Haha cheers, Will take a look!The one that's mischievously called 'jobs offered' - they do make it difficult to find
Haha cheers, Will take a look!The one that's mischievously called 'jobs offered' - they do make it difficult to find
Ever heard of basic software to remove ALL exif data.
QUOTE]/QUOTE]
Strangley working previosuly in the forensic arena yes. But I'm also aware of some very special software that will recover it even thouugh most people will believe it to have been destroyed ! - that aside, it matters not, If you take someones work and claim it for your own and the photographer can prove copywrite (I have all my orginal files back up) then you have no grounds ![
Don't get me wrong, none of this is insurmountable, as I said earlier though, the OP needs to understand the 'ask'.
If a 'local photographer' came to me and asked for me to shoot some images of him, explained how he wanted to process them, why he needed my input etc. we could easily reach an agreement for me to shoot on his card and hand it over (similar to the way we 2nd shoot for others). But the OP hasn't 'thought this through' to the point he's aware of the pitfalls. He just appears to think he's 'cutting down the work to reduce the bill' which isn't even close to how it works.
Which is how some event photography works and I've done stuff like this before on large events. Shoot on the event photographers cards, they have runners to collect cards and take back to the site 'hq' for processing and display to potential buyers. All responsibility of the images are theirs. Shoot rubbish and you don't get asked back, shoot well with little need for processing and you'll be in demand. Either way the photographer is covered over image usage and expectations. It's all agreed beforehand, which is what would have to happen in this case.
Looking at upping my Budget to £200 for the right guy, still know this is only a fraction of what a proper wedding package should charge, but looking back through this thread i'm pleased some of you have helped me raise the budget!
Even considering some of the Groupon deals that are available.
I still like the idea to pp our wedding day pictures, so i would mention this in the early stages of agreeing a deal with the tog.
Thanks again.
For £200 I'd deliver you RAWs if you let me do the cull first.Looking at upping my Budget to £200 for the right guy, still know this is only a fraction of what a proper wedding package should charge, but looking back through this thread i'm pleased some of you have helped me raise the budget!
Even considering some of the Groupon deals that are available.
I still like the idea to pp our wedding day pictures, so i would mention this in the early stages of agreeing a deal with the tog.
Thanks again.
You do realize that the customer can edit anything you deliver. There are limits, but they are pretty lenient IMO (and proving "damages" is no minor thing). I suppose there is some difference in supplying finished images that you don't expect to be/need edited.If money has changed hands, the product walking out the door is labelled 'Phil Vaughan Photography', and if it's unedited that raises a question of reputational damage.
You do realize that the customer can edit anything you deliver.
Of course, or at least something they don't feel they *have* to edit .The aim must be to deliver something which they don't want to edit.
Steve.