Freelance Photography Rates Per Photo

Posted in Photography by admin on April 29, 2009 No Comments yet

Freelance Photography Rates Per Photo

Freelance Graphic Design as a Work-At-Home Business

Are you a whiz kid with a pen in your hand? Can you whip up photographic mash-ups that make the Mona Lisa look like illegible scrawl on a bathroom wall? Do you look at album covers and glance at the heavens above, shaking your head knowingly? Then why not put those skills to use and show those rank amateurs how it’s really done?

Whether it’s putting together album covers, posters and logos for the local garage band, doing ensemble flyers for traveling street theatre or producing viral advertising for the world’s largest shoemaker, there’s never been a bigger market for freelance graphic designers, or a better time to be one. The software and hardware that once made digital design and subsequent mass-marketing a rare and expensive medium has cheapened to the extent that anybody with an internet connection, an inexpensive personal computer and an inspired idea can have their work broadcast to tens of millions of people around the world.

Graphic design in its truest form is about conveying a message with a combination of carefully selected colors, symbols, images, shapes and words that, put together, create a unique identity for a product. Those who can do this with rapidity, enthusiasm and a little flair are always in demand. If you’ve got some ability within the realm of traditional fine arts, all the better, but it’s not the be all and end all of your career. Like all artistic pursuits, though, you need the right tools for the job. Specifically, you’re looking for the following:

1. Software. Whether you work with a can of paint and an easel or a mouse and a monitor, you are going to eventually end up with a digitized version of your finished work for delivery to the client. For those of us with liquid assets, I highly recommend Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator. If you can’t splurge the high cost for these programs, you can find extremely serviceable replacements in the free, open-source GIMP and Inkscape. Together, these should cover your needs for vector artwork, photo retouching/manipulation, post-processing and final file exports.

2. A good digital (or even film-based!) camera is a useful optional extra. I prefer Canon DSLRs for their aggressively reasonable prices and excellent image quality, but high-end point and shoots can do the job in a pinch. They do, however, lack slightly in credibility while on-site. For those of us nostalgic for the days of 35mm, you can find brilliant film SLRs on eBay for knock-down prices.

3. If, however, photography isn’t your cup of tea, then free stock photo services such as MorgueFile or Stock.xchng are excellent resources that do all the work for you.

4. Finally, a flatbed scanner always comes in handy, whether you’re digitizing hand-drawn designs, scanning client-provided images or transmitting 35mm negatives. The Epson Perfection and Canoscan 8400F have garnered extensive praise for being well-rounded and affordable. Throw in a color inkjet printer or a membership to the local Kinkos, and you’re done.

So now you’re well-equipped and looking to set the world on fire as a gun-for-hire designer, but don’t know where to start. Assuming you haven’t done this kind of work before, your first priority would be to produce a varied portfolio guaranteed to blow the socks off any potential employer. A useful technique, I’ve found, is to start by going through your collection of books, video games and CDs, and picking out a few of each with covers you either hate or love. Decide why it is they produce such strong reactions in either case, and what you would have done differently. With this in mind, attempt to redraw as many as you can in your own image. As you come up with successful designs, put them aside.

Similarly, find some eye-catching stock photos and see what comes about when you simply sit and play with them in your chosen image manipulation software. Get to know the functions of the software and the way images respond to different treatments until it’s second nature.

When you think you’ve got a killer portfolio and the mindset to successfully close a deal, it’s time to find a client. Great first-time employers include local musicians and stage acts, as well as neighborhood businesses with uninspiring logos or lackluster advertising material. (You know what we’re talking about when I mention brochures or restaurant menus that look like they were put together by a ten year old using Word Art and MS Paint).

Most potential clients of this caliber don’t know how presentation affects their business, or feel that hiring a graphic designer to do work for them would be too expensive, so offer them a cheap, friendly, local alternative: yourself! For small projects, offer a flat rate; and for larger ones, keep a log of hours you spend and how many designs you produced so that you can bill accordingly.

