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Posts Tagged ‘Freelance’

Wanted: Homepage content tips and freelance writers!

07 Jul

We’re on the lookout for freelance writers to contribute news and short feature content for our homepage. If you’re an experienced writer with great editorial instincts who loves ferreting out interesting and unusual photo-related content, we want to hear from you. 

If you’re interested in contributing to dpreview.com, click here and tell us about yourself – preferably with links to published work. If we like the cut of your jib, we’ll be in touch.

If you’re not interested in writing for DPReview, but you’ve found an interesting story that you think we should write about, you can submit suggestions here.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Reuters will no longer accept edited Raw files from freelance photographers

19 Nov

In an email to freelance photojournalists this week, Reuters has confirmed a change in its photo submission policy requesting that photographers submit JPEGs rather than edited Raw files to the news agency. The message also states that original JPEGs with ‘minimal processing’ are acceptable, for example, level corrections and cropping. Read more

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Freelance Photography Tips from the Experts

11 Aug

We’ve all become a world obsessed with imagery, and this couldn’t be more obvious than the simple fact that the photo heavy social network Instagram currently has 300 million monthly active users. We all see ourselves as amateur photographers, but some of us want our love for a good picture to become far more than a pipe dream. If you’ve Continue Reading

The post Freelance Photography Tips from the Experts appeared first on Photodoto.


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Getting Your Foot in the Door as a Freelance Assignment Photographer

23 Jun

Hurricane Sandy

One of the biggest changes photography has seen over the last 10 years is in photojournalism and documentary photography. Some will see this change as good while others will see this change as bad. The improvements made to consumer DSLR cameras, lenses and editing software have opened the doors for many photography hobbyists to engage in documentary photography.

Gone are the days when having a good camera and access to a darkroom separated the professional photographer from the amateur photographer. The playing field has been levelled and it is open season for anyone to take part. Within this new landscape there is an abundance of opportunities for you to possibly earn a little extra cash by taking photos for your local paper, magazines or online news outlets.

The assignments will always vary. You may be asked to cover a government meeting or the opening of a new business. You may be taking pictures for a human interest story about a unique person in your town. You could be asked to cover a local high school football game or be asked to rush to the scene of an accident. You may find yourself taking pictures of a festival or a gala dinner featuring some movers and shakers.

Police Car

Below is a list of tips that will help you be a better assignment or documentary photographer, and possibly get your foot in the door to get some jobs.

PRACTICE. KNOW YOUR GEAR.

In many regards, photography starts with the gear. It is important to know the limitations of your equipment. It is equally important to know the areas in which your equipment performs well. No matter what camera and lens you are working with, your equipment will have limitations. Don’t spend time wishing for, or wanting a different lens or camera. Use what you have to the best of its ability. A better lens in some warehouse, is not going to help you now.

ASK QUESTIONS OF YOUR ASSIGNMENT EDITOR

As an assignment photographer you should be prepped before you go out by the editor of the publication, or the writer of the story. If you have any questions, ask them! I have never had an assignment editor react poorly to me asking questions about a piece they are asking me to cover.

Ignorance can be overcome by asking questions. Overcoming stupid is more challenging. Don’t be stupid. If you are not clear about what is expected of you, ask questions until you and your editor are on the same page.

WHO? WHAT? WHEN? WHERE? WHY? HOW?

Speaking of questions, do your pictures answer the ones above? Try to take pictures that answer as many of these questions as possible. While it will be very challenging to capture one picture that addresses all of them, shoot with the idea that your pictures are answering as many as possible.

Blueberry Season

DO YOUR OWN RESEARCH

After you have asked the necessary questions of your assignment editor, do your own research on the subject. This will help you develop ideas, understand how events may unfold, or which images will be more important than others. Don’t expect your editor to tell you exactly what picture to get. They are hiring you, in part, because of your vision. Conducting a little research before you go out will help you find your vision.

COME WITH AN IDEA IN MIND

After researching your subject, think of shots that you want to capture and work toward those pictures when you are in the field. But don’t knock yourself too much if you don’t get “the” picture you wanted. Documentary photographers have little (or no) control over what happens. Come with an idea that will keep your mind centred, but be prepared to adjust your ideas accordingly as the events unfold before you.

