pancakes

MicrostockGroup Sponsors


Author Topic: alamy for beginners  (Read 58183 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

ShadySue

  • There is a crack in everything
« Reply #50 on: August 21, 2010, 06:34 »
0
Side question. Do Alamy ever change the licence type attached to an image ?  Do the photographers have complete control ? If we set the use to RM and specify editorial use only can we be certain that this will stick ? If an image is specifies as RM is there any danger of it being switched ?
There is no current way of specifying 'editorial use only' other than by setting many restrictions for commercial use - though as has been pointed out in this and other threads, and the Alamy forum, just saying that there are people without MRs or property without PRs is enough.
But not supplying MRs (there isn't currently any way of supplying an MR for editorial use only, and no current need for one) or PRs, and marking your image as such means that if an agency switched an image to RF, they'd carry the can.
BTW, when uploading to Alamy, it clearly warns that you can't change from L to RF or vice versa after an image is on sale (you'd have to go through their support system).
« Last Edit: August 21, 2010, 09:25 by ShadySue »


alias

« Reply #51 on: August 21, 2010, 06:47 »
0
Thanks ShadySue.

if an agency switched an image to RF, they'd carry the can.

Expanding the terms of my question slightly, is there any possibility or history of that happening, Alamy or any other site deciding to switch an image from RM to RF without consulting the photographer or rights owner ?

lagereek

« Reply #52 on: August 21, 2010, 09:22 »
0
Thanks ShadySue.

if an agency switched an image to RF, they'd carry the can.

Expanding the terms of my question slightly, is there any possibility or history of that happening, Alamy or any other site deciding to switch an image from RM to RF without consulting the photographer or rights owner ?

Once an image has been in Micro or RF, no it can never be sold as RM. Rights-managed-RM simply means there are rights involved, copy, worldrights, etc, to basically ensure the same pic isnt sold to two compeeting concepts ( within same branch),  this is why big AD-agencies, etc, always buy RM for their clients. This is why an RM picture is often much more expensive.

Its estimated that if a client buy an RM pic  for say 500 bucks,  all the rights involved mounts up to 400 bucks and the actual picture only a 100 bucks.
The RM industry is the Traditional way of selling pictures and is mostly associated with professional photographers, at least they are the prefered contributors.

alias

« Reply #53 on: August 21, 2010, 10:56 »
0
Thanks Lagereek. But you answered to a different question :)

Here it is again ..... is there any possibility or history of .. Alamy or any other site deciding to switch an image from RM to RF without consulting the photographer or rights owner ?

Obviously that could be even before it has ever sold.

lagereek

« Reply #54 on: August 21, 2010, 11:03 »
0
Thanks Lagereek. But you answered to a different question :)

Here it is again ..... is there any possibility or history of .. Alamy or any other site deciding to switch an image from RM to RF without consulting the photographer or rights owner ?

Obviously that could be even before it has ever sold.

Dont think so,  they would have to consult the photographer in question because once its been in RF, it can never go back to RM.

alias

« Reply #55 on: August 22, 2010, 04:53 »
0
Thanks Lagereek and ShadySue.

« Reply #56 on: September 11, 2010, 14:13 »
0
Just started at Alamy.  I am curious about what is popular at Alamy and also if contemporary personality/celebrity shots have a place on Alamy or if there is another on-line stock site micro- or macro- that would be good for that content.  I have also been approved for the reportage/archival path as well. I shoot many assignments each year for magazines or promotion with reality tv stars, musicians, business people and have freedom to release for editorial usage after publication.  Didn't see a category that seemed obvious or natural on Alamy site for this type of image.  I know that Corbis handles this type of stuff regularly, but I have regular stock agency already.  Not sure I'm ready to make wholesale switch. 

For those who are active in micros as well as Alamy, any thoughts about which type of imagery you submit to IS/SS/DT etc rather than on Alamy or vice versa?

ap

« Reply #57 on: September 11, 2010, 14:29 »
0
I have also been approved for the reportage/archival path as well.

hi dan:

i applied for this also, but keep having problems with their online form submission. i also emailed their support with no reply. any tips on this?

i think the alamy forum is a much better place for your questions or do a search there. but from what i gather, there are a couple of celebrity stock sites based in the uk that would want these shots for news, rather than archival. again a search on alamy would retrieve those names for you. (rex features?)

« Reply #58 on: September 14, 2010, 01:16 »
0
I don't really set 'editorial' for alamy, i think you just need to set no model release and no property release for it.

I don't think an agency will change the license without informing you.

RM to RF is possible, but if an image had been sold as RF, it seems violating the RM license, unless you know who download it and tracked down how it had been used.


