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Author Topic: Alamy Online Uploads  (Read 34627 times)

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« on: August 14, 2007, 09:49 »
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Received an email, "You can now submit your images online using AlamyUpload."


w7lwi

  • Those that don't stand up to evil enable evil.
« Reply #1 on: August 14, 2007, 10:08 »
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Yes, they are converting over to 100% FTP.  The following is a message I received this morning attached to a confirmation that they had received my latest CD submission.

As you now have AlamyUpload enabled on your account we ask that you send your next submission to us online. We will shortly only be accepting online submissions. Simply go to "My Alamy" and click on the "Upload Images" link in your account to send us your images.

No more $2.70 international mail charges to submit a CD.   :D

« Reply #2 on: August 14, 2007, 10:34 »
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Yep me too!  :) Seems like I will try out Alamy in the next time :) Thats what I was waiting for..

« Reply #3 on: August 14, 2007, 11:00 »
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Wonderful!!

« Reply #4 on: August 14, 2007, 11:14 »
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"We are gradually rolling out AlamyUpload, our new online upload facility, to all our contributors and will send you an email when we activate it in your account."
SIGH.

« Reply #5 on: August 14, 2007, 15:15 »
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Its not FTP its an activeX plugin similar to some of the microstock ones. Quite nice as you can upload files or folders and it shows you the percentage progress, just don't navigate from that page/browser tab.

I only uploaded a few files about 30 or so but it worked fine and they were even reviewed far quicker than the 5 week wait.

I even received a cheque at the beginning of the month finally.

« Reply #6 on: August 14, 2007, 15:18 »
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Received an email, "You can now submit your images online using AlamyUpload."

Same here...

« Reply #7 on: August 14, 2007, 16:17 »
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great news! so that will make the whole process a lot faster.I am just about apply to alamy but as far as I know first application is  still in the same way,sendin cd's dvd's. if you are approved then you are able to upload photos on line.

this a little off the topic but I'd like to know if you upload same files that you also upload to micros,is it allowed and how good idea is it?
one more thing I 'd like to know ,are they only paying by cheque or do they have paypal as an option.
cheers
« Last Edit: August 14, 2007, 16:21 by stokfoto »

« Reply #8 on: August 14, 2007, 17:20 »
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Is it valid also for first submissions, or do they still require CD submission to be accepted?

Regards,
Adelaide

« Reply #9 on: August 15, 2007, 00:39 »
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I started at Alamy three weeks ago. First application can be done online and I was approved within 2 weeks

Olga

« Reply #10 on: August 15, 2007, 01:22 »
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this a little off the topic but I'd like to know if you upload same files that you also upload to micros,is it allowed and how good idea is it?

A very bad idea in my view. If a customer buys an image for a high price at Alamy, only to discover later that it's available for a dollar or two at a micro, he will probably not be happy. I wouldn't have been, and I wouldn't even consider buying from your portfolio at Alamy again.

« Reply #11 on: August 15, 2007, 07:57 »
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this a little off the topic but I'd like to know if you upload same files that you also upload to micros,is it allowed and how good idea is it?

A very bad idea in my view. If a customer buys an image for a high price at Alamy, only to discover later that it's available for a dollar or two at a micro, he will probably not be happy. I wouldn't have been, and I wouldn't even consider buying from your portfolio at Alamy again.

I agree with that but there is one thing though. by uploading same files  to a macro site you offer your files as RM not only RF (which is mostly not available on micro sites)so that should mean you are giving a different buying option to the buyers.and to my point of view this  should be the main point of considering such a thing.

and one other thing ,I remember reading  some articles  saying many  macro photographers started to think micros were more profitable(this is just according to what I read and remember not my own experience since I don2t have it with macros)and if you choose your best file to upload only to macros this might mean you are limiting commercial possibilities of your work.(having said that I am well aware of price licensing and commissions difference between the two)
so I am still trying to find out a middle wayin order to  to keep might profit as high as possible without upsetting the buyers.

btw if your first application can be done online than it's fantastic news:)
« Last Edit: August 15, 2007, 08:14 by stokfoto »

« Reply #12 on: August 15, 2007, 08:38 »
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First application? Does it mean if you fail the first aplication you have to send the images via CD?

« Reply #13 on: August 15, 2007, 08:54 »
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Don't think so, I submitted my "first application" by cd and got rejected for size (thought they required 40mb). Then I got an email stating the FTP was activated and submitted my "second application" via the site.

« Reply #14 on: August 15, 2007, 08:57 »
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this a little off the topic but I'd like to know if you upload same files that you also upload to micros,is it allowed and how good idea is it?

A very bad idea in my view. If a customer buys an image for a high price at Alamy, only to discover later that it's available for a dollar or two at a micro, he will probably not be happy. I wouldn't have been, and I wouldn't even consider buying from your portfolio at Alamy again.

I agree with that but there is one thing though. by uploading same files  to a macro site you offer your files as RM not only RF (which is mostly not available on micro sites)so that should mean you are giving a different buying option to the buyers.and to my point of view this  should be the main point of considering such a thing.

You can't submit an RF image that's on a micro and put it as RM on Alamy or anywhere else. The image is either RF or RM.

« Reply #15 on: August 15, 2007, 10:53 »
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this a little off the topic but I'd like to know if you upload same files that you also upload to micros,is it allowed and how good idea is it?

A very bad idea in my view. If a customer buys an image for a high price at Alamy, only to discover later that it's available for a dollar or two at a micro, he will probably not be happy. I wouldn't have been, and I wouldn't even consider buying from your portfolio at Alamy again.

I agree with that but there is one thing though. by uploading same files  to a macro site you offer your files as RM not only RF (which is mostly not available on micro sites)so that should mean you are giving a different buying option to the buyers.and to my point of view this  should be the main point of considering such a thing.

