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07/22/2006 01:29:35 PM · #1 |
Besides Alamy, what other macro sites are there?
And before digital, where and how did people submit to stock agencies, and are those places still open and accepting new stuff?
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07/22/2006 01:35:57 PM · #2 |
Originally posted by moniepenny:
And before digital, where and how did people submit to stock agencies, and are those places still open and accepting new stuff? |
Most traditional stock agencies take photos in form of 35mm color slides. And, yes, there are many of them still open for business.
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07/22/2006 01:49:47 PM · #3 |
Originally posted by fotomann_forever: Originally posted by moniepenny:
And before digital, where and how did people submit to stock agencies, and are those places still open and accepting new stuff? |
Most traditional stock agencies take photos in form of 35mm color slides. And, yes, there are many of them still open for business. |
Do you know of any specifically?
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07/22/2006 01:52:58 PM · #4 |
Not right off the bat, no... if you are seriously looking into traditional stock... I'd suggest 2006 Photographer's Market
It's a good listing of who needs what.
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07/22/2006 02:07:57 PM · #5 |
Originally posted by moniepenny: Besides Alamy, what other macro sites are there?
And before digital, where and how did people submit to stock agencies, and are those places still open and accepting new stuff? |
Places like Corbis and Getty used to take transperency film. They're still around, but extremely hard to get into. You need a very large portfolio of exceptional photographs, and I think they only accept photos from the professional dSLR's eg: Canon 1-series |
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