Photos online - versus live
I am enjoying my DSLR immensely but I have come to conclude I hate looking at them on my computer once the post processing is done and really want to start printing more of them. This then has other issues and one of course is cost, but I think I can swallow what I need to for the printing of a few. Then the other issue there is only so much wall space and the viewership is very limited. It was one of the reasons I contacted the Church I liked the photo and would have had it sit on my hard drive to viewed occasionally by me or friends or family and thought what a waste.
I know I can upload them and share some online, but this is what I am finding out, viewing them on a computer kills so much of the detail that I see in my printed copies. I have sold a couple of my prints, this past one was the first I gave away and would consider offering a few others away for free also just so they don't sit on my computer or online where 90% of the people run at resolutions or their monitors are not calibrated and that I think just ruin photos, but monitors,video and calibration devices can be very costly so I get it. And even then most computer users have don't even do a basic calibration to their monitors.
So right now I am at a point on what I want to do, selling them would obviously be the best solution but my stuff just is not that good to sell more than the odd one. I am going to probably cover my house in as many as I can but stilll again only so much wall space. So here is the question rather than just have them sit lost in bits and bytes on a hard drive is it worth offering them as donations to auctions, hospitals so and so forth. This last print was gifted and no cost to me for frame and mounting. I can do my own frames and mounting, glass there are a ton of places around who will cut it and sell me it really cheap. I just think it is unfortunate that mine, yours or anyones who has some decent shots just get lost on their hard drives.
After that very long and irrelevant rambling what do you all plan to do with your photos that you just really like. The ones that you look and say, I really took that?I am not in this for the money I have a job, well my wife says that might be a stretch lol, but I just want everyone to see them, even if it is just a glance, I want them viewed but not online, in print where they really show how they were meant to viewed. Opinions, comments?
Caveat: enthusiast beware
I think that any amateur enthusiast needs to be careful when either giving away, donating, or selling the occasional photo. The consequences may not meet your expectatins.
An owner of a private park asked for photos taken during an activity day so that she could print them out for the residents. They were snapshot quality rather than serious photography so the photographer agreed. Prints were made available by the owner to the residents, but the photographer in leafing through a magazine later found one of his photos used to advertise the private park.
A sports enthusiast taking photos of his own child in an event was asked by a neighbour to try and shoot his child as well. The photographer did so and gave the print to his neighbour. It appeared in a magazine without any photo credit and the neighbour of course was paid well for it.
Many new pros when they are just beginning make the mistake of not using a contract that specifies that the photographer retains all rights to the photo beyond the print that is being purchased. The result has sometimes been that the purchaser has re-sold the photo for more than the purchase price and then in one case it showed up in a major advertising campaign all without an credit or proper remuneration to the original photographer.
No matter what your intentions are, every photographer (I would hope) wants to retain credit for his/her photos, wants to be paid for major use, and wants to control the use of his/her photos. This requires a photo contract, even if the photo is given away. Otherwise the photographer stands to lose and many have become outraged and frustrated by the situations that they got themselves into through careless practices. Shooting yourself in the foot through your own stupidity is not to be recommended.
Tegan