It helps, too, to do some gratis work to get your name out there. Use your judgment and offer to redesign for free when you think it’s suitable. Networking and subsequently maintaining contacts in the local business community is what can net you, initially, the most lucrative projects, as well as long-term contract work. Graphic designers in the freelance arena have to think of themselves as part-artist, part-salesperson. Pound the pavement, scan the back pages of community newspapers for projects that look interesting, make calls to fashion, art and IT magazines to see if they have any space for an aspiring designer in their ranks.

On a larger scale, attracting corporate clients requires an online presence, and enough of the above to make an impression. Magazine freelancing in particular can generate contacts and assets in the upper tiers of international marketing and design. Spend some time uploading your creations to a website like Flickr.com or DeviantArt.com, where you can get free exhibition space, as well as having a place to call your own that you can point people to for easily accessible examples of your work. This is just an extension of your portfolio; but like your portfolio, make sure it’s a showcase of all your abilities. Indicate especially that you can diversify and handle different mediums and project sizes.

Freelancing as a graphic designer can be initially difficult; more often than not you may find potential clients slamming doors in your face. Take this in stride and persevere. Like most creative positions, as you accumulate paying jobs, more will become available to you. There’s a lot of demand globally for you to carve out a niche for yourself in freelance graphic design.

About the Author

Brian Scott is a freelance writer for
http://www.FreelanceWriting.com
, a free website offering
freelance writing jobs
and hundreds of
writer’s guidelines
to paying magazines. Read his
blog for freelance writers
at http://workingwritersnewsletter.blogspot.com


Freelance Photographer's Handbook: Success in Professional Digital Photography


Freelance Photographer’s Handbook: Success in Professional Digital Photography


$31.99


Providing useful strategies for becoming a freelance photographer and building a successful business, this in-depth manual offers a complete overview of the profession–from perfecting the art form to project management. Demonstrating important points for getting started–customer service, marketing, billing, and negotiating prices–this comprehensive guide also delves into important matters of law, taxes, permits, insurance, and copyrights. Paying special attention to the evolving role of technology in the creation, marketing, and sales of images, this reference provides invaluable advice on digital photo equipment, computers and software, and custom processing. Loaded with entirely new images, this revised edition details a variety of interests–such as advertising, entertainment, fashion, or travel–and presents step-by-step instructions for turning a passion for photography into an exciting, full-time career.

Big Bucks Selling Your Photography: A Complete Photo Business Package for All Photographers


Big Bucks Selling Your Photography: A Complete Photo Business Package for All Photographers


$30.04


This updated guide to financial success for aspiring photographers helps them make the leap to earning a living as freelancers. Explaining how to handle the financial complexities of professional photography, this resource provides expert guidance on attracting clients, staying out of legal trouble, navigating the ins and outs of copyright law, and setting and collecting fair but competitive rates. Important advice is also included on how freelancers can handle tax preparation and deal with the threat of audits. New sections feature discussions on how freelance photographers can effectively market their work and how to capitalize on new digital technologies. Forms to help freelancers elevate their careers, such as model release contracts and copyright applications, are also included.

Freelance photography: Advice from the pros


Freelance photography: Advice from the pros


$6.4


This book is in Good Used condition

Photography


Photography


$3.98


Offered here is a brief history of photography and descriptions of early techniques pioneered in the nineteenth century. Also explained is the revolution in photography early in this century with the inventions of roll film from Kodak and the first sophisticated 35 mm. cameras from Leica. Here too are descriptions of photography as an art form, as a component of journalism, and in advertising and fashion. Techniques, processes, darkroom chemistry, photo composition, and different camera types are described in detail.

