Horseshoe Falls, Hazelbrook, Blue Mountains, NSW

This shot was taken yesterday while running my Blue Mountains Day Course… great weather but the rain got a bit heavy towards the end of the day. None the less perfect weather for shooting waterfalls.

This shot had quite a bit of work done on it in terms of trying to balance the dark tones and shadow detail in the image. Quite tricky to edit when some techniques adding contrast resulting in the greens really popping so you have to go back and kill the colour back a bit.

All the tonal work has been done using different types of luminosity masks, blurring them / sharpening them in selective areas that kind of thing. I didnt use the shadow / highlight tool in this shot (which I am a big fan of). Think the image could still do with some more work especially in the colour, but next time I might think about bracketing a shot or two for some more shadow detail in certain areas.

Single image capture | 5D MkII | 17-40mm lens @ 17mm | Polariser | F11 for 8 sec 50 iso

BEST VIEWED LARGE, SO CLICK ON THE IMAGE

Horseshoe Falls, Hazelbrook, Blue Mountains, NSW

Shot up to the Blue Mountains yesterday for a spot of waterfall shooting given the weather was perfectly overcast with drizzle. (would have liked a little bit less drizzle).

This one is taken at Horseshoe Falls in Hazelbrook. I have been playing around with a soft mist / glow effect in Photoshop which seams to work well. I think the shot would have benefited from an over exposed shot blended into some of the shadows. Maybe next time.

Got chewed on by a few leaches as well. Bastards…

1 sec | F13 | 100 iso | Polariser | 5D MkII 17-40mm lens @ 19mm

CLICK IMAGE TO VIEW LARGE

Loving Summer at Manly Beach

Now this is summer… !! Running my second day of Northern Beaches Day Courses due to demand at this time of year.

The beaches were packed as they should be, every man and his dog trying to get some relief from the heat, but apparently the water is still quite cold.

Really getting into shooting more day time images for the site. For me this cloud combination is perfection so a few more days like this over the coming months would be fantastic.

5D MkII | Panoramic stitch.

Is Limited Edition photography really an asset to a buyer ?

Last week I took the family to Hunter Valley Gardens (not Duff gardens) and we walked through the Ken Duncan’s Gallery that he has up there. While looking around I saw some mounted 11 inch panoramics selling for $99 and 18 inch mounted panoramic’s selling for $199 each. All where limited editions of 2000 and it got me thinking about the difference between limited edition and open edition and the ways in which limited editions are done and thought it would make for an interesting blog post.

Now before I go any further please note that this article is my own opinion and I will make general speculations. I have used well know landscape photographers Ken Duncan and Peter Lik as examples as people know and respect their work and they have a proven track record of being very successful in this industry. So if for some reason you take what I say to heart please be mature in any post you care to give, unlike some in the past.

Anyway now that for formalities are out of the way … for starters I personally don’t do limited edition images. I have considered it, even to the point that I have put some images aside to be limited editions but I just don’t see myself taking that route at this time. Purely as a personal choice. I have lost sales in the past from people who have called me asking if I offer any limited editions. When I inform them that I don’t, they have taken their business else where.

When you decide to do limited editions from my experience of seeing how other photographers do it there are many roads. Some are a bit questionable but all with one goal. To sell your work at an increased price to open editions, that will gradually increase as the edition number closes with a sales pitch that when the edition closes the price of the work will be of greater value and that you are buying an asset. Before I touch more on that topic here are some ways I have seen limited editions sold.

1. Edition print runs offered 30 inch and higher ranging from 50 to 300 in an edition. This is the method used by Ken Duncan and most who sell Limited Edition.

2. Edition print runs offered 30 inch and higher but numbers are limited to around 300 but also limited in the size offered as well. So there might only be 50 prints offered in the 30 inch size, 100 in 40 inch etc. This is a method that I have seen Peter Lik do. Not 100% sure if that is the case still.

3. Another one I have seen is edition print runs over 30 inch of an image in numbers of around 300. But the photo is also an open edition if purchased in sizes under 30 inch. I disagree with this method. A photo is either limited edition or it’s not. I have only seen a few photographers do this.

4. The other one is limited editions of 1000, 2000 or higher sold at a lower price than editions of 300 but are also have a size capped and are not offered over 24 inch. This is another method by Ken Duncan. One could argue that 2000 copies of an image isn’t really limited edition but I guess you are paying less and still getting a great product from the photographers who’s work you admire.

With selling limited editions there is quite a sales pitch that comes with them of how the buyer will eventually own a photo that will be an investment, especially when the edition sells out. This is great if true, but in reality this is only going to be true if there is a market demand for your work when it sells out and at a higher price than what most paid for it and their is a precedence of your work selling at a given increased price point.

