Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2011/07/18
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Tina writes: "It's almost impossible to make a living as a professional photographer these days and I try to discourage everybody who asks. You have to be better than the prosumers but that's not often an issue since "good enough" and "cheap" trump "best quality" most of the time." - - - - - A while back I posted a similar complaint about a photographic version of Gresham's Law - Bad, i.e. adequate cheap photography forces out good, i.e. expensive professional photography. Here is a portion of the text: *Photographic equipment has evolved to the point where little technical knowledge is required to make adequate photographs. Anyone can pick up a camera, point it at a subject and get a perfectly exposed, in focus, image. It is all in knowing where to point the camera and that facility is shared by many who do not classify themselves as photographers. There is no long apprenticeship learning the fundamentals. The entry bar is very low. This extends to commercial photography as well as pictures of Aunt Julia. A national distributor of mechanical equipment in my neighborhood photographs all the pictures in his voluminous catalog himself. "Why," he says, "pay thousands to a professional photographer. How much skill does it take to make a picture of a bolt?"* Larry Z