Microstock Images Get Multiple Uses

By Jim Pickerell | 311 Words | Posted 3/15/2010 | Comments (4)
Chris Barton, managing director of Photographers Direct has written a humorous article on the multiple use of microstock images that shows five young people—three women and two men—promoting the products and services of a dozen different companies, with copy that would lead the reader to believe that these people were employees of all these companies. Every rights-managed photographer will enjoy this piece.

iStockphoto Launches Microdonation Program

By Julia Dudnik Stern | 180 Words | Posted 3/15/2010 | Comments
iStockphoto has launched a user-directed donation program, pledging up to $500,000 in 2010. The phased program will eventually enable iStock clients, contributors and employees to make microdonations to charities of their choice from within istockphoto.com.

Schultz Celebrates 30 Years on Iditarod Trail

By Julia Dudnik Stern | 183 Words | Posted 3/12/2010 | Comments
Alaska Stock Images founder Jeff Schultz has volunteered as the official photographer of the Iditarod trail race for 30 years. In March, teams race from Anchorage to Nome, traveling over 1,150 miles of the most extreme and beautiful terrain in the world.

iStockphoto Offers Free Images to Blogger Users

By Julia Dudnik Stern | 157 Words | Posted 3/12/2010 | Comments
As part of its promotional strategy, Getty Images-owned iStockphoto is offering a selection of free images through Google Blogger, a leading blogging platform that boasts millions of bloggers.

ImageSpan Adds BrandProtect to LicenseStream

By Julia Dudnik Stern | 258 Words | Posted 3/11/2010 | Comments
Sausalito-based ImageSpan has announced that the services of Toronto company BrandProtect are now part of online content licensing platform LicenseStream. BrandProtect's LinkWalker will help LicenseStream users identify where brands, company names, images, audio, video and trademarks appear online.

Use Pricing Could Benefit Microstock

By Jim Pickerell | 712 Words | Posted 3/11/2010 | Comments (1)
What an image is worth to a customer depends entirely on the customer's intended use. The size of the file delivered has very little to do with how an image might be used, or the value the customer will receive from using it. Granted, there are limits as to how a very small file can be used. But, there are many ways that a medium-size file can be used, with widely varying values. The biggest problem with royalty-free licensing, and particularly with microstock, is not that it prices certain uses very low, but that the system of pricing by file size has tried to ignore use in an effort to achieve simplicity.

Why Do Some Customers Pay More?

By Jim Pickerell | 789 Words | Posted 3/10/2010 | Comments
One of the key things to understand about stock photography is why some customers are willing to pay more than others to use an image.

BAPLA Remains Unsatisfied with Digital Economy Bill

By Julia Dudnik Stern | 271 Words | Posted 3/10/2010 | Comments
The British Association of Picture Libraries and Agencies, which expressed serious misgivings about the proposed U.K. Digital Economy Bill in January, released a statement that highlights that some of such concerns remain in the latest version of the legislation.

Henson Takes PACA Reins

By Julia Dudnik Stern | 128 Words | Posted 3/9/2010 | Comments
The Picture Archive Council of America has announced its newly elected board for 2010-2012. Blend Images' Robert Henson is taking over the presidency from Maria Kessler.

fStop Launches iPhone Greeting Card App

By Julia Dudnik Stern | 206 Words | Posted 3/9/2010 | Comments
Berlin-based fStop has launched the fCards App for the popular Apple lines of iPhone, iPad and iPod. The app, available through the iTunes store for $1.99, is a mobile adaptation of the free e-card service fStop has developed previously.

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This stock photography news site focuses on the business side of photography with a special emphasis on stock photography. Our goal is to help photographers maximize their earnings based on the quality of their work and the commitment they are prepared to make to the trade. The information provided will be applicable to part-timers as well as full time professional photographers. We’ll leave it to others to teach photographers how to take better pictures.

Jim Pickerell launched his career as a photographer in 1963. In 1990 he began publishing a regular newsletter on stock photography. In 1995 the information was made available online as well as in print and was gradually expanded to a daily service. Click here for Pickerell's full biography.

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