Side question. Do Alamy ever change the licence type attached to an image ?  Do the photographers have complete control ? If we set the use to RM and specify editorial use only can we be certain that this will stick ? If an image is specifies as RM is there any danger of it being switched ?

« Reply #59 on: September 16, 2010, 16:34 »
0
hi all.
Just want to share that i begun on Alamy last week and i was confused about the lack of activity (sales) but today i found i had a sale for 152$ (91,2 royalty) HEY if thats how it goes, i can wait a week between sales!!!

« Reply #60 on: September 16, 2010, 17:32 »
0
hi all.
Just want to share that i begun on Alamy last week and i was confused about the lack of activity (sales) but today i found i had a sale for 152$ (91,2 royalty) HEY if thats how it goes, i can wait a week between sales!!!

You're either very, very good or very, very lucky. Could even be both. Alamy is not a big volume seller, sales often take months to report. It took about a year before I got my first sale, now I usually get one or two a month, often for not much more than a couple of dozen dollars commission.

In answer to an earlier question, Alamy decided to switch most of my files from RM to TL a couple of years ago, I don't know why. Unreleased files (editorial) now default to TL.

« Reply #61 on: September 17, 2010, 03:10 »
0
hi all.
Just want to share that i begun on Alamy last week and i was confused about the lack of activity (sales) but today i found i had a sale for 152$ (91,2 royalty) HEY if thats how it goes, i can wait a week between sales!!!

You're either very, very good or very, very lucky. Could even be both. Alamy is not a big volume seller, sales often take months to report. It took about a year before I got my first sale, now I usually get one or two a month, often for not much more than a couple of dozen dollars commission.

Guess im very lucky, besides the image sold was one of the less sold i have in other sites, again luck and having just what a person looks for in a concrete moment, then again luck.

« Reply #62 on: September 17, 2010, 21:39 »
0
I signed up for Alamy a little over a week ago but didn't get to upload anything until last Sunday. I read through the Alamy forum threads there and it seems wait times for the "Awaiting QC" step is usually 1 to 2 days. But it's been a little over 5 days now. Is this what everyone else is experiencing?

This is my first very small batch to Alamy to test the waters. These images were my better sellers in the past.

« Reply #63 on: September 17, 2010, 22:53 »
0
Hmm, think my most recent QC wait was under 24 hours, but that was earlier this week. The one before that was atypical, a few days over a long holiday weekend. I agree with those A forum posts - Alamy's generally quite efficient, speedy. But first QC waits could very well be different, can't remember mine.

Quote from: ScottNodine link=topic=10918.msg162412#msg162412 date=
I signed up for Alamy a little over a week ago but didn't get to upload anything until last Sunday. I read through the Alamy forum threads there and it seems wait times for the "Awaiting QC" step is usually 1 to 2 days. But it's been a little over 5 days now. Is this what everyone else is experiencing?

This is my first very small batch to Alamy to test the waters. These images were my better sellers in the past.
« Last Edit: September 17, 2010, 22:56 by ann »

« Reply #64 on: September 17, 2010, 23:21 »
0
I signed up for Alamy a little over a week ago but didn't get to upload anything until last Sunday. I read through the Alamy forum threads there and it seems wait times for the "Awaiting QC" step is usually 1 to 2 days. But it's been a little over 5 days now. Is this what everyone else is experiencing?

This is my first very small batch to Alamy to test the waters. These images were my better sellers in the past.

it takes longer when you are new or if you have a high failure rate, when you have a reputation for minimal failures it is usually under 24 hours (but I dont know how submissions this takes sorry).

ShadySue

  • There is a crack in everything
« Reply #65 on: September 18, 2010, 04:41 »
0
Also, if there's a 'processing' (i.e. technical) problem with one of your images in a batch, that whole batch (but not subsequent ones) will be held up for a week, then someone goes in and manually shifts the problem.
That doesn't necessarily mean there's something wrong with your file. I put three 'stickers' (without change) in one batch and uploaded them and they all went through in the usual 24 hours.

« Reply #66 on: September 18, 2010, 08:40 »
0
Good info to know. I will wait a little while longer. Thanks.
On a side note: I never though Right-Managed would be a direction I would go in but something in the back of my mind always had me not putting some of my favorite images up on the Micro sites because I believed those pictures were worth much more than a few dollars.
« Last Edit: September 18, 2010, 10:24 by ScottNodine »

« Reply #67 on: September 18, 2010, 09:01 »
0
hi all.
Just want to share that i begun on Alamy last week and i was confused about the lack of activity (sales) but today i found i had a sale for 152$ (91,2 royalty) HEY if thats how it goes, i can wait a week between sales!!!

