PhotoShelter Collection is shutting down - Why I care

I woke up this morning to learn that PhotoShelter is shutting down the PhotoShelter Collection stock website in a month.  I've been a member of PSC for about a year now and although I haven't actually had any sales, I'll still miss them. Why will I miss the stock agency that never sold any of my images?  Let me count the ways:

  • I like the company: I was already a member of the PhotoShelter Personal Archive, which is a pay-for photo hosting/sales site.  They're good people!
  • Allen M. is also one of the founders of SportsShooter.com which is a truly great resource for people interested in sports shooting.  They put a lot of work into building a good community that helps photographers worldwide, whether they're customers of PhotoShelter or not.  It's sad to see bad things happen to good people.
  • Some sort of kindred feeling:  The PhotoShelter Collection was started right as I decided to treat my photography as a business.  The first time I ever took time off from my day job to do something photographic was when PSC held their "open house" of sorts in San Francisco.  I was took some vacation time, dressed up, drove up to The City, and listened to some great people talk about the state of the stock photo business.   I listened to Michael Zagaris and a bunch of other people talk and at the cocktail mixer afterwards I talked to Brad Mangin a bit.  Brad was there "to support the team" and he told me a lot really good things about the world of photography.
  • Love of equality:  The coolest thing about PSC was that anyone could join.  It was the opening for part-time shooters like me to get our foot in the door of the stock world and get images up for sale.  They seemed to have some real street cred in the "Bitter New York Photo Scene" and they took it as their mission to include as many people as they could in the rarified air of stock agencies.
  • Professionalism:  Joining PSC made me think about my photography differently.  Getting accepted there and paying attention to the editors, the School of Stock discussions, the blogs, etc. helped me learn a lot more about the "business" side of photography and see the difference between photography that's "pretty" vs. photography that's "salable".  It made me think about an efficient workflow for capturing, editing, captioning, archiving, and submitting images.  These things are crucial skills!
  • Sticking up for the value of the little guy:  One of the main things the PhotoShelter people stress is that commercial use of photography should not be undervalued, regardless of who shot the photo.  We can't all be Annie L. but there can be some middle ground between the Big Guys and microstock.   Their $50 minimum price in the face of $1 microstock was their way of sticking their neck out for the little guy.

I have to admit - there's a lot about their view of stock that I never understood.  I don't like or even understand all the images they select.  I was often baffled by Editor's Choice images, and I'll probably never understand the New York photography/art/fashion/image/attitude scene, and I they never moved any of the 36 images I had live.

But I'm still unhappy they're closing down.

Golden Gate National Cemetery (Memorial Day)

The Wife and I were heading to The City for a function on Memorial Day so we stopped off at the big cemetery off 280 on the way up and took some photos.  I thought these 9 were the most representative of the group and they were good enough for PhotoShelter, so there they are: Gallery on PhotoShelter Collection (defunct)

This was also the first real test of geotagging with the new GPS and GPSPhotoLinker.  It worked out really well and now I can tell within about 20 feet where each of these photos were taken, in case I ever want to go back.  Hopefully in the future there'll be some cool ways to visualize the places these photos were taken.

To learn more about the cemetery, wikipedia's page is here:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden_Gate_National_Cemetery

The official webpage for the cemetery is here:  Department of Veteran's Affairs

Shooting on white seamless

Photographer Zack Arias has put together a five-part discussion about how to build a space for shooting people on white seamless, and all the different ways you can make it look. Great post!  This is one to bookmark, or send to the Mrs. when she wonders why you want the basement to be 20' x 40' x 14' high.  :-)

I don't have quite that much space (yet) which is fine since I mostly do products on the white seamless, but the concepts are sound.  You can scale it all down to a smaller size for tabletop work.

Wedding yesterday

I shot another wedding yesterday and overall, things went very well.  I had rented a Canon 5-D and the 15mm fisheye lens from BorrowLenses to have a better second body than my old 20, and it worked out really well.   The wedding was a leisurely affair, with pictures of the prep starting at noon, and me leaving at 8:00pm. It was quite the day, including 1,625 pictures!  Now the editing begins...

Things I learned:

I'd like to do future weddings with a pair of cameras with similar interfaces, since switching between the 5-D and the 40-D was a bit confusing at times.

Full-frame is the way to go.  It really takes advantage of the heavy glass I've been carrying around for 2 years.  The 24-70 is finally a semi-wide angle lens like it was intended to be!

Also, I'm gonna need more Compact Flash space...

Lightroom 2.0 Beta

As some of you might know, Adobe is sharing a pre-release version of Lightroom 2.0 with the world.  You can find out more about it at the Adobe Labs website. I've installed it and given it a whirl, but most of the coolest of the new features require Photoshop CS3, which I don't yet have.

One feature that's totally worth the price of admission though is the ability to specify a vignette for a photo that's already been cropped.   Yay!   I crop most pictures after the fact, so this went on my wishlist of features as soon as I saw the regular vignette tool.  I've been waiting for this for a long time.

Lightroom Beta Invitations

There's some sort of limitation on how long the Beta will run for you unless you have a Lightroom 1.x serial number or are "invited" by someone with a Lightroom 1.x serial number.  Let me know if you're interested in getting an invitation for the Beta of 2.0.  I'm a big fan of Lightroom and I love to spread the word...

Geo-tagging photos with GPS: It Works!

After purchasing a Garmin GPS and experimenting with the excellent GPS Photolinker software by Jeffrey Early, I'm happy to say that everything totally works!   I have a couple future feature wishes for various parts of the process, but overall, it's great. I'll go into a little more detail in an upcoming post.