenges," the report found.

So where do weddings – full of family and often in a church – fit into that spectrum of acceptability? It depends on the venue and the family.

Wedding photographer Kendra Pettit outlined her own policy in an interview with The Christian Science Monitor.

"Put away the phones, don't worry about it, I'll cover it," Ms. Pettit said.

Harris vs. Trump: Where they stand on the big issues

Pettit puts a no-phone rule in her contract, but she also makes the photos available digitally for easy sharing. She doesn't make a public announcement about phones at the wedding itself, but she appreciates when the minister or officiator asks guests to put phones away.

"Most of the time (guests) listen, but I always catch a couple people," she says. "They say, 'Oh, this is my great-niece, I have to have this photo.' "  

Some couples put a sign up at the wedding urging guests to resist the temptation to post. On the other end of the spectrum, some couples create hashtags for their weddings to encourage guests to post and share photos of the event. 

Simone Hill claimed on the wedding site The Knot that in 2014, 55 percent of weddings used a hashtag.

"Will you love the photos everyone took forever? Definitely," Ms. Hill wrote. "At the end of the day it's the photos you'll really care about having and that everyone had fun with it."

Ultimately, considerate phone use will come from some but not others, like any other aspect of polite behavior.

"The problem with a new technology is that society has yet to come up with a common understanding about appropriate behavior," Mizuko Ito, an mobile phone culture expert at Keio University in Tokyo, told CBS News. "No matter what the technology, there'll always be people who don't mind their manners." 

Ultimately, wedding guests are there to bear witness, not to photo-document the event, notes Stewart in his viral rant.

"Share and celebrate the love that two people feel for each other.... You are witnesses to their marriage, so for goodness' sake, watch them with your eyes and your minds, not your phones."