You're either very, very good or very, very lucky. Could even be both. Alamy is not a big volume seller, sales often take months to report. It took about a year before I got my first sale, now I usually get one or two a month, often for not much more than a couple of dozen dollars commission.

Guess im very lucky, besides the image sold was one of the less sold i have in other sites, again luck and having just what a person looks for in a concrete moment, then again luck.

It's often photos that you wouldn't expect to do well on the micros that get the sales on Alamy. It's really unpredictable.

ShadySue

  • There is a crack in everything
« Reply #68 on: September 18, 2010, 09:21 »
0
Good info to know. I will a little while longer. Thanks.
On a side note: I never though Right-Managed would be a direction I would go in but something in the back of my mind always had me not putting some of my favorite images up on the Micro sites because I believed those pictures were worth much more than a few dollars.
I always wanted to do Editorial/RM, but had to earn the equipment on iStock before I could afford/justify the gear! But gosh, Alamy's such a slow waiting game - to get sales and then to get paid after you get the sales.

« Reply #69 on: September 18, 2010, 11:01 »
0
One can not expect regular sales on alamy with an avarage portfolio, before there about 2500+ images online.

Remeber - you are compeeting against 20 million other iomages there.

If the portfolio is truly outstanding, sales might be regular before such high numbers.

And on Alamy - its "allways" the unexpected that gives you the sales....
Atleast thats how it is for me...

« Reply #70 on: September 18, 2010, 16:58 »
0
The top two pieces of advice I'd give to someone entering stock:

1) Focus on quality images in well-targeted areas - at the expense of volume, if necessary.
Expect a strong port of 100 or less to at least equal earnings of an average one of thousand+....

2) If your subject matter and technique fit, focus on macro over micro. And keep the two portfolios completely separate.

« Reply #71 on: September 18, 2010, 17:21 »
0
One of the thinks I've always hated about Micro is that I have to apply noise reduction to get nearly anything through the inspection process. I hate it because I know there is more detail in my photos than what I'm supplying. I can't always shoot at ISO 100 to get the right exposure. I don't mind taking out the color noise but to get rid of the ISO grain all together for Micro... I hate it.

So, with that said do have to make everything look like plastic for Alamy too? Do skys have to be completely grain free for Alamy?

« Reply #72 on: September 18, 2010, 17:32 »
0
One of the thinks I've always hated about Micro is that I have to apply noise reduction to get nearly anything through the inspection process. I hate it because I know there is more detail in my photos than what I'm supplying. I can't always shoot at ISO 100 to get the right exposure. I don't mind taking out the color noise but to get rid of the ISO grain all together for Micro... I hate it.

So, with that said do have to make everything look like plastic for Alamy too? Do skys have to be completely grain free for Alamy?

honestly you sould try to be always at 100.. you can believe or not but I have never reduce noise in my pictures, got a few at on 200, 400 and some 800.. and were approved! (not talking about Alamy but all other stock agency)

you can always have a tripod around :P

« Reply #73 on: September 18, 2010, 17:41 »
0
I'm surprised by that too.

I have never applied more than minimal noise reduction for iStock, because if I did the image would be rejected instantly.  And when I do have to apply it, I try to do it via a mask so only where it's needed - usually just the dark bits.  And I'm shooting with a 4/3 camera.

« Reply #74 on: September 18, 2010, 18:07 »
0
That's just been my experience mostly with Istock. So it's all I know. (The other Micro sites have been recent additions to the list I submit to.) 
I've submitted photos in the past (to test the waters) in which I had the right exposure, removed the color noise in the RAW converter, did minimal (if any) processing, saved the JPG at level 12 in Photoshop and they'd still send it back for artifacts and noise. I'd take it and run it through some noise reduction and it would get accepted. To me, it looked like I was removing detail. So irritating.

What about Alamy? Anyone?


 

Related Topics

  Subject / Started by Replies Last post
17 Replies
10826 Views
Last post August 13, 2009, 21:30
by elvinstar
8 Replies
5479 Views
Last post April 26, 2016, 22:33
by AlessandraRC
29 Replies
14841 Views
Last post October 11, 2017, 15:53
by increasingdifficulty
2 Replies
5252 Views
Last post March 20, 2018, 10:04
by Brightontl
4 Replies
2436 Views
Last post October 09, 2018, 02:42
by rushay

Sponsors

Mega Bundle of 5,900+ Professional Lightroom Presets

Microstock Poll Results

Sponsors