subject: How To Sell Photographs Using Just 3 Lenses! [print this page] How To Sell Photographs Using Just 3 Lenses!
If you have a Digital SLR then you have a means with which to sell photographs. You will have the option to change lenses as you require, and this sets the DSLR apart from their cheaper contemporaries. Most professionals have a large selection of lenses for their cameras. However, I have found that only a few lenses are ever really required, and most jobs can be adequately covered with the use of 3 lenses.The Standard lens size that many cameras come with is an 18mm-55mm lens. A 50mm prime lens will show the subject roughly the same size as you see with your eye. This means if you look through the view finder at a person standing 10 yards away with one eye, and also look at him with the other eye without the camera, both eyes should see the person as the same size. As the number of mm decreases so the person, as seen through the camera, would start to shrink, and thus setting your 18mm-55mm lens to 18mm would enable you to stand close to a subject, and still get the complete scene in your shot.Alternatively a larger lens such as a 200mm will show one little piece of the scene and that is all. An 18-200mm lens would be counted as a telephoto lens or its popular name of a zoom lens. If you have the option of obtaining a variety of lenses make sure you first check the fittings on your camera as they are not always compatible (e.g. Canon mount will not be the same as a Nikon mount) and then decide which lenses are most important. I have found that for most situations, the following 3 lenses cover my needs.* An 18mm-55mm (good to take photographs of landscapes)* 75mm-300mm (a great all rounder from portraits to wildlife and sport) * A 50mm Macro lens. A Macro lens allows you to get close to things like the petals of a flower, or the wings of a butterfly and zoom in on the tiniest part and take a clear picture. My 50mm Macro also allows me to take and sell photographs of beautiful portraits, and at its widest aperture (f2.8) I can create wonderful depth of field effects, especially when close to my subject.