"We Are The New Vintage"
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flipside, cuz I like to play devil's advocate
you asked to shoot them correct
so you had the images anyway
what were you planning on doing with them?
adding to your own portfolio I imagine, promotional materials etc etc
so it's work you would have done already, regardless of if they wanted a copy or not
isn't that a lot like the trade for cd that photographers and models have been doing for years?
of course that being said I'd charge em $100 like DC says
time and resources are valuable and everyone needs to understand that
I run into the same thing doing websites
John
Personally, I'd stick with the $43...why? Because a lot of non-profits are struggling to keep or get money in to their causes. As someone who is a part of a non-profit Pinup group in that situation that's what I would suggest. You could ask them to plug you at shows, see if they'd let you do some event photography for your portfolio using their shows and if they plan on selling the images...see if they spot ya a couple bucks per print and they could use the rest for their non-profit. I think it would also depend on the type of non-profit. You could conceivably write off your photos as charity donation IF you are making a solid living off your photography AND they are registered as a non-profit.
On the flip side of that, a lot of non-profits make plenty of money. Just because they're non-profit, doesn't mean that their members don't make money. It just means that 70% of their yearly profit has to be donated to charity. Any registered Non-Profit is also not paying taxes, which helps to ensure that their employees are well taken care of.
You're definitely not wrong to charge the NP for the photo CD. The money is for your time and effort, not the disc. Even Sears Portrait studio would charge them $100 for a photo CD....(crappy photos at that).
Charge them $100, give them rights to the photos that they pay for, badda bing badda boom. I wouldn't charge them only for your time ($43). YOU'RE not running a non-profit.
IF they bring up the "I could get these on photo bucket for free" thing....be honest. Say "yeah, you could get them there, but they will not be full sized, or good quality, due to photobucket compressing the images for the web."
Plain and simple.
Ellie Retrophilia said:Personally, I'd stick with the $43...why? Because a lot of non-profits are struggling to keep or get money in to their causes. As someone who is a part of a non-profit Pinup group in that situation that's what I would suggest. You could ask them to plug you at shows, see if they'd let you do some event photography for your portfolio using their shows and if they plan on selling the images...see if they spot ya a couple bucks per print and they could use the rest for their non-profit. I think it would also depend on the type of non-profit. You could conceivably write off your photos as charity donation IF you are making a solid living off your photography AND they are registered as a non-profit.
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