Freelance photography job in London

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Dmitry
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Hello everyone.
I have a question. If anyone know where to get freelance photography job in London?
Such as selling pics to newspapers or magazines or else...
(sorry for typos)
 
basically if its freelance you arent 'getting a job' at all - you go out and take the pictures and then attempt to sell them to picture desks - the Bureau of Freelance photographers have a manual with a lot of listings for possible markets,
 
Hello everyone.
I have a question. If anyone know where to get freelance photography job in London?
Such as selling pics to newspapers or magazines or else...
(sorry for typos)


If it's news imagery, as above. However, a great deal of breaking news imagery is just crowd sourced now and is basically just lifted from twitter etc. Long gone are the days where a photographer is dispatched to an unfolding news story in the first instance.

What Pete says is only true for news imagery though. Editorial, fashion, advertising.. are all still often commissioned, so in effect, yes, they will give you a "job" but only on an assignment by assignment basis.... there are no "jobs" in photography in the conventional sense.

Many publications will feature your work if you send it in on spec though, but you're very unlikely to get paid. Arts and Culture type publications often feature new or interesting artists for instance, so it's not impossible to get featured somewhere. This is a good way to get known actually, but you need to be producing work that is worthwhile for them to publish... interesting work. If it's just the usual amateur fare... forget it.. no one's interested.

Editorial, advertising, fashion etc? If you need to ask, then you've no chance unless your images are phenomenal as you'll be too naive to cope with that ****storm :). The best way in is still assisting. Self-publishing is another way to get your work out there and seen. You can send a folio to an agent to see if they are willing to represent you as well.


You can send a folio direct to the picture editors of magazines, but you can imagine how many people do that, so don't hold your breath.

What are you doing to get your work seen by the people you want to work for? If the answer is nothing, then it will never happen. You need to get your work published as much as possible.. get it out there and seen by as many of the type of person you need to see it. Get it featured on websites etc. Obviously, to do that, it needs to be good. Look for artist/photography galleries online, art collectives, magazines etc. that feature the kind of stuff you do, and send them work.


Also... are you any good? Competition is stiff and most publications want something that gives them an edge. What do you shoot, and how do you shoot it? You have to know the markets you're trying to penetrate inside out and have work that is suited to it.

As you are referring to London, it makes it even more difficult, as it's a saturated market, and unless you hadn't noticed... everyone's a photographer these days :) Plus, there are hundreds of graduates every year flocking down to London with folios full of work, some of it incredibly good. Not only that, if the courses they've been on are good, they'll be clever, clued up, trained to talk about their work and pitch for work in a way you haven't, and they'll know the ins and outs of the industry already to some extent. Most will have already been networking and have contacts before they graduate too.

I'm not saying give up.... but I think you've massively under estimated how difficult it is.

Do you have a website or other online portfolio? If I knew what you shot I may be able to be more specific. I have no idea how good you are. You could be amazing for all I know, in which case, it's obviously going to be so much easier for you and all you'd have to do is get the work seen and then you're on your way.

Got a link to your work?
 
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He's probably the best qualified person here to tell it like it is.

Apart from people like demilion and kipax who are actually doing it , though tbf they'd probably say much the same - when someone opens with "how do i get a freelance job" it makes me think they havent actually understood what freelancing is
 
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Apart from people like demilion and kipax who are actually doing it , though tbf they'd probably say much the same - when someone opens with "how do i get a freelance job" it makes me think they havent actually understood what freelancing is


Been there, done it. Demilion knows his onions though, yeah. Good work too. Kipax shoots sports, which is pretty much like freelance press... shoot first, then sell, as you say, so that becomes a race to the finish line between you and others (assuming your shots are as good as theirs). If I'm wrong, I'm sure he'll take great delight in correcting me :) The OP mentioned magazines though, so I imagine he meant editorial work... I think... he wasn't very specific. In which case, it's mainly commissioned and a different kettle of fish altogether. About 40% of my income came from editorial work... it's hard to get, but once you can prove reliable, you keep getting it.
 