Civil War

START BY PLAYING

Once you arrive, begin by playing with your exposure settings and shooting styles. This will ensure that you, and your camera, are properly set up when the moment arrives. In the same way athletes warm up before a race or a game you need to begin by getting your mind and your gear in proper condition before the event begins.

BE INVISIBLE

Remember, you are there to document what others are doing. The story is not about you. Do what you can to stay out of the way to allow events to unfold naturally. If you are too intrusive your subjects will not relax and you will not be documenting natural events. Stay out of the way and let events unfold in front of you.

TIGHT. MEDIUM. WIDE.

Take wide, medium and tight shots of what you are covering. As an example, if you are covering a town hall meeting be sure to get a wide shot that shows all of the filled, or empty chairs, in the room. A medium shot may be a waist-up shot of someone at the podium. A tight shot would be a head shot of someone expressing emotion as they discuss the subject of the meeting or as they listen to the presenters speak.

Westville Meeting

FOCUS

Proper focus is critical in all photography. It is essential in documentary photography and photojournalism. Your focal point tells the viewer what they should be looking at. If you are still taking pictures at that town hall meeting you can have two very different pictures of someone at the podium if one picture is focused on the speaker and another picture is focused on all of the microphones that the presenter is speaking into. One picture shows who was talking and the other picture shows how many people (news outlets) were there to cover the event. Each picture has its own meaning and that is derived from the focal point.

ANTICIPATE

I make a lot of sports analogies when talking about documentary photography because, in many regards, photojournalism and documentary photography is a sport. Just as a quarterback has to read the defence as he stands behind the centre, a documentary photographer has to have his eyes and attention in several places at once. By keeping a constant vigil on your surroundings you will see a picture developing in the same way a quarterback sees a play developing. The great ones always seem to be a few seconds ahead of the action.

Semana Santa

BE PROFESSIONAL

A professional attitude will help to guarantee two things. One, it will help to ensure that those around you understand that you have a job to do and they will permit you to do your job as long as you maintain a professional demeanour. The other thing a professional attitude will bring to you is another assignment. If word gets back to your editor that you were forcing people to behave in a certain way or that you interfered with the event to get a shot, you may not get another chance to work for that editor again because you have embarrassed them (and yourself) in your attempts to get a great picture.

BACK UP YOUR WORK

Once you get back home or to the office, back up your pictures. It doesn’t matter if you put them on a second hard drive, upload them to the cloud or put them on a disk. Make sure that you have copies of your pictures in more than one place in the event that the originals become damaged, destroyed or lost.

Farm to Fork

CAPTION YOUR PHOTOS

Your job as an assignment photographer doesn’t end when you back up your pictures. More times than not you will be asked to caption your photos. Your assignment editor will have no idea of the names of the people in your pictures. It will be up to you to write a brief description for each picture you are turning in. An easy way to do this is to answer the questions, who, what, when, where and why when making captions. “How” may not always be relevant.

DON’T OVER EDIT YOUR PICTURES

If you are asked to turn in edited pictures, don’t over-edit your work. Photojournalism and documentary photography are about the real world. In a strict sense you should only adjust the contrast of your picture. Some news outlets shun adding too much color and all news outlets shun the removal or addition of elements into a picture.

Habitat Vans

BE EASY TO WORK WITH

Being easy to work with is incredibly important in today’s freelance assignment photography landscape. It is becoming easier and easier to take quality pictures with less than professional equipment. Photographers are becoming very replaceable as there are more and more people with photo skills itching to get a little credit and maybe even a little money. Make sure you have an easy payment process. Make sure it is easy to get in touch with you, and that you respond quickly to emails and phone calls. Make sure you are open to your editor’s suggestions and that you are willing to go the extra mile to make them happy. Make it a no-brainer for them to rehire you because there are more photographers behind you just waiting for their chance.

This is a great time to get your foot in the door as a freelance assignment photographer. It’s not easy work and it’s not always sexy. But with hard work, a good eye, a professional attitude and determination you can find yourself on a short list of photographers that assignment editors want to use again and again.

The post Getting Your Foot in the Door as a Freelance Assignment Photographer by Scott Umstattd appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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Wanted: Freelance news / features writers!

