Articles by Jim Pickerell

Brianna Wettlaufer Joins Adobe

By Jim Pickerell | 194 Words | Posted 4/15/2019 | Comments
Brianna Wettlaufer, former Co-Founder and CEO of Stocksy, has joined Adobe Stock as Head of Content. A longtime creative industry veteran and innovative entrepreneur Brianna has held numerous leadership roles in the stock photo industry including Vice President of Development at iStock among others. Brianna resigned her position at Stocksy last August for personal reasons.

Adobe Release 2019 Visual Trend, Brand Stand

By Jim Pickerell | 101 Words | Posted 4/15/2019 | Comments
Adobe has released its latest 2019 Visual Trend report called Brand Stand. The trend report explores consumers’ desire for companies that align themselves with important social issues and how brands like Nike and Gillette are driving this trend with high-impact creative that takes a stand.

VCG Violates Copyright

By Jim Pickerell | 229 Words | Posted 4/12/2019 | Comments
Techcrunch reports that VCG grabbed the first black hole photo released by the European Southern Observatory and immediately made the image available for sale for either editorial and commercial use without any attribution to the Event Horizon Telescope Collaboration (EHT), an array of radio telescopes that captured the black hole image.

In Defense Of Getty

By Jim Pickerell | 919 Words | Posted 4/11/2019 | Comments (3)
More and more photographers are expressing frustration with Getty Images and saying they are pulling their images. Many are looking for another distributor that will charge higher prices and offer a better royalty share. I hate to defend Getty, but to be fair today’s low prices are not all their fault. If we go back to the early 2000s Getty tried to keep prices at reasonable levels, but once iStock and Shutterstock came on the scene, and got some traction, there was no way for Getty to hold out forever.

Envato Acquires Twenty20

By Jim Pickerell | 400 Words | Posted 4/11/2019 | Comments
Envato, headquartered in Melbourne, Australia, has solidified its place as one of the key players in the stock photography market with the acquisition of stock photo subscription service Twenty20. The Los Angeles-based company that started out as a way for people to print Instagram photos onto canvas, boasts more than 350,000 creative contributors to its library of more than 45 million authentic, crowd-sourced photos.

Rawpixel Changes Terms And Conditions

By Jim Pickerell | 414 Words | Posted 4/11/2019 | Comments
Rawpixel is an agency in the microstock arena that everyone in the stock photo business should be aware of. The company is headquartered in the UK, but its creative hub in Bangkok, Thailand. The company is the leading contributor to Shutterstock with over 1,000,000 pieces of content in the collection.

Will Terapixel Resolution Help Professional Photographers?

By Jim Pickerell | 179 Words | Posted 4/9/2019 | Comments
Will Quantum Dots make the next generation of camera technology so much better that it will dramatically separate the quality of the work of professional photographers from those using smartphones and give the professional a new leg up? A story on thephoblographer.com points out that the Quantum Dot technology is much more efficient than the CMOS technology used today.

Intel Grabs Copyright?

By Jim Pickerell | 332 Words | Posted 4/4/2019 | Comments
Some photographers attending the Intel press and analyst event on April 2, 2019 interpreted the following notice to all entrants as a move to grab the copyright of any photos the photographer might take.

Will CGI Reduce The Need For Photography?

By Jim Pickerell | 83 Words | Posted 4/4/2019 | Comments
Fstoppers has an interesting story on the impact CGI may have on commercial photography and photographers in the not too distant future. Earlier this week I wrote about the declining need for professional photographers in the future. Rather than buying camera equipment and spending time and effort learning how to take pictures anyone interested in the visual arts as a profession might be better advised to find a comfortable chair, sit down at their computer and learn CGI rather than being a photographer.

Will There Be A Future Need For Professional Photographers?

By Jim Pickerell | 790 Words | Posted 4/2/2019 | Comments (1)
Young people (those in their 20s and 30s) interested in a career as a photographer should think hard about that decision. Yes, there will always be a demand for photographs, but will those who want photographs be willing to pay enough to make it a business for image creators?