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For selling photos to magazines and newspapers etc, check out The Freelance Photographer's Handbook. Ideal for that purpose in my opinion. I did a video on it here -
View: http://youtu.be/6glf9z14ODc


Also, think about joining a directory such as Freelance Photographers in London - freelancephotographers.london/
 
If it's news imagery, as above. However, a great deal of breaking news imagery is just crowd sourced now and is basically just lifted from twitter etc. Long gone are the days where a photographer is dispatched to an unfolding news story in the first instance.

What Pete says is only true for news imagery though. Editorial, fashion, advertising.. are all still often commissioned, so in effect, yes, they will give you a "job" but only on an assignment by assignment basis.... there are no "jobs" in photography in the conventional sense.

Many publications will feature your work if you send it in on spec though, but you're very unlikely to get paid. Arts and Culture type publications often feature new or interesting artists for instance, so it's not impossible to get featured somewhere. This is a good way to get known actually, but you need to be producing work that is worthwhile for them to publish... interesting work. If it's just the usual amateur fare... forget it.. no one's interested.

Editorial, advertising, fashion etc? If you need to ask, then you've no chance unless your images are phenomenal as you'll be too naive to cope with that ****storm :). The best way in is still assisting. Self-publishing is another way to get your work out there and seen. You can send a folio to an agent to see if they are willing to represent you as well.


You can send a folio direct to the picture editors of magazines, but you can imagine how many people do that, so don't hold your breath.

What are you doing to get your work seen by the people you want to work for? If the answer is nothing, then it will never happen. You need to get your work published as much as possible.. get it out there and seen by as many of the type of person you need to see it. Get it featured on websites etc. Obviously, to do that, it needs to be good. Look for artist/photography galleries online, art collectives, magazines etc. that feature the kind of stuff you do, and send them work.


Also... are you any good? Competition is stiff and most publications want something that gives them an edge. What do you shoot, and how do you shoot it? You have to know the markets you're trying to penetrate inside out and have work that is suited to it.

As you are referring to London, it makes it even more difficult, as it's a saturated market, and unless you hadn't noticed... everyone's a photographer these days :) Plus, there are hundreds of graduates every year flocking down to London with folios full of work, some of it incredibly good. Not only that, if the courses they've been on are good, they'll be clever, clued up, trained to talk about their work and pitch for work in a way you haven't, and they'll know the ins and outs of the industry already to some extent. Most will have already been networking and have contacts before they graduate too.

I'm not saying give up.... but I think you've massively under estimated how difficult it is.

Do you have a website or other online portfolio? If I knew what you shot I may be able to be more specific. I have no idea how good you are. You could be amazing for all I know, in which case, it's obviously going to be so much easier for you and all you'd have to do is get the work seen and then you're on your way.

Got a link to your work?

Unfortunately I just started photography and don't have a web site yet. Im just asked is this possible to get some freelance job. Looks like is not easy... Thanks for your advise ;)
 
If it's news imagery, as above. However, a great deal of breaking news imagery is just crowd sourced now and is basically just lifted from twitter etc. Long gone are the days where a photographer is dispatched to an unfolding news story in the first instance.

What Pete says is only true for news imagery though. Editorial, fashion, advertising.. are all still often commissioned, so in effect, yes, they will give you a "job" but only on an assignment by assignment basis.... there are no "jobs" in photography in the conventional sense.

Many publications will feature your work if you send it in on spec though, but you're very unlikely to get paid. Arts and Culture type publications often feature new or interesting artists for instance, so it's not impossible to get featured somewhere. This is a good way to get known actually, but you need to be producing work that is worthwhile for them to publish... interesting work. If it's just the usual amateur fare... forget it.. no one's interested.