26 May

DPRlogo.png

We’re on the lookout for freelance writers to contribute news and short feature content for our homepage. If you’re an experienced writer with great editorial instincts who loves ferreting out interesting and unusual photo-related content, we want to hear from you. Click through for more details.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Diego Angarita – The Freelance Retoucher

15 May

Diego Angarita Freelance Retoucher White Thin Dutches 1Diego Angarita co-founded Freelance Retoucher Ltd in 2012. His passion for working directly with photographers and ad agencies in the creative process to produce stunning pieces of imagery for commercial usage. Based in the UK, the high-end creative retoucher has had experience working in advertising, providing post-production services worldwide for clients in the TV, music, fashion and advertising industries. I asked Diego for a moment of his time to share his journey as a freelance retoucher and the processes that he undergoes when he is working on a project.

Diego Angarita Freelance Retoucher Mews of Mayfair 3

Diego actually started in the industry as a photographer, he explained, “My background is in photography. I landed in this exciting career by accident and am very glad I did. It all started 9 years ago as a photographer in a studio where I began editing and retouching my own images. I then realised that this was the part I enjoyed most and immersed myself completely to learn all aspects of photo retouching. I then did freelancing for various ad agencies around London and worked for a few years in a top London post-production house where I was exposed to advertising. Since then I have co-founded my own post-production studio, Freelance Retoucher Ltd, and have been working with some great photographers and ad agencies around the world.”

Diego Angarita Freelance Retoucher Julia Valimaki

From the awe inspiring images that he continues to produce as a profession, one wonders where Diego’s ideas for his images comes from and how he starts his creative process, he expressed that “I’m very inspired by classic films such as Schindler’s List and The Pianist, and modern films like Sin City, The Matrix, Oblivion, Elysium and Cloud Atlas, etc. I also take inspiration from classic painters and love Rembrandt and his use of interacting shadows and light called chiaroscuro. I follow photographers online and blogs to see what the latest trends are and keep in touch with people and network. Usually the ideas come from a brief with references, sketches and mock-ups followed by a creative call with the agency or photographer along with research on the client to get a feel of the look of their brand. Keeping in close contact with the client is important to ensure you don’t take the image far [from the brief].”

Diego Angarita Freelance Retoucher Franceska

When talking about his approach to retouching, Diego voiced that “I think it is probably about pushing the boundaries of an image to create from a realistic image, a unreal scenario achieved by not being afraid to take the risk in doing something different. I feel that this approach allows us to create beautiful pieces that evoke emotions in our artwork for the ad campaign.”

In regards to future plans, Diego mentions that “We are just setting up a blog right now that will contain a lot of  industry info and nice articles. We are planning some very exciting things this year so if you are interested then please subscribe to the newsletter on our website”.

To find out more about Diego Angarita and his work here at www.freelanceretoucher.co.uk
Works from Freelance Retoucher has been published on Behance so feel free to check it out.
To contact Diego, details are on the contact page on the website or feel free to get on the phone to his business partner Alex who is always happy to help and have a chat.


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The Guide of How to Succeed at Freelance Photography

27 Nov

Many photographers work freelance. It’s just the nature of the industry. You may believe that working freelance is the ideal life since it means no boss, no micromanagement and definitely no annoying co-workers to deal with on a regular basis. Not so fast, there! Working freelance photography also means the potential of no regular paychecks, no support from fellow co-workers Continue Reading

The post The Guide of How to Succeed at Freelance Photography appeared first on Photodoto.


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Wanted: Freelance news/features writers. Also, DPReview is hiring!

07 Jun

DPRlogo.png

We’re on the lookout for freelance writers to contribute news and short feature content for our homepage. If you’re an experienced writer with great editorial instincts who loves ferreting out interesting and unusual photo-related content, we want to hear from you. Also, DPReview is hiring! We have two open full-time positions available: we’re looking for an Editor to join our team of writers and reviewers, and a Software Manager. Click through for more details.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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The Best Tips & Tools for Freelance Photographers

06 Jun

[Today’s guide comes from awesome photographer and Photojojo pal, Helena Price!]

Being a photographer is regarded as one of the coolest jobs on the planet.

That said, there’s a lot that goes into running a successful photography biz. Making good photos is just the beginning.

This year, I made the jump from my office job to becoming a full-time freelance photo-taker, and I’ve been lucky enough to do some really fun photo work for brands that I love (including Photojojo!).

These jobs don’t just fall into your lap. There’s an endless amount of helpful tools and resources out there for freelance photographers – you’ve just gotta go out there and find them.

