Thursday, April 28, 2011

Real life uses

It's been a little while since our last post... nevertheless.

I found today, 2 real life cases of where my images are being used after being purchased. Two. W0000t!! :D After having long given up thinking I'd find examples of my images being used, I read on Microstocking or Ministocking how the author googled "luis santos shutterstock credits". Replacing his name with mine I found two cases of my own images being used in the wild!!

Ahh...I had to post this somewhere, far too good a find. Hence the posting revival! Here are the images and their uses:

As a brief look back at our blog, I don't think I've done anything for microstock since end of 2009. However, I suspect (hope?) 2011/2012 will see a revival of sorts...

Saturday, December 19, 2009

Why does light get stretched when reflected off water?

Here's a couple of photos that illustrate how light reflects off the water.

In the first, the lights are 'stretched'. Note that the lightning bolt also casts a reflection off the water in the same way as the apartment and street lights.

In the second pic, the light sources are not stretched:


So what causes the difference in the way water reflects off the water? Use of a circular polariser? The stillness of the water? The angle the picture is taken?

I suspect the relative angle is important. The first photo was taken of buildings at least 200m away, the second was taken of trees some 30m away. I suspect the smaller the angle of the light source relative to the camera lens, the larger the apparent stretching of the light across the water.

If this is true, this is bad. In order to get an unstretched reflection of lightning off the water, the photo must be taken from close quarters!

Monday, November 16, 2009

Progress to date

I haven't really made a great of progress yet towards my stated goals since my last post. However, I have taken a few photos. Actually a lot of photos. Surely the laws of probability dictate that one or two of them are worthy of submission? In the meantime I've posted a fraction of them on flickr.com:



New York



US East Coast



Canada East Coast


In other news, the good folks at www.schmap.com have agreed to post my bumble bee photo on their website to promote tourism in and around Canberra. I'm a little surprised anyone could put Canberra and tourism in the same sentence but there you go. And how exactly a bumble bee constitutes a reason to visit Canberra and surrounds is beyond me. However, the gesture is much appreciated even if the pecuniary gain is $0 and my 'net profit' for the year remains in the red.

Wednesday, October 7, 2009

Progress Update

It's almost mid-October.......I think a progress update is due.

September
Last month was quite a month for me. I think my efforts since July-August started paying dividends - I got a massive jump in earnings. I earnt a total of $27.32 across all sites (!!!!!). Comparatively....(as my below post indicates)....in August I earnt a measely $11.

In terms of goals, that almost got me to me to the $30 mark....which I'm hoping I'll earn in at least one month from now till the end of the year. Let us see what the next few months bring.....although i have a sneaking suspicion I'll be lucky to hit 30 (seasonal demand is decreasing from now till Dec).

Portfolio
Last month I didn't add very many photos to my portfolio. I think one reason is that I worked 2 out of the 4 saturdays....not leaving too much time for photo-taking. I ended up submitting around 5, and only 1 or 2 got accepted at each site. These are the ones that made it:








T
raining
I was talking to a colleague at work who had recently started getting into photography....and he said he'd joined some Photography courses. After a little enquiry and some research, I ended up deciding to join too - Camera Skills at the Sydney Community College. It's a bit pricey......but I think it's exactly what I need - while I consider my layout/composition to be relatively decent....my technical skills with the camera are shameful. Eight classes of technical photog jargon should get me up to speed in no time!! I may even post some interesting learnings..... :-)

Monday, September 7, 2009

End of Year Goal

Ok.....so I finally get around to it.

The target.

Goal, aim, milestone.....stake in the ground. As you will.

As aspiring microstockers, there needs to be a goal we set for ourselves. The reason for the goal may differ, but the common aim is for it to stretch us more than we would typically like, yet not so much that it is unachievable.

As far as microstocking goals go, I think there are two key indicators that can be used - Earnings, and Number of approved photos. The former is the ultimate indicator of success, but can be subject to seasonal variation in demand, price policy changes at the major sites and changing credit/subscription ratios of downloads. The latter doesn't indicate the profitability of your portfolio - a large number of photos in a niche market may not yield good return - but does provide a stable, consistent measure of effort.

Current achievement:

Below are my current portfolio sizes across the various MS sites:
  • iStockPhoto: 36
  • ShutterStock: 40
  • Dreamstime: 61
  • BigStockPhoto: 80
  • Fotolia: 74
  • 123rf: 89
On average, that comes to around 60 photos / site. My earnings last month were $11, and the average over the last 6 months has been $9.50.

Goal:

To hope to progress further, more quickly....I aim to achieve the following by 1st of January 2010:

Approved photos:
  • iStockPhoto: 50
  • ShutterStock: 55
  • Average across all sites: 75
Earnings:
  • Sep 09 - Dec 09: At least one month with $30 sales
  • Jul 09 - Dec 09: Average of $20 / month
As an additional goal, I also aim to upload at least 3 videos to iStockVideo (and thus pass the test to become a regular contributor). Given my new Nikon D90...I owe it to myself.

.....

So there you have it.
My goals to achieve by 1st of January 2010.

What are yours?

Saturday, August 29, 2009

Looking for your image on the web

I was thinking about a couple of my images which I've posted on www.flickr.com. They're been viewed a fair number of times and I figured that they might have been re-used elsewhere on the web.

Turns out that Tineye scoures the web (over 1 billion images and counting) for images and stores a 'digital footprint' of each. You provide your photo and it will look for the same image, even if cropped or altered. Examples here.

It didn't find my images (not even on flickr.com) for any number of reasons:
1. it hasn't crawled the entire web yet
2. the photos were added since the last time it crawled flickr.com
3. the Tineye web-crawler didn't crawl over particular parts of an otherwise public website which contained a robots.txt file.

Anyway, food for thought given our endeavours...

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Commercial vs. Editorial photography

I had just had one of my photos rejected by Shutterstock and was investigating whether submitting it as an editorial photo would get it approved, when I came across this article (linked to in the Shutterstock FAQ) on Commercial vs. Editorial Stock photography.

From the article:

In short: commercial stock photography offers high upfront money, but questionable artistic reward and little opportunity for long-term photographer/buyer relationships.

Editorial stock (photo illustration) receives lower fees, but the photos enjoy longer shelf-life and multiple sales over the long haul. Editorial stock is generally more introspective, sensitive, and universally appealing, and eventually can become historically significant. And the nature of most editorial markets, with less turnover of personnel, provide photographers with opportunities for long-term sales associations with buyers. All that marketing homework has a chance to reap more mileage.

It then goes on to talk about the appeal of editorial photography.

Given that I'm not inclined towards studio shots, and find myself increasingly attracted to the candid/artistic aspects of photography........found the article quite interesting.........