You guys got to understand, photography is near worthless.
Don't worry exposure is now legal tender.
Quote from: Iluvmycam on May 03, 2015, 05:13:27 pmYou guys got to understand, photography is near worthless. But, if it is in your blood you do it for love and not for $. Now, some of you will be lucky and get half a mil for your tricycle pix. But for the rest of us, no, nothing of that sort. Actually it's not...it's worth what you think it's worth and if you personally assign near zero value, that's what it's worth.I've experienced a lot of "can we use your image for free/credit?". I usually nicely say "no"...but I can see where somebody might get a bit tired of that and take a strong stand as this photographer did. I applaud him for standing up for the value of his images. The band screwed up by first asking for free/credit and then pushing back against the photographer. The book project should have had a budget to include some compensation unless the entire project was a not-for-profit effort for a charitable cause. I have allowed free/credit use for some causes...but it's very clear here that this was a promotional effort and thus not a not-fot-for profit project.
You guys got to understand, photography is near worthless. But, if it is in your blood you do it for love and not for $. Now, some of you will be lucky and get half a mil for your tricycle pix. But for the rest of us, no, nothing of that sort.
Pope made a mistake. Not for refusing to give them his work for nothing. But for publically embarrassing the group. Why did he openly publish his complaint letter first? He should have responded to them initially, but privately, to give them a chance to consider his concerns. But he went public without any discussion with the group. A lot of groups will now not hire him because he seems like a "loose cannon" blowing off steam publically when he doesn't get his way.
to give them a chance to consider his concerns.
Why did he openly publish his complaint letter first?
“Your two choices are to give them the permission, valuing your work at zero, or to refuse permission, in which case they will quietly remove you from the list of freelancers they work with so you won’t get any future work.”
no, there are many choices - one of them is to behave yourself properly and he didn't
This is a band that has been publicly vocal about the value of artists when it suits their interests only to demonstrate privately that they don't really value artists when it doesn't suit their interests.
you are not getting it... they tried to conduct a business in a professional manner - privately offered him some price - in that case a "credit" (note that apparently he was happy to either conduct business with them for some time and/or make money off their photos = "... One act with whom he has worked several times are 90s indie titans Garbage..."), he didn't agree with that offer and found it insulting ? ok, that's just his emotions ... he is a businessman, not a kid in a kindergarten... being childishly emotional in a very public way about the offer from somebody off whom you were happily making money before is not the right way to behave.