This is a discussion on What should My rates be? within the Photography Beginners' Forum & Photo Gallery forums, part of the Foundations of Photography category; Quote: Originally Posted by bgaideski To sum it up... Just charge what you feel your pictures are worth. People might pay it, people might not. ...
|
|||||||
| Register | Home | Forum | Active Topics | Photo Gallery | Members List | Social Groups | Search | Today's Posts | Mark Forums Read |
| Photography Beginners' Forum & Photo Gallery Brand new to photography, or brushing up on some of the basics? Don’t be shy! Talk to other beginners and ask all your basic photographic questions here. Show us some of the photos you have taken so far and get some review - so you can learn where there is room for improvement! |
|
|
#76 |
|
Been spending a lot of time on here!
|
To sum it up...
Just charge what you feel your pictures are worth. People might pay it, people might not. Most professional photographers won't agree with this point. Its business. If a pro charges $1000 for a shoot, and an amateur only wants $150, you can see how the amateur could be cutting into the pros profits. When it comes down to it, I just feel that not everyone wants the best picture in the world, sometimes people will sacrifice quality to save money. But in the words of my professional photographer friend... 'People who aren't pros and are charging for their work are killing the industry'.... It's up to you weather you think that is true or not. Are the cheap Ipod replicas killing the Ipod market...I dont think so.
__________________
http://www.flickr.com/photos/cranzor/ Last edited by Charles89; 02-19-2010 at 11:49 AM. |
|
|
|
| Sponsored Links |
![]() ThePhotoForum.com is the premier Photography Forum & Digital Camera Resource! Registered Users do not see the above ads. Please Register - It's Free! |
|
|
#77 |
|
I spend too much of my life on TPF!
Join Date: Feb 2009
Location: Rain City
Posts: 871
My Photos Are OK to Edit
Thanked 14 Times in 12 Posts
My Gallery: (0)
|
Read this.
Hopefully you'll get a better idea of what to charge, or if you should be charging at all. |
|
|
|
|
|
#78 |
|
***** Tool
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Cleveland, Ohio
Posts: 2,851
My Photos Are OK to Edit
Thanked 216 Times in 188 Posts
My Gallery: (0)
|
Not really, just like any industry there are quality ''products'' and cheap ''products''. If there were no amateur doing the work for $100, people who cant afford $1000 shoots would still not buy it... Are the cheap Ipod replicas killing the Ipod market...I dont think so. I am predominately on the wholesale side of the industry, meaning I do work for the retail stores. I work in a building that has 4 other jewelers that do the same thing, wholsale repair for retailers. I am the best of the bunch. If you want quality work, done right the first time, you come to me. I am doing quite well in my first 5 months of business, because of my reputation. My biggest problem is dealing with complaints about my prices. Retailers are more than willing to use me, but they want my quality work, at the prices of the lesser qualified trade shops. To compete, I am forced to undervalue my labor. Mind you, I don't meet there prices, and often when someone complains, I refer them to the other shops. ![]() Furthermore, I receeve plenty of work that was done by those shops to fix, and redo the job right. I am expected to give the customer a break too! I smile and tell them how much money they would have saved, coming to me first. ![]() They slowly come around. But I am still limited in my pricing. It seems to me the reason why the other shops are still in business, is because the customers are driven by price, and will accept lower quality work because they are getting it at a low price. This is something that is very hard to overcome. Slowly I am seeing where I can raise my prices, an I am making adjustments gradually. This is the same all over in any service industry. Prices become tied to the lowest player. The way I see the art photo field, is you can sell a matted print for $25. You have plenty of cheap venues to sell in as well. What the artist will find, as his work gets better, and he/she is selling a ton at $25, the price can start going up. As your quality and prices rise, you move yourself out of the street vender arena, and move towards local small art galleries. If you are doing well there, again, you go up the ladder. Raise your price per print, and move into a better market for it. |
|
|
|
|
|
#79 |
|
I spend too much of my life on TPF!
Join Date: Feb 2009
Posts: 554
My Photos Are NOT OK to Edit
Thanked 2 Times in 2 Posts
My Gallery: (0)
|
Racefan.
From the things you've said, here: Quote:
community college in BEGINNING photography classes. Plus I wasn't taking non stop photography classes too, you gotta throw in gen ed's too, so I wasn't really a full time photography student. When I took my first class at Columbia College, they actually made me start from stratch because I didn't know that.
Then it seems clear; pass it on. There will be chances far and wide in the future. Let this one pass, work on your skills - particularly, in the areas in which you would want to work. And in the areas you aren't so familiar with, don't get paid for photographing unless you're dead keen and have gone through some familiarising with that area. I assume, by your OP, that you are getting mostly portraiture, maybe wedding, shoot offers. A wedding should be passed on. Time, practice and equipment are necessities in this field, and you really don't want to ruin someone's somewhat best day. Portraiture? Sure, it's not so pressing, but really, the more you work in aiming higher in this field, the better your first shots and impressions will be. It'll make it all the worth while.
__________________
|
|
|
|
|
|
#80 |
|
TPF Junkie!
Join Date: May 2008
Location: UK - England
Posts: 7,820
My Photos Are OK to Edit
Thanked 214 Times in 188 Posts
My Gallery: (0)
|
Um....weddings arn't the topic here (I just wrote about them not being the topic a page ago).
This is not wedding thread!!
__________________
How to get critique and feedback on your photography! The Wildlife Project My Flickr The Mentor Scheme mentoring on TPF all are welcome to read and apply Gear list: Canon 400D+batterygrip; Canon 70-200mm f2.8 IS L M2!! Canon MPE 65mm f2.8 macro; Sigma 70mm f2.8 macro; Sigma 150mm f2.8 macro; 580EX2; more teleconverters than is healthy! "When you have to shoot, shoot, don't talk" Tuco Sometimes a good song helps as well |
|
|
|
![]() |
Lower Navigation
|
||||||
|
||||||
| Tags |
| photographer, rates, student |
| Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
| Visitors found this page by searching for: |
|
Nobody landed on this page from a search engine, yet!
|
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
| Sponsored Links |