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Re: photographers rip off or not ?
By:
PeoriaIllinoisan
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Aug 6, 2012 - 04:32 pm |
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Fifty Dollars is represented as $50 with the dollar sign in front of the number. Generally when you see something after the number you view it as cents. There ya go.
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photographers rip off or not ?
By:
Pock
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Aug 6, 2012 - 04:35 pm |
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@froggy
I certainly have not said you or anyone should work for nothing. If you'd read, I said people should be compensated for their time and equipment and I even said perhaps the rate should be higher. |
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Re: photographers rip off or not ?
By:
Chef Kevin
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Aug 6, 2012 - 04:37 pm |
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Can I say I actually kinda agree with Pock? Follow me here. The nameless, faceless, unknown at the time future Mrs. Chef Kevin and I get married. We hire a photographer who takes pictures of the event. How can the photographer hold the copyright to me and the Mrs. Without us, there is no picture. I can understand being compensated for the work before, during and after the event (because very few can understand that better than me) and have no issues with that, but holding the copyright to pictures of me? I grimace.
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Re: photographers rip off or not ?
By:
froggy
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Aug 6, 2012 - 04:52 pm |
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The photographer holds the copyright because they created the work using their equipment, time and training. You paid for limited use of that copyright--I.e. using the pics on Facebook, making prints to give to family, framing them in your house, etc. Some photogs will transfer the entire copyright to you and all the pics. Some won't.
Most photographers will have you sign a model release up front that says you understand you have limited copyright use but they own the pics and can do with them what they wish (within limits). Most just use them in their portfolios and blogs/websites but some will also sell them to the stock houses to make a little more money, especially if they're "specialty" photos--like you dressed up as a chef from the 30s or something. My kid has modeled for a local stock house and we signed the model release for that up front. She also got compensated up front for it. Copyright law is tricky at times. Added: something to think about--Monica Lewinsky was plastered all over the news because one photographer had one photo of her. He made tons of money off that one pic and the story was huge. Bet he was happy he hadn't signed away the copyright to all those pics!! (http://digitaljournalist.org/issue9807/editorial.htm). * This message has been revised. |
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Re: photographers rip off or not ?
By:
froggy
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Aug 6, 2012 - 04:55 pm |
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That definitely sounds like a ripoff, why not just take the one CD and make a copy of it yourself and save $50?
You have to be really careful this day and age because anyone and everyone fancies themselves a professional photographer with the way photo technology has leapt
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Re: photographers rip off or not ?
By:
1ITGuy
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Aug 6, 2012 - 05:45 pm |
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@diezelmom303, why don't you post the sheet, or website so we can know what the heck you're talking about.
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Re: photographers rip off or not ?
By:
Pock
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Aug 6, 2012 - 06:07 pm |
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@froggy Now that I'm done jogging, I can give a proper response.
I bet @Chef Kevin, wouldn't cook a meal for my family for 50 cents--not with all his years of experience and training.
But I Hera @Pock is fairly cheap.
@Pock, why don't you come over and fix my computer for free--or do whatever it is you do for free? Or better yet, set it all up so that I can do it myself but you can stand there next to me and guide me for free while I use your equipment. Yeah, that's it. Lol!
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Re: photographers rip off or not ?
By:
mizzouman_2000
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Aug 6, 2012 - 07:39 pm |
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photography isn't art. A photographer is just capturing an image with technology, they aren't creating anything.
If a photographer can claim a "copyright" by using technology to capture an image, than in the same right, the manufacture of the camera could.
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Re: photographers rip off or not ?
By:
mizzouman_2000
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Aug 6, 2012 - 07:50 pm |
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Beauty does not equal art, While the images are creative, I'd argue they are rarely original.
Put me next to any photographer with the same equipment and angle and I'll take the same picture. Put a paint brush in my hand, and sit me next to a Da Vinci painting and I'd have no chance of replicating his original work.
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Re: photographers rip off or not ?
By:
mizzouman_2000
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Aug 6, 2012 - 08:05 pm |
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I bet @Chef Kevin, wouldn't cook a meal for my family for 50 cents--not with all his years of experience and training.
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Re: photographers rip off or not ?
By:
Chef Kevin
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Aug 6, 2012 - 08:42 pm |
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photography isn't art. A photographer is just capturing an image with technology, they aren't creating anything.
If a photographer can claim a "copyright" by using technology to capture an image, than in the same right, the manufacture of the camera could.
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Re: photographers rip off or not ?
By:
Pock
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Aug 6, 2012 - 09:20 pm |
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You must think highly of your photographic abilities. I'm not afraid to admit that I don't like portrait work. I've been studying photography and involved with it for 8 years and I think portrait work, especially using studio lighting, is some of the most difficult. If I were given the same exact studio equipment as a highly talented portrait photographer under the same conditions, I would be extremely surprised if I could set up and produce as good of a portrait as the more knowledgeable photographer, and I know how to use my camera. Most times I shoot in full manual mode and never in full automatic mode. There's more to it than point and click the shutter.
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Re: photographers rip off or not ?
By:
Pock
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Aug 6, 2012 - 09:25 pm |
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Are you serious or are you just trying to stir siht? If photography isn't an art, is like to see you produce results that top notch photogs produce.
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Re: photographers rip off or not ?
By:
froggy
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Aug 6, 2012 - 09:25 pm |
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Sure, someone can copy and modify your recipes, Chef K, but no one can copy it exactly and claim it as theirs. That's the beauty--and the curse--of copyright. And plenty of folk guard their recipes with their life. One dish that is incredible is the Peas and Peanuts from a place in some small town in Michigan called the Embers. I even believe they've gone out of business but they still guard that recipe so everyone else can come close to recreating it but it never does seem to taste the same.
I use plenty of lighting "recipes" that other photographers put out there for their photos but even so, I don't come close to recreating the photo they originally created. Mine might look similar but it's definitely not the same, yet it's mine and subject to copyright. Chef K, if you ever decide to get married, hire a photog who is willing to transfer the copyright over to you. Heck, for the right price I'll do it. P.S. Art is all subjective but the fact that it was "created" rather than copied and pasted is what matters. * This message has been revised. |
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Re: photographers rip off or not ?
By:
shifty
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Aug 7, 2012 - 12:11 am |
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Copyright is sure to stir the pot, no matter what the forum, heh. We have similar threads frequently on a sign forum I visit and it's always a debate.
My thoughts: Photographers copyright their photos because they generally cannot ask the price they wish for the time they spend prepping, taking photos, modifications, proofs and eventual print. Mostly this is just because it is difficult for a semi-professional photographer to maintain enough steady business to turn a hobby into a business. So, they retain the rights to any future copies of the images in the hopes of making residuals through additional print sales, which may or may not pan out. I have seen people pay ridiculous sums of money for what amount to average pictures taken in creative spaces or locations. **Edit: Or a ridiculous amount of photoshop filtering. On top of the $500 sitting fee, they pay crazy fees for prints that were made at the Walmart photo lab in most cases. I'm not knocking photographers, particularly those that go out of their way to shoot unique and out-of-the-way locales and instances. However, I'm going to agree with Pock that it's complete BS when a photographer retains copyright to portraits, especially when collecting exorbitant sitting fees. Right to use it in a portfolio is certainly fair though. When I got married, I made it very clear to the photographer that I would be owning the master images and would not be paying anything additional for prints in the future. I think we paid $700, including the over 10 CD's of full-res images. * This message has been revised. |
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