H and H Color Lab - Professional Photo Lab Blog

Once again Facebook has unilaterally improved (changed) their user interface and its capabilities. Like it or not it’s a whole new ballgame…again! Georgia takes you through a quick update of the changes.  As an author, speaker, trainer and social media and photography evangelist, her perspectives entitled “A Picture is Worth a Thousand Friends…or Enemies” appear in print in the book entitled The Relationship Age, with social media guru Mari Smith. Georgia is a frequent guest blogger for our photo lab.

Today we’d like to offer a guest blog post, written by Teri Ritter, of Teri Ritter Photography.  Teri has been in business for 10 years in San Diego, CA and Dexter, MI, specializing in families, seniors, and babies.  Teri is also a Marketing Consultant and enjoys sharing marketing ideas and plans which boost the bottom line for professional photographers everywhere.  Today, Teri talks to us about finding inspiration.

Everybody is very busy this time of year and burnout is running rampant. For the next couple of months it is pedal to the metal.  However, I challenge you to take the time to find some inspiration to make this a brighter time of year.  Not so nerve wracking, but more fulfilling for you and your business.

1. Start an inspiration notebook TODAY.  

You have old notebooks sitting around.  Just put a label on it and christen it My Inspiration Notebook.   Now, when you look through a magazine and see an image that touches you or inspires you, tear it out and throw it into your inspiration notebook.   Do the same with quotes, cool marketing pieces, and anything that you see, touch or feel that inspires you.  It all goes into the notebook.  Periodically (at least once a month) sit down with a cup of coffee or tea and peruse your inspiration notebook.  Challenge yourself to incorporate methods, products, sets, and lighting into your world. (more…)

Summer is the time to move your school business forward by reinforcing existing contacts and by making new contacts.  Because this is the time of year when employees step into new positions, your point of contact may change.   So be sure to determine who your contact is and reinforce that relationship via mail, email or a personal visit.  Bringing small gifts of cookies or a small personalized product like a mug, etc. can go a long way!

Offer a variety of products that are new and compelling.  People are looking for things that are different than the ordinary school package.  Key chains, mouse pads, dry erase boards, mugs, etc. create add-on sales opportunities.  Be sure to include images of the products in your promotional materials, as well as providing samples to your key contacts to show off before picture day.

Offering a variety of techniques and poses allows you to differentiate yourself and build your average check:

  • Sepia, black and white, color and tinting can be set up as actions, which only take seconds to process, and can add dollars to your bottom line.
  • Photograph two frames per child and then crop to create a total of 4 images to select from.
  • Photograph with different poses than the classic direct front head and shoulders image.

Yes, this is a little more work, but you cannot get complacent in this competitive industry or your business will die a slow death.

Be sure to offer retouching for an additional price.   Different levels are a good way to approach this: Basic (light blemishes,) moderate (light blemishes, scars, tone,) and extensive (braces removal, teeth whitening and more.)

Make money while you are out on another job – offer “after sale” opportunities via hhimagehost.com!  Here you can offer additional products as well as a-la-carte prints.  Use email or skinny minis to direct people to your branded storefront.

If you aren’t shooting schools, think about it.  Schools offer a serious income stream and it isn’t as complicated as one might imagine.  Contact the experts at H&H to learn how you can go about getting into the school segment of the photographic industry!

Jeff Edwards, of Jeff Edwards Studio in Milwaukee, WI, was here at H&H last week, helping teach our School Boot Camp classes.  He is a 33 year veteran in the school picture business. Jeff started his career working for a large senior contract studio. In 1987, he opened his own studio with two locations and a color lab which he later sold in 1997.  After moving to the Kansas City area, he began working for Interstate Studio & Publishing, becoming their National Sales Manager.  He has also consulted for Jostens and Herff Jones.  He currently lives in the Milwaukee area and owns Jeff Edwards Studio, a full service photography studio.

Since we had him in the University, we asked him to do a video blog post for us.  We asked him to break down some of the important skills needed by school photographers.  Thanks Jeff!

We had several entries in our Dog Days of Summer photography contest, and the expert panel of judges (H&H employees) have finished judging.  Believe it or not, we had a TIE!  First, the runners up:

photo by Kim Sparks

photo by Liz Chivvis

photo by Fritz Geil

photo by Kim Sparks

And the two winning images, both submitted by the same photographer:

photo by Fritz Geil

photo by Fritz Geil

Thank you for playing along.  Fritz, enjoy your two free dog tags!

I was recently asked in the context of photography what was the one thing that I could not live without.

As I thought about it, I realized that it would be very difficult to narrow this down to just one item. In actuality there were several different areas that in each, there was a piece of hardware, software, or tool that I would not want to be a photographer and not have.

The more I thought about this, the more I thought it would be a good challenge to analyze in the following areas, what things I could not live without. The areas that I considered are the following:

  • camera gear (things other than lens and camera body)
  • computer hardware
  • computer software

So, for this blog post, I thought I would talk about just one of my favorite, can’t live without, photographic things.

Adobe Bridge CS5

I use Adobe Bridge for so many different things.

First – probably the use most people think of:  I use it to browse through and look at my images.

There are so many ways that I can look at my images; in the content tab looking at thumbnails, and I can also see a larger version in the Preview tab if I wish.

I can view them in a Full Screen Preview mode by pressing on the space bar. Then I use my arrow keys to navigate through the folder.

I can use the Review Mode to quickly edit down images (Command/Ctrl B) by pressing the down arrow, I am unselecting the image.

I can also do a very quick slide show by pressing Command/Ctrl L, and adjust the slide show settings by pressing shift Command/Ctrl L.

In any of these viewing environments, I can add rating meta-data to help sort these images later, either by adding a 1-5 star rating, or a color code.

I also can use Adobe Bridge to select a range of images either Raw or Jpg’s and using Adobe Camera Raw, do batch corrections to the images. I can do color/density corrections, cropping, remove camera sensor dirt, sharpen, remove noise, apply lens profile corrections. The big advantage of doing these types of corrections in Adobe Bridge and Adobe Camera Raw, is that the corrections are non-destructive. I can always undo the correction without damaging my original image.

I can also batch rename images in Adobe Bridge. I can drag the images into the sequence that I want them to appear, and use bridge to append a sequential number to the beginning of the file name to keep the images in that sequence. A new feature in the Batch Rename dialog in CS5 is the ability to do a “String Substitution”. For example if I have a series of images named BSkeie###.jpg and I want to remove the BSkeie part of the file names and replace it with Bentley, I use the String Substitution and tell it to find BSkeie and replace with Bentley.  Very fast and easy!

A new feature that I am really excited about is the Export Tab. On this tab I can set up different export critera. Information like the destination where the exported files are to be saved and setting up different Image Size exports. I can save several of these different exports in the Export tab, then drag the images I want to apply the specific criteria to, and then press the export arrow and have the selection I selected applied, and then saved out to the specified destination.

I have set these up for several different exports for web previews, proof prints, or medium resolution files.

There is also the ability to have exports that will save your images directly to your Flicker or Facebook pages.

There are many many more things that can be done using Adobe Bridge, but as the song goes, “these are a few of my favorite things”

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