Anonymous wrote:She paid $2,450 for a regular photo shoot and didn't get high res digital images. This was NOT a wedding shoot which takes all day and produces at least 500 photos.
That price is absurd. She should get digital images for that price. I don't know where you people having your family photo shoots?? We get them done every year and don't pay anywhere close to that price and get the high res digital images.
OP I would let the charity know so they don't get a "donation" from this person again
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rad 1627, folks. OP paid a fraction of a fraction for service. She did not pay thousands (or even a thousand). She paid 450 on 750 of service.
This is not a case where IP paid thousands, and has a right to be irritated. She paid a pittance on regular service and still isn’t happy. She also had the opportunity to negotiate for other things before the session, but didn’t.
I paid for 2,000 in prints after the service. So what would have cost 2,750 I got for 2,450 which amounts to a discount of 8%. I do not think that is a pittance. That is not out of our price range clearly but that is a lot of money for our family and not remotely what I would call a pittance.
I should have asked for pricing and information before the session, that is true. I do think if you are a high end photographer who knows you are on the high end of cost that you should perhaps proactively disclose that to someone who knows nothing about you prior to the session but I will take that criticism.
You paid for PRINTS.
So I guess you’ve gone to Lowe’s, bought a fridge, and expected a stove as it’s still inter kitchen?
Any lack of understanding in the contract is up to you, even if it seems unreasonable. You wanted the deal, and got it, but it wasn’t up to your standard.
What? I didn't want a deal on anything it was a charity auction. I wanted to bid on something to make a donation.
I don't understand your analogy at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ll be the outlier. I’m surprised you don’t get the digital file of any picture you bought a print of. I’ve never heard of that before.
I’m assuming you haven’t used a professional photographer before then. It’s pretty standard practice.
Anonymous wrote:She paid $2,450 for a regular photo shoot and didn't get high res digital images. This was NOT a wedding shoot which takes all day and produces at least 500 photos.
That price is absurd. She should get digital images for that price. I don't know where you people having your family photo shoots?? We get them done every year and don't pay anywhere close to that price and get the high res digital images.
OP I would let the charity know so they don't get a "donation" from this person again
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rad 1627, folks. OP paid a fraction of a fraction for service. She did not pay thousands (or even a thousand). She paid 450 on 750 of service.
This is not a case where IP paid thousands, and has a right to be irritated. She paid a pittance on regular service and still isn’t happy. She also had the opportunity to negotiate for other things before the session, but didn’t.
I paid for 2,000 in prints after the service. So what would have cost 2,750 I got for 2,450 which amounts to a discount of 8%. I do not think that is a pittance. That is not out of our price range clearly but that is a lot of money for our family and not remotely what I would call a pittance.
I should have asked for pricing and information before the session, that is true. I do think if you are a high end photographer who knows you are on the high end of cost that you should perhaps proactively disclose that to someone who knows nothing about you prior to the session but I will take that criticism.
You paid for PRINTS.
So I guess you’ve gone to Lowe’s, bought a fridge, and expected a stove as it’s still inter kitchen?
Any lack of understanding in the contract is up to you, even if it seems unreasonable. You wanted the deal, and got it, but it wasn’t up to your standard.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Rad 1627, folks. OP paid a fraction of a fraction for service. She did not pay thousands (or even a thousand). She paid 450 on 750 of service.
This is not a case where IP paid thousands, and has a right to be irritated. She paid a pittance on regular service and still isn’t happy. She also had the opportunity to negotiate for other things before the session, but didn’t.
I paid for 2,000 in prints after the service. So what would have cost 2,750 I got for 2,450 which amounts to a discount of 8%. I do not think that is a pittance. That is not out of our price range clearly but that is a lot of money for our family and not remotely what I would call a pittance.
I should have asked for pricing and information before the session, that is true. I do think if you are a high end photographer who knows you are on the high end of cost that you should perhaps proactively disclose that to someone who knows nothing about you prior to the session but I will take that criticism.
Anonymous wrote:Rad 1627, folks. OP paid a fraction of a fraction for service. She did not pay thousands (or even a thousand). She paid 450 on 750 of service.
This is not a case where IP paid thousands, and has a right to be irritated. She paid a pittance on regular service and still isn’t happy. She also had the opportunity to negotiate for other things before the session, but didn’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Totally normal. It was most likely all spelled out in the contract you signed or their price list. Why are you expecting to get something for free?
I'm not expecting anything for free. I spent 2k on prints.
I bought the session at a charity event via a fundraiser and it wasn't spelled out at the time. I wasn't informed actually until AFTER we had done the shoot about this or any pricing.
Well then, lesson learned. Read the fine print!
Photographers spend hours that you do not see working on your photos. They make their money selling the photos in all formats after the shoot. Good, high end photographers do the pricing the way you see it.
Agree. Just pay the damn money. It's not just snapping pics and sending them to you straight from the camera. There are touch ups on those, sizing, and also the session planning (to get the shots, lighting, etc.) It's an art. Plus, her admin costs (e.g., upkeep for Photoshop, billing platforms, her time, etc.)
I'm just a hobbyist but, even for my pics (which are decent but not professional), its a LOT of work.
So just asking, do you not think a client ordering 2k in prints is showing adequate respect for their work? This photographer shot us last week. Went over photos earlier this week and will be sending them for print today after touch ups.
So lets say they did nothing else BUT work on my product for this entire week. 2k a week is making quite a bit of money. That is in addition to their $500 sitting fee (which is about what I paid at the fundraiser, so they didn't receive that directly).
Your beef is with the pricing, then. You should have checked that upfront and you didn't. This is your problem, not the photographer's.
Add this to the fact that OP got her package at a discount, through a charity event. She didn’t even pay full price for the small package she got (session and one print)