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Messages - RichTheGeek

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1
Newbie Discussion / Re: Hello there
« on: July 23, 2013, 05:12 »
Thanks for all the kind words and advice.

I do agree that I have to work on lighting and backgrounds (among other technical and compositional issues) to make the pictures better and more commercially viable, especially if I want to dwell in the niches. I don't mind being there, but I do understand that if I want to live in a niche, my work has to really stand out from the rest.

Just as an aside, I don't only photograph nature and wildlife. That's just what I've been doing recently because of various time- and weather-related reasons. It's either been pouring rain or horrendously hot and hazy for the past few weeks, and I also was busy with a big project for a Web design client; so I haven't gotten out much. All of the pictures above were taken right outside my own home.

Thanks again.

-Richard

2
I buy a lot of lifestyle stock and I rarely use models isolated on white. What I am always looking for are natural looking people, not posing, not looking at the camera. I want to see an instant of real life captured. I want great lighting, and artistic flair. As the boomers age, there is definitely a growing market for good looking, active older people. Shopping, golfing, eating, drinking, biking... It sounds cliche, but I need those images all the time, and most of what is available is awful.

I thought of this thread today as I was searching SS/Canstock for some realistic photos of a business meeting and all I could find in the first 5 pages were with a white background and people looking fake and smiling at the camera. So I wanted to chime in PLEASE no more isolated on white photos!! I'm sure people use them but the market is over saturated with them. I agree with fiftyfootelvis - I'm always looking for  candid photos of people in realistic situations and backgrounds for my graphic projects. I do a lot of non-profit work and that's the worst because it's hard to find 'real' looking diverse people to fit the not-happy-shiny-smiling content I'm designing for.

I've had the same frustration as a designer. My clients don't sell people. They sell products or services, and that's really what the pictures need to convey. Isolated shots emphasize the people, but completely ignore the working environment.

For white-collar professions, I'd rather have a generic office with blurry file cabinets, copying machines, and the like in the background, as opposed to white. These shots are harder to come by in microstock, probably because they require access to an office environment for the shoot rather than just a white backdrop. That's understandable, but still a bit frustrating.

The other problem is that if I want to maintain design continuity across the site, I want some consistency between the pictures used on the various pages (and even more so, pictures used on the same page). This means that I need more than one picture, most of the time; and I want the pictures to have similar "feels" to them. Microstock reviewers, however, often reject pictures simply because they are "too similar" to other pictures in a batch, not thinking that for reasons of maintaining design continuity, many designers would jump for joy if they could find want multiple, similar pictures of the same models in the same environment.

That's the main reason why I've often wound up using pictures with white backgrounds even though I really didn't want to. There simply weren't enough good shots with more realistic business backgrounds for me to maintain design continuity, so I resigned myself to using isolated on white. It wasn't my preference, but it was the best I could do considering what was available image-wise.

-Richard

3
Newbie Discussion / Hello there
« on: July 22, 2013, 21:47 »
I'm basically a semi-retired Web designer with a camera.

Okay, here's a little more detail. As a designer, I often had trouble finding suitable pictures for some of my sites, so I started taking them myself. Then I started taking pictures  for other designers. Then I submitted a few to stock companies. And then I sold a few (both privately and through microstock). Then one day it dawned on me that I was a photographer.

It's still a very part-time thing for me, though. It's  basically a hobby that helps pay for itself. But I've decided to start working  seriously on developing my skills. I don't know that my income from it will ever be more than lunch money, but because this is not my primary source of income, I do have the luxury of being able to have a bit more fun with it than if it were.

I'm going to try to attach small versions of a few of my recent shots. That does seem the thing to do on a photography forum, don't you think?

I'm eagerly looking forward to learning from all of you veterans, more about photography itself than the business end. I have nothing but respect for anyone who can make a living in what I've learned is an extraordinarily challenging business, but at this point I would just like to take better pictures.

Thank you very much for having me.

-Richard

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