photography
Workplace photography from past to present, highlighting historical significance and modern day work ethics.
The Importance of Good Photography in Web Design
A high-quality relevant photo can transform the site, make it more effective and understandable. However, poor quality and inappropriate can produce the opposite effect. Without photos, sites look boring and not interesting. No matter how interesting the text is, a beautiful picture will enhance its perception a hundredfold. Advertising photography on the Internet (and not only) is a powerful marketing tool with an incredible power of persuasion and influence on the audience.
By Nick Brown5 years ago in Journal
A Look At Somewhere New
It was late fall during the 2020 pandemic. A long time model journeyed into the woods to capture new content for a project. She had gone into the forest to pick up where she left off her acting career. Once she arrived she noticed that a new path had appeared. She was so surprised. Someone had opened up part of the forest that she had never explored.
By LaBree Johnson5 years ago in Journal
From Lawyer to Professional Photographer: Orange County Native Wins International Photography Contest
YORBA LINDA, CALIFORNIA — Several years ago, K.C. Crow gave up her high-paying job as an attorney to become a lifestyle photographer. Instead of trying cases, she now captures the special moments of adorable toddlers— and she wouldn’t have it any other way.
By Nikki Gaskins Campbell8 years ago in Journal
Five Things Professional Photographers Don’t Want You to Know
Five things Professional Photographers don’t want you to know Ten years ago, a well-known travel guidebook used to pay their photographers £10,000 to shoot all the images for their country guides. A year later, the rates had dropped up to 50%. Nowadays, guess how much they pay? Not a sausage.
By Eugene Gabriel8 years ago in Journal
Thousands Finding the Photo Booth Business a Route to Excellent Full-Time, Part-Time, or Retirement Income
In validation of the old adage “What goes around, comes around,” photo booths are back and are more popular than ever. Originally patented in 1888, the photo booth (aka “automated photography machine”) first gained popularity at penny arcades, amusement parks, and carnivals. To receive your photographic mementos of the moment, you just popped behind the curtain, adjusted the seat, deposited twenty-five cents and smiled! Ten minutes later a strip of eight fairly decent black and white (or sepia) photos would slide out a chute on the side.
By Robert Lindquist8 years ago in Journal