Editorial, advertising, fashion etc? If you need to ask, then you've no chance unless your images are phenomenal as you'll be too naive to cope with that ****storm :). The best way in is still assisting. Self-publishing is another way to get your work out there and seen. You can send a folio to an agent to see if they are willing to represent you as well.


You can send a folio direct to the picture editors of magazines, but you can imagine how many people do that, so don't hold your breath.

What are you doing to get your work seen by the people you want to work for? If the answer is nothing, then it will never happen. You need to get your work published as much as possible.. get it out there and seen by as many of the type of person you need to see it. Get it featured on websites etc. Obviously, to do that, it needs to be good. Look for artist/photography galleries online, art collectives, magazines etc. that feature the kind of stuff you do, and send them work.


Also... are you any good? Competition is stiff and most publications want something that gives them an edge. What do you shoot, and how do you shoot it? You have to know the markets you're trying to penetrate inside out and have work that is suited to it.

As you are referring to London, it makes it even more difficult, as it's a saturated market, and unless you hadn't noticed... everyone's a photographer these days :) Plus, there are hundreds of graduates every year flocking down to London with folios full of work, some of it incredibly good. Not only that, if the courses they've been on are good, they'll be clever, clued up, trained to talk about their work and pitch for work in a way you haven't, and they'll know the ins and outs of the industry already to some extent. Most will have already been networking and have contacts before they graduate too.

I'm not saying give up.... but I think you've massively under estimated how difficult it is.

Do you have a website or other online portfolio? If I knew what you shot I may be able to be more specific. I have no idea how good you are. You could be amazing for all I know, in which case, it's obviously going to be so much easier for you and all you'd have to do is get the work seen and then you're on your way.

Got a link to your work?

Imagine - I shot some accident or some interesting thing. This possible to sell this pics to newspapers by sending them sample or crop pictures? Or it's not easy?
 
Didn't Pippa Middleton's sister want to be a photographer too, and despite her contacts and unique access to the rich, privileged and famous, was advised to do something else.

Like marrying her boyfriend? ;)
 
Imagine - I shot some accident or some interesting thing. This possible to sell this pics to newspapers by sending them sample or crop pictures? Or it's not easy?
if it's genuinely interesting, yes... the pictures email addresses are on their websites.

The bar for what is interesting is reasonably high, though...
 
Imagine - I shot some accident or some interesting thing. This possible to sell this pics to newspapers by sending them sample or crop pictures? Or it's not easy?
If you're really lucky then yes, you can make a decent-ish one off payment, especially if it's celebrity based. However it's a fraction of what the images would make syndicated around the world.

Local papers, you'll be lucky to get £15-20
 
Imagine - I shot some accident or some interesting thing. This possible to sell this pics to newspapers by sending them sample or crop pictures? Or it's not easy?


Yeah, that's easy, but how often are you going to be at the scene of an accident or an interesting thing? Unless it's a picture of David Cameron inside a pig's head or something, you'll not get much.. plus, there's always someone with a phone nearby. News images are crowd sourced now... they just trawl twitter.
 
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Imagine - I shot some accident or some interesting thing. This possible to sell this pics to newspapers by sending them sample or crop pictures? Or it's not easy?

I once (1999) had a load of photographs of a Micro-lite pilot (and machine) crashed into a tree which I witnessed first hand and was first on the scene with a digital camera..... the Rescue Services 'entourage' consisted of a couple of Fire-engines, three ambulances and numerous other super-numeries, about 60 persons I'd guess.

I contacted a couple of newspapers who weren't particularly interested except for one [which shall stay remain nameless]. I was asked if anybody had been killed. When I replied in the negative they told me they weren't interested!

Now I need to find the shots.
 
.... I was asked if anybody had been killed. When I replied in the negative they told me they weren't interested!

Whilst you may not approve, that's a realistic criteria for local and regional news titles.

To make the nationals then multiple fatalities are required.

Unless it's a murder.
 
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