Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/05/14
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]- --- Paul Chefurka <Paul_Chefurka@pmc-sierra.com> wrote: > > -----Original Message----- > > From: Michael Scarpitti > [mailto:mikescarpitti@yahoo.com] > > Sent: Sunday, May 14, 2000 8:18 PM > > To: leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us > > Subject: RE: [Leica] Thanks!! OT Nikon F5 > > > > Let's take two groups of photographers who have > "pro > > equipment": > > > > 1.) Amateurs (doctors, lawyers, dentists, business > > owners) > > 2.) Pros > > > > Wanna think about that again? > > Not really. All you're saying is that members of > high-income professions > can afford top-of-the-line gear for their hobbies. > What else is new? That > fact doesn't relegate professional photographers to > the bottom of the social > barrel. > I didn't say that. Where does that leave you and me, who left photopgraphy as a "profession" to make MUCH better money elsewhere? I've been there and done that. I'm damned good with a camera. But I'm never ever going to be a pro again. But who does that leave in the profession? Those who can stand to work for miserable pay. Those who are self-employed (and use soft-focus filters and "do weddings"). Need I say more? Many, many doctors and dentists I know are damned good photographers. They have the time, equipment, and resources to do so. My opinions of pros and wannabe pros is based on YEARS of experience meeting and talking to them. They're often dedicated, hard-working, and loyal to their clientele. The most successful are always ahead of the pack, not followers of the latest fashion. One of the most successful portrait/wedding photographers in my area was a jazz saxophone player before he turned "pro". He gets BIG bucks for weddings, and does such things as scouting the locales a week before hand to see where the shadows fall, etc. Nothing is left to chance. On the other hand, many pros and semi-pros don't get it. They buy F5's with their 80-200's, resting on a Bogen tripod, and shoot Velvomita. That this is NOT the way to go never dawns on them. Then there are the nature guys. Tall, sometimes with glasses, with their arms cradling on their F4 or F5 with a 600mm lens, wearing their photo vests, with longish hair and a neatly trimmed beard. In short, the typical pro is either someone who is so gifted that he would be succesfull at anything he tried, and is wildly sucessful because he knows where the bucks are (maybe 5%), or is a hack with a Nikon who earns a "living" following the latest trends (95%). That my 2 cents worth. > What I will grant you is that photography is an > abysmally underpaid and > undervalued profession. This fact prompts many who > would otherwise consider > it as an interesting, fulfilling and meaningful > career to look elsewhere. I > speak from experience here - I was a pro for about > 10 years, and now manage > software designers for a living. I'm no smarter and > have no more > self-esteem now than I did then, but I make a heck > of a lot more money. > > Frankly, I consider professional photography to be > one of the more demanding > professions. I have nothing but respect for those > who are successful at it, > and nothing but heartfelt sympathy for those who > aren't. I've met very few > insecure dullards in the business. So whose > perceptions are right? > > Paul Chefurka __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Send instant messages & get email alerts with Yahoo! Messenger. http://im.yahoo.com/