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Ha ha ha!
I thought I was bad Jo but there ain't no way I'm lobbing my car keys in a bowl round here![]()
Thats a shame, we could have gone out shooting foxes in the woods for the evening...........
Ha ha ha!
I thought I was bad Jo but there ain't no way I'm lobbing my car keys in a bowl round here![]()
Ha ha ha!
I thought I was bad Jo but there ain't no way I'm lobbing my car keys in a bowl round here![]()
Ha ha ha!
I thought I was bad Jo but there ain't no way I'm lobbing my car keys in a bowl round here![]()
ha ha ha you lot! I don't mind a group hug but I've had to put up with DD discussing shooting boudoir as a "shoot in knickers" on FB today and you can imagine how that one degenerated!
![]()

the photography industry and raising the standards.
So you're in fact saying what most of us have said!![]()
No one was bitching about 'them and us', we were however saying it could be what happens if thread like this continue to appear.
Or am I totally misreading your post?![]()
Sorry Mark - whilst i agree on most of what you have put .... this last quoted bit hasn't been shown in this thread by acting in a "professional" manner.
Spitting your dummy out isn't "professional"
And whatever your opinion on what a professional is - the general view held by the majority is that when someone starts charging and certainly when they are full time - they are considered professional.
Right or wrong it doesn't matter as it is just a name - so in the context of many of the references in thsi thread - the name / title is irrelevant

I guess a few 'pros' see becoming members of forums as just another form of marketing.
Hopefully the air is clearing on this one now . . . But if I may offer my take on this?
I guess a few 'pros' see becoming members of forums as just another form of marketing.
Hang around long enough to gain street cred for volunteering advice and crit, but as a prelude to selling services to the amateur members who wish to improve.
Nothing wrong with this as it is good business sense, but there are just as many semi/skilled photographers who want nothing more than to share their passion and techniques.
I'm one of them
(watch my DVD for full details, available from . . .)
interesting - are you now full time with a sports desk/agency then Phil?
Hopefully the air is clearing on this one now . . . But if I may offer my take on this?
I guess a few 'pros' see becoming members of forums as just another form of marketing.
Hang around long enough to gain street cred for volunteering advice and crit, but as a prelude to selling services to the amateur members who wish to improve.
Nothing wrong with this as it is good business sense, but there are just as many semi/skilled photographers who want nothing more than to share their passion and techniques.
I'm one of them
(watch my DVD for full details, available from . . .)
I would agree with this also. More evident in those that insist on copy and pasting the link to their website at the bottom of every post incase they haven't typed enough to make their sig appear![]()
Spitting your dummy out isn't "professional"

.... it hasn't done pro's any favours again ......![]()
Being a PROFESSIONAL is a state of mind, not a statement of how many hours you spend each day doing the job.
Yea, near as dammit! Had a game Saturday, last night, tonight and tomorrow night... would have as well on the Sunday but I was otherwise engaged
I've been shooting for them since New Year, and things are looking promising (well, from my side they are anyway)
Just a little confused and disappointed by Zoe's reaction - and feeling a bit guilty because I started this line of thinking.
Just a little confused and disappointed by Zoe's reaction
You didn't if that helpsI laughed when I read your post initially as I had literally just delete my own post (before hitting submit) saying just about the same thing.
Sarah - my point exactly
Bad day or not - you can be sure it will be that day that everyone sits up and takes notice
Just a comment about photo criticism.
Personally I'd rather have details "that could be cropped better - like this" "what did you think was the interesting bit?" or even more bluntness. (Though joining a photo club will get plenty of that.). But that's just me.
Maybe it'd be good to state if we really want warts-and-all constructive criticism? Like in that other photo forum (which seems to be maybe 99% aggro about canon / nikon / sigma), where they have "dragon's den" threads which are actually good and non-aggroey (at least as I've seen so far).
But also... I'd be interested to find out from people who make their money doing photography ("pros"?) what it's like to have taken the risk of making your living doing photography. Good / bad / how you find inspiration / does inspiration matter? / how to put people at ease....
Just a comment about photo criticism.
Personally I'd rather have details "that could be cropped better - like this" "what did you think was the interesting bit?" or even more bluntness. (Though joining a photo club will get plenty of that.). But that's just me.
Maybe it'd be good to state if we really want warts-and-all constructive criticism? Like in that other photo forum (which seems to be maybe 99% aggro about canon / nikon / sigma), where they have "dragon's den" threads which are actually good and non-aggroey (at least as I've seen so far).
.
.... and that shows why I should read more before posting...Try the "In depth critique" subforum.![]()


I'm not disagreeing with you but the problem is - that's not how a lot of "professionals" see it.
I've seen so many arguments on here about what being a pro actually means and I really don't want to start another one. My point is there will always be someone calling themselves a pro for different reasons than yours and waving their willy about like it's going out of fashion - as long as that person is making enough noise then there will be an undercurrent of a divide.
I like to base my opinions on each individual person and not label groups because of the actions of one - but there is no getting away from the fact that it is human nature to catagorize people and assign them attributes based on a label. It's how we make sense of the world and how we fit ourselves into it.
I'm not really sure where I'm going with this other than to say unless we forget all labels other than "Talk Photography Member" then I do think there will be a perceived divide BUT how we react to that divide and interact with each other is still completely within our control.

Looks it's simple folks...
Professional is better than Amateur EVERYTIME - simples - in Scrabble anyway
As for photography - well I guess we know more about the life & business of being a Pro photographer, but we don't necessarily know any more than a keen Am on anything technical or artistic about photography
Pros are not necessarily very good photographers, though most are pretty good as otherwise people wouldn't book them for jobs, but a Pro's opinion is NO different to any well informed other, and no more relevant than any other whether they be well informed or not
"I love it" is a perfectly good response to an image. If that image is crap by others' standards then that opinion is fine too. The key to useful comments is commentary - being able to say why it's great or not is far more important and useful to everyone as
a) they can see you're right and learn from it; or
b) they can see you're an arse, totally wrong, and discount your opinion - but having considered it they will have learned from it
Asking about business in the Talk Business section is where a Pro's response is most likely to be valuable and different to perhaps an Am's response; in all other sections, it's just an opinion - and one to take it or leave it
Phew - 2p enjoyably spent there
DD
Couldn't have said it better myself
The term "Pro" conjures up such emotion it baffles me.
Today I was having a discussion with a friend as to what a "Pro" was and I truly baffled him.
I know a Soldier, who just happens to take photos for the Army. The Army supply his equipment, pay for his training but first and foremost he is a Soldier. If it came down to the wire and the doo doo hit the fan, he would put down his camera, pick up his SA80 and be a soldier. Now this particular Soldier is rather good at what he does. He photographs everyone from VIP's down to the private grunt on the ground. He has had many many images published and I believe is up for some awards. He is though a Soldier, he gets paid to be a Soldier, and receives no financial gain or renumeration whatsoever for taking photographs.
So he receives no payment for taking photographs and I would like to be there if anyone was to tell him he wasn't a Professional.
He would take you down a dark alleyway and batter you round the head with a trusty D3s with a 70-200 attached![]()
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Too many people get hung up on terminology when it isn't about that, it's about the photography.
Applies to someone I know who isn't a pro. He went and did a training course, three weeks after finishing the course he had his stall out touting his new found abilities as a "Photography Trainer" churning out the exact same stuff he had leant less than a month previously.