Now for example if you look at Ken Duncan’s Hot List of images on his website that are about to sell out. A 75 inch framed 3:1 panoramic is going to sell for $5900. Now if you take a look at the Hall of Fame – Resale prints the average price of a framed photo selling there is $7000. Now guessing that in the Hot List there are also 75 inch photo’s IF someone buys a Ken Duncan photo and decides to resell it later you could expect a minimum profit resale margin of $1100 (minus their commission for the resale). If you bought the photo earlier in the edition for a lower amount say $3400 for a 75 inch then your return will be greater but that is only a profit of $3600. Now this profit margin I would say is going to be dependent on what image is being re sold and I would guess that there are images with higher demand than others which will bring in a higher return on re sale and also it’s edition number too. This is also reflected in Ken’s hot list as some images are re selling for $22500. But someone has to buy it at that price for a precedence to be set.

Another example is you hear roomers on forums that Peter Lik will sell a framed panoramic image for $40,000 US and his sales people telling buyers that when the edition sells out it will be worth double the amount (no wonder he turns over 30 million a year) . This would only be true if someone is willing to pay $80,000 for the closed edition image. Now if there is proof that his sold out editions sell for double, then and you could honestly say this to buyers who have been happy to pay double for his closed editions. Other than that this would be salesman Bull S*$t to get the sale and I would ask for proof of resale at the higher amount as promoted.

So the profit (or acquiring of an asset) to be made to investors in buying anyone’s Limited Edition is only real if there are proven re sales to back it up. Not sure if you could list owning someones limited edition photo as an asset on your home loan application. But there are people (I would guess most) who don’t give a rats about the re sale value of the photo, they just love it for what it is and enjoy the knowledge that not everyone will be able to buy one and that the photo itself is limited.

Selling Limited and Open editions is a personal choice and main stream veterans like Ken Duncan and Peter Lik show the best way to do it and their model obviously works very well.

MacMasters Beach, Central Coast, NSW

Last nights sunset was a ripper but I wasnt able to shoot it, so I made sure I wouldn’t miss this morning. Woke up and you could see the sky full of high cloud… as soon as you see that you know your on for sure.

Met up with a good friend and we headed down to MacMasters Beach. Gorgeous blood red sunrise that moved into great gold tones with blue sky. When the sky went red I went nuts running around shooting with digital, my GX617, Fotoman 624 and also the Hasselblad 6×6. Four cameras and only two tripods, with the light changing so quickly can get stress full changing camera mounting plates. Why so many film cameras… well they all give you different views. The Fuji G617 stayed home and had a sleep in.

Click the image to view larger.

The Skillion – Star Trail Night Photography

Yet another trip out shooting the stars last night. This is becoming very addictive. Moon was at 41.9% illumination (waxing) which means the period that runs between the New Moon and the Full Moon.

This is a combination of moon light and ambient light from the surround suburbs and peoples headlights. Single image capture.

Now I just got to think up my next location and what sort of shooting combination I want to do… maybe sunset into a star trail… you will have to wait and see.

CLICK THE IMAGE TO VIEW IT LARGER

The Entrance on the B+W 10 stop ND

This shot was taken on the evening shoot on the first day of my two day workshop I hold on the central coast where we cover both the capture and post production of images. We were shooting with 10 stop filters pulling a whole range of shutter speeds from 2 min to 12 min playing around with the ISO and Aperture. This one was around 5 min and the difference in clouds movement from 5 min to 12 min really wasnt that much to warrant the extra time sitting around. Let alone the extra noise.

As sunset approached we just decided to keep the filter on as the look was great, natural fall off was great and I think complemented the shot well.

I have just finished teaching 7 days straight so I will be posting more regularly now. Over the 7 days I almost lost my voice from all the early 3 to 4 degree mornings talking while teaching on sunrise.

New tutorial – Location planning with the Photographers Ephemeris

A new and fantastic tool on the market is the Photographers Ephemeris. In this tutorial we look at how the tool can be used to plan in detail how to get the best from locations on your “Must shoot list”.

We go through some well known locations in Australia and show you what we consider the best time to shoot them and how you can do it all with this application. You will never shoot in bad light again.

This tutorial is now available under the “Tips and Tricks” section of our tutorials. Free for members or $4.99 for guests. To view the tutorial please click here.

Forresters Rocks, Central Coast, NSW

With bad weather comes interesting clouds and lighting. Today I ran a course on the Central Coast for a lovely couple Mick and Trudy and we were able to squeeze in a full day just before it poured down.

This was an interesting spot at Forresters Beach with some strong foreground rock and great clouds in the back ground. I deliberately desaturated the clouds which worked well but I had to find a nice balance of contrast as I did have a B&W soft light layer on the clouds but the contrast too much so I got rid of it.

Return to Wentworth Falls Lookout

wentworthfallslookout_da

Our start to my Blue Mountains Day Course couldn’t have been better. Once again starting from the beautiful Wentworth Falls lookout. This time no crazy sunrise colour like last time, just clean warm light and what turned out to be dust through the valley that blew in over night from central Australia that complemented this shot perfectly.

Thanks to Andrew, Peter, Warren and William for a great day of teaching and shooting.

New dates for the Blue Mountains Day Course for 2010 have been released.

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