After spending hours digging through the interwebs, asking freelance friends and compiling everything I’ve learned, I’ve put together this great beginners’ list of things to read/use/do if you’re making the jump into freelance photography.

Great Tips & Tools for Freelance Photogs

p.s. WE ARE HIRING AN EVANGELIST/BIZ DEV HERO. Creative deal-maker types, APPLY HERE.

Building Your Portfolio

beforeVirb: Virb is by far the easiest way to build a beeeeautiful portfolio website for your photography. They have tons of sleek, pre-designed website themes to choose from (my favorites are York, Grace and Copenhagen)—just add your photos, and voila! Your portfolio is ready.

Squarespace: Like Virb, Squarespace has everything you need to build a fresh new fully-customizable website with your name on it. Check out the themes on both and see what’s your favorite!

Tumblr: Want to set up a photoblog in just minutes? Tumblr’s got you covered. These days, Tumblr has plenty of themes that have the look and feel of a photography website, like this one by Pixel Union. Best yet, Tumblr is full of tons of photography blogs to get inspired by! For starters, check out their photographers directory.

Soaking in Knowledge

beforeA Photo Editor: Founded by Rob Haggart, the former Director of Photography for Men’s Journal and Outside Magazine, this blog is chock-full of inspiration, interviews, and practical advice that you can apply to your budding career.

Freelance Switch: A blog by freelancers, for freelancers. A couple of good articles to start with include 30 Inherently Useful Tools for Freelancers and 25+ Resources for Starting a Freelance Photography Business

Creative Boom: Creative Boom is a UK-based blog for freelance creatives. In their “Tips” section, blog founder Katy shares her top tips for creative freelancers, startups, graduates, artists and small businesses. Topics range from “How to win your first freelance gig” to “How to get tough with problem clients.” Go soak in her knowledge!

Keeping Your Books / Gettin’ Paid

beforeOneReceipt: This handy tool lets you store and organize all of your receipts, both paper and digital, so you can track and manage all of your freelance expenses.

Harvest: Harvest helps you you track all of the time you put into your freelance work, which is super important when it’s time to invoice folks for payment. Time is money!

Google Drive: Never send a Word document again! Google Docs lets you build docs, spreadsheets and more right in your Internet browser. You can send them as attachments or simply store them in the cloud as long as you need them.

Freshbooks: Freshbooks is another great tool for time tracking, billing, and keeping track of everything related to your photo biz. You can take a free trial for 30 days to test it out for yourself!

Preview: This app is great for reading PDFs—but did you know that it’s the BEST for signing documents too? All you have to do is write your signature on a piece of paper, Preview will let you scan it in using your webcam, and voila! You’ll be signing and sending documents in no time.

Other Helpful Things

beforePreview: This app is great for reading PDFs—but did you know that it’s the BEST for signing documents too? All you have to do is write your signature on a piece of paper, Preview will let you scan it in using your webcam, and voila! You’ll be signing and sending documents in no time.

Freelancers Union: The Freelancers Union is the best option for health insurance for freelancers. In addition, they have a Freelancers Yellow Pages where you can list your services, as well as a supportive community you can learn from.

Munawar Ahmed’s Blog: For those really getting into the nitty gritty of setting up your business, taxes, insurance and more, Munawar has tons of advice and knowledge to share. One click on his blog and you’ll realize this guy KNOWS his taxes!

Related posts:

  1. 9 Tips for Breaking into Photojournalism New in the Photojojo forum: One of you kids is…
  2. People in Motion — Two Quick Tips for More Interesting Shots Capturing motion well is one of the most difficult photographic…
  3. Top 10 Tips from Our Fave Kid Photographer! Holiday. Photo. Time. Three innocent little words that when strung…


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What’s In The Bag w/Chris Weeks, Freelance Photographer Part 1

18 Mar

Chris Weeks is an incredibly busy photographer based in LA, who has one of the most unique eyes we’ve seen in event and portrait photography. He was generous enough to share the contents of his gear bag, showing us what a real working photog uses. Watch this vid for an uncensored look at the real deal. Keeping up with the current trend toward DSLR/Video shooting, he also teases that gear in this vid, and will show you all in Part 2 coming soon. Visit photoinduced.com for more photo-ness and free stuff weekly.
Video Rating: 4 / 5