fltogger
Member
unfortunately the more develope an attitude like bogpony the less photographers youll see at events. ruins it for those that do pay for photos..
simplez.
simplez.
unfortunately the more develope an attitude like bogpony the less photographers youll see at events. ruins it for those that do pay for photos..
simplez.
I have been watching this thread and please please please can one of the photograhers come to a venue near me- our local venue affiliated dressage and SJ etc hardly ever has a photographer and I would love some pics. MY OH who is a good photograher won't come so we are pictureless!!! Happy to pay!!!
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I have been watching this thread and please please please can one of the photograhers come to a venue near me- our local venue affiliated dressage and SJ etc hardly ever has a photographer and I would love some pics. MY OH who is a good photograher won't come so we are pictureless!!! Happy to pay!!!
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unfortunately the more develope an attitude like bogpony the less photographers youll see at events. ruins it for those that do pay for photos..
simplez.
You'll have about 40 next week![]()
Shakes head in disbelief and trudges off to find out if I am still capable of holding down a proper job. Do you refuse to buy the tea or bacon butty at an event based on the same bizarre reasoning?
Excuse me....do not shoot me down when all i am doing is taking an interest in a thread and providing reasons for both sides of the arguement....
I agree with what applecart has said, photographers need to realise that many competitors can just about afford to compete, let alone buy extras when at an event. Some competitors are competing less often because of the lack of money. If you are not selling enough pictures photographers have to think WHY. Is it because they are too expensive or not what the customer wants or are there other reasons.
I know when I take pictures on my cheap digital camera I can go to Boots and have a picture printed for about 30p, now compare that to being charged £7 upwards for a picture. I think photographers definatley need to go down the jpeg image route for a small cost and then more people will buy.
Okay....if anyone is bored and fancies helping with my ongoing experiment....do you want to try and lift the image of Ben Maher from this URL :-
http://www.krk.me.uk/Test2.html
Note: You will only be able to see Ben if you use Internet Explorer and you will need to allow pop-up's from within your browser (apologies to everyone else)...
liz that is true a lot of people cant afford photos but then that doesnt excuse stealing them.
can i refer you back to the list of costs i posted a page or two back, like competing a horse it all adds up. id confidently put my own money on an image taken on a cheap compact printed at boots will be blown out of the water buy a professional version.
personally i hope that the cheap jpg option never happens, all that achieves is to damage the industy as a whole. plus a lot of photographers prefer to deal in prints as its easier to control copyright. if youre supplying a high resolution jpg for a couple of quid youre effectively giving licence to that person to have umpteen prints, massive canvases made up etc etc. it doesnt make good business sense.
hope that makes sense![]()
I agree with what applecart has said, photographers need to realise that many competitors can just about afford to compete, let alone buy extras when at an event. Some competitors are competing less often because of the lack of money. If you are not selling enough pictures photographers have to think WHY. Is it because they are too expensive or not what the customer wants or are there other reasons.
I know when I take pictures on my cheap digital camera I can go to Boots and have a picture printed for about 30p, now compare that to being charged £7 upwards for a picture. I think photographers definatley need to go down the jpeg image route for a small cost and then more people will buy.
Okay....if anyone is bored and fancies helping with my ongoing experiment....do you want to try and lift the image of Ben Maher from this URL :-
http://www.krk.me.uk/Test2.html
Note: You will only be able to see Ben if you use Internet Explorer and you will need to allow pop-up's from within your browser (apologies to everyone else)...
http://www.krk.me.uk/Test2.html
Chrome = failed
Opera = unhappy face only
firefox = unhappy face only
I agree that if you were to enlarge an image from a cheap camera and a top end camera used by a professional then the latter would come out on top. BUT how many people have space for these larger pictures? Our house has quite a few professional pictures taken from various horse events, infact we have no room for them, therefore if we do buy pictures we go smaller ones i.e 6x4
I agree that if you were to enlarge an image from a cheap camera and a top end camera used by a professional then the latter would come out on top. BUT how many people have space for these larger pictures? Our house has quite a few professional pictures taken from various horse events, infact we have no room for them, therefore if we do buy pictures we go smaller ones i.e 6x4
You'd still be able to tell the difference at that size.
Seriously, I can put two photos side by side one taken on my fairly decent two year old compact camera and one taken with my husband's bridge camera of the same subject in the same conditions and tell the difference, especially if it is taken in awkward conditions. Even at 6x4. If you added a pro DSLR I'm sure you could tell the difference in all circumstances.
It isn't just about blurring or pixilation it is about crispness and colour etc
It can also be about actually getting the subject at all. A Pro DSLR will have a separate wideangle and telephoto lense so that subjects very close or very far can be photographed. It will also have a fast speed so that several images can be taken over one fence without compromising quality, whereas a cheap one will not be able to refresh in time to get two at the same fence.
BUT at the end of the day if you aren't bothered about the quality and are happy with the pictures you can take yourself fair enough, but don't steal the pro ones.
In case you hadn't noticed we are in a recession. Those of us that still have a job are very priveledged to be able to compete but I think you will find that in order to do that we have to do everything else on a shoe string. Ihave not been on holiday for over 4 years, nor can I afford to eat out, visit the cinema, buy clothes or do any of the other things most people do. On the bottom of my list is photos.
I am losing my job in 22 days time due to Council cut backs. For your info no I do not buy food or drink at shows as I consider paying £3.00 for a couple of rashers of streaky bacon slapped between two pieces of bun a rip off as I do about paying £1.00 for what is essentially a tea bag. I do not mind paying sensible prices for anything but what I resent is people charging silly prices for things. And the photographer that calculated that you would only get 20 customers from a likely 200 competitors is talking ridiculous. I have seen queues of people at our event photographers van before now, and can say most definetely that if YOU are over charging people then they will stop buying your product.
There will be a difference in quality but I am not prepared to buy a photo every week or every time there is a photographer there. I will buy a picture if it is particularly good or at a special event which is not very often. Mum will often take photos, yes they may not be as good as professional ones but for the purpose they serve they are good enough for me.
Applecart14, I wish you well and hope that life improves. My own life has had it's ups and downs and will not doubt continue to do so, as will yours.
Shall we agree to disagree and leave it there?