lovcom_photo Posted May 19, 2006 Share Posted May 19, 2006 Paul, you missed the point. And sinse when is the price of a photo linked to how hard it is to make? NEVER. Ansel's images sell for big, big $$ because HE made them...because of his popularity, reputation, his awesome work....not because they are hard to make....yes, in fact they were hard to make but that is not the reason he gets $60,000 a pop. You tying difficulty with price is an invalid metric. Don't fool yourself...I've been shooting landscapes for 15+ years....shooting a wedding more often then not is much more of a challange, and with few exceptions. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
35mmdelux Posted May 19, 2006 Share Posted May 19, 2006 That is not what I said. Get your facts straight. In any case, this is your opinion, and nothing more. This is the problem w/ deduction, or inferences in this case, when belief/notion is taken as fact. You really need to study his work, the ground he broke in the early twentieth century, and then you might understand why your "relatively easy" landscapes fall short of anything he ever did. Do you say the same about Jason Pollack's work? Oh, "thats easy, I can paint too." The great photogs like in any creative art make things appear easy. Let me know when your next foto sells for $50,000. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
darrin ballman www.crossl Posted May 19, 2006 Share Posted May 19, 2006 I also simply shoot... 1. Whatever I need to to get the job done and 2. keep shooting as much interesting stuff as I can see. No formulas or limits...that being said, "average" for me is probably shooting 600-ish (35mm-film)and delivering 400-500. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
fotografz Posted May 19, 2006 Share Posted May 19, 2006 Picked up 50 rolls myself. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
vcallaway Posted May 24, 2006 Share Posted May 24, 2006 Wow! I stopped doing weddings about 15 years ago, but have been asked to re-enter the market. After reading through here I'm kinda wondering what weddings have turned into. My average wedding was 4-5 hours. A wedding package consisted of a studio session for formal bidal shots. At the wedding I would shoot 150 to 200 exposures to produce and album of 100 to 150 proofs. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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