You can't submit an RF image that's on a micro and put it as RM on Alamy or anywhere else. The image is either RF or RM.
you are right.sorry I got confused with the terms.RF and RM just opposites and can't go together.what  I was tryign to say you may offer exclusive rights of the image (like exclusive buy out that FT used offer,full ownership that DT offers.)

after all I guess it depends on your marketing strategies,which photo of your to put in a macro and which one to micros.now I am convinced that it certainly isn't good idea to shuffle things and you have to be certain which files go to micros and which goes macros.

thank you all for your help
much appreciated.

budgaugh

« Reply #16 on: August 15, 2007, 17:37 »
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Can you submit photos to Alamy the same way as the micros or do you have to upsize the photos before you submit?

« Reply #17 on: August 17, 2007, 02:52 »
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You need at least a 6mp camera 8 mp would be better and you need to upsize to about 3455 x 5150 which would be a 50.5 meg uncompressed TIFF (mimimum is 48 meg) but we can send JPEGS now  ;D.

If they still wanted TIFFS the online upload would be fairly pointless (2 photos per hour with my broadband).

Payment is by cheque
British pounds, US Dollars, euros or other currencies?
I know my cheque came direct from their bank so you might be able to get cheques in quite a wide range of currencies

They charge $8 for a cheque and there was another charge for the currency conversion so much for the 65/35 split.

Payment also by direct bank transfer but you have to give them your bank details (scary!)

no paypal as far as I know.

For those of you who moan about having to wait a week for payment from Microstock beware Alamy make you wait (I was told up to 10 weeks) after you clear the $250 barrier as they give their clients 30 days credit.

For example I sold a photo in September 2006 another in April 2007 which brought me over the magic number but it was early August before a cheque arrived though strangely the first of my June sales was cleared in time so was also included.

Total sales five photos  ;D from an entirely RM portfolio of about 2,600

If the photo is of a popular subject I usually send to the micros.  If in doubt search the Alamy site. As remember as a Newbie your Alamy index will be low so your photos will go to the back and their is only one search criteria no searching by contributor, age, Dls etc.

« Reply #18 on: August 17, 2007, 08:15 »
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Steve, great info there, well done. You answered a lot of questions and your info is clear. Thankyou.

Just one thing:

Quote
Payment also by direct bank transfer but you have to give them your bank details (scary!)

It's a common concern, giving out your bank account numbers, but it's actually a great thing to do.

The only risk you run is that people will give you money. They cannot make withdrawals. Why do you think it's safe to have your account numbers printed on the bottom of every check you write?

Why is it great? It's automated, instant, and entirely online. I run a business in Australia, but I haven't been there for almost a year. All my clients pay me by direct deposit as I put my bank account numbers on my invoices (which are emailed in PDF). If a client ever asked, I'd accommodate alternative arrangements, but it hasn't happened yet. It's also more secure than checks. It's why many governments tax your bank account if you have a checking facility attached - they need to recover the cost of investigating check fraud.

I realize this is WAY off topic, but I hope the information is of value to everybody. The less time you spend banking checks the more time you can spend creating great photos! 

« Reply #19 on: September 10, 2007, 13:59 »
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You need at least a 6mp camera 8 mp would be better and you need to upsize to about 3455 x 5150 which would be a 50.5 meg uncompressed TIFF (mimimum is 48 meg) but we can send JPEGS now  ;D.


That's confusing.  If you save an upsized image at 5150x3455 in TIFF format in order to make it 50megs (which is what I once tried with a Canon 10D image) , how in the world would you meet their 48mg minimum if you saved it in JPG form?   Since JPG is compressed, how would that fly with their minimum file size?



« Reply #20 on: September 10, 2007, 14:37 »
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JPEG is compressed. When you have a JPEG image open in Photoshop it tells you the uncompressed size in the bottom left-side corner.  If your camera is 6MP it'll be 48MB uncompressed.

Thankfully you can upload it uncompressed! ;)

« Reply #21 on: September 10, 2007, 15:03 »
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JPEG is compressed. When you have a JPEG image open in Photoshop it tells you the uncompressed size in the bottom left-side corner.  If your camera is 6MP it'll be 48MB uncompressed.

Thankfully you can upload it uncompressed! ;)

No it won't... I shoot with a 8MP EOS 20D and still have to upsize it by 144% to meet the minimum requirements. With this i end up with a image that's roughly 5000x3350 pixels which in fact is 16,75 MegaPixels. So that's more or less you're minimum requirements. But there are things that people normally confuse, is that the demand an uncompressed size of 48 MegaBYTES, which means 16,75 MegaPIXELS. And the file shouldn't be bigger than 25 MegaBYTES in a compressed form (actuakky my files, saved in Photoshop JPEG 12 vary from as little as 2 MegaBYTES to as much as 17 MegaBYTES, until now...)

Regards

Francisco Leito

dbvirago

« Reply #22 on: September 10, 2007, 15:36 »
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And to make it worse, I can shoot an 8MP file in two different MB ranges

« Reply #23 on: September 10, 2007, 16:24 »
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i still don't get why they don't just say how many pixels they want, because the image size depends a lot on if there is dark or white or colored pixels in the image.

« Reply #24 on: September 10, 2007, 16:35 »
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i still don't get why they don't just say how many pixels they want, because the image size depends a lot on if there is dark or white or colored pixels in the image.

It doesn't Leaf... when you measure uncompressed pixels, they always occupy the same amount of data (the maximum). What is affected by the value of the pixels is the compressed size, due to the JPEG algorythm.
So an uncompressed image of all white or all black pixels with 5000x3350 always has 48MB uncompressed (you can see this if you save tiff uncompressed).

Regards

Francisco Leito


 

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