Digital Photography


Digital Photography


$3.98


"Digital Photography: Top 100 Simplified Tips & Tricks 2nd Edition" has been totally updated for Photoshop Elements 3 and the latest digital camera features to provide adventurous users with 100 useful and surprising techniques that can be used to make better digital photos, prints, and photo-based projects. Organized into 10 chapters, with 10 tasks per chapter, this book provides the time-saving tips, cool secrets, and productivity tricks to help take a reader’s knowledge of digital photography beyond the basics. Full-color screen shots and numbered, step-by-step instructions show readers how to save time and boost productivity. InfoTrends Research Group says Digital camera unit sales will grow from 6.7 million in 2000 to 42 million in 2005, while worldwide revenue from digital camera sales is expected to reach $11.8 billion by 2007 with unit sales surpassing the 18.7 million mark.

Instruction in Photography


Instruction in Photography


$39.85


ACME CAMERAS AND RECTILINEAR LENSES. i t-Press Opinions of the Acme Camera. British Jomal of Ph togr hy. – It folds into a smaller compass, and is lighter and more portable, than by pattern we have yet segn. A ma tmr Phto ra her – . A wonderful, compact, -and fairy-like instrument, exhibiting several new and important features. Sure to be a favpurite with tcurist photographers. Phtography. – One of the greatest-acivances i camera – con struction yet reached, away ahead of anything we have seen. – - – –essrs. Vatson have found, by ingeni a i l m odifications, how to a k tehe weight still lighter, P AA t i l m or – e – firm. – For portability and compactness, ha1 utihty, this Camea ma fairly a d, and to be deserving of tKe title PRICE LIST. – - – 64x4f, x5 8 xG 10×8 d Acme . Camera and three Iris Diaphragm … … … Double Slides … … … Rapid Rectilinear Lens with ., Solid Leather Travelling Casewith sprin lock … 1 15 0 1 15 0 2 2 0 2 10 0 Rotating urntabfe in base, andTripod Stand … … Extra if Camera Slides are bra b ndforhotclirnat – es – —for cash with order. Any part of the above may be sold separately. Prices are subject to five per cent. discount . 38 PR l ZE MEDALS AWARDED including Five Highest Awards, Chicago, 1893 two r Gold bledals, Paris Universal Exhibition, 1889 Gold hledal, Budapesth, 1890 the Medal of the Photo. Society of India, at Calcutta, 1889 the Gold Medal, hlelbourne International Exhibition, 1888 the only hledal. for e r q e a s, and the only hIedal for Studio and Tripod Stands, at the Great Photographlc E ublt on, – Crystal Palace, London, 1888 the only Medal for Photographic Apparatus, Adehde International. Exhibition, 1887 and the only GoldMedal for Photographlc App- us, Liv-l International Exhibition, 1886. Six times placed alone at International Exhlbltions, recelvlng a higher award than any other competitor. A FULLY ILLUSTRATED DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE of Watsons Acme .. and Premier Cameras, . Rapid Rectilinear and Wide-angle Lenses, and every access or, Apparatus, and Material required in Photography, sent post free to any address on appllcatlon. W. WATSON SONS, 313 HighiHolborn, LONDON. Branches 16 Forrest Road, Edinburgh, and 78 Swanston Street, Melbourne, Australia. ESTAB 1 . 837. STEAM FACTORIES g, 10, XI, 16 17 FULWOODS R ENTS, W . C. U G. CAMERAS FOR HAND AND TRIPOD. I I ALL SIZES -From 4 x 34 to 7 X 5in. I I SEVEN DISTINCT PATTERNS -All one Quality-The Highest. 11 Have been In nore than eigbt Years in all Parts of Constant Use for the World. I Opert, to show Fittings N. G. Cntn rncl oscri, 7-endyjorw ork-nftdM ove zents. SPECIFICATION.–Any Lens or Lenses Iris Diaphra, p Automatic Self-Cap Automatic Spring Door Special High-efficiency Shutter, working between the lenses, made entirely of metal hermetically closed Pneumatic Regulation, giving automatic exposures from 4 to, h t h second, and time exposures at will Hand and Pneumatic Releases. N. G. Detachable Changing-Box for plates or films two Spec


Leave a Comment

Spam Protection by WP-SpamFree