You don't even have to be a good photographer to have a successful business as photographer. You just have to be good at business and marketing. Anything else will be just details.
Well you just gave an answer to that in another related thread:
And how is the market on Wet Plate portrait?I think most people wouldn't appreciate the difference between a daguerreotype and your standard collodion wet plate, making the former a bit excessive. Heck, I'd be thrilled just to have a wet plate done.
Yes I agree. But this quote is from an other thread and is completely contextualized because the other thread talk is about 35mm film negative to use as professional service. And what I said is that between 35mm film negative and digital to people it doesn't make difference. As far you delivery sharp images in a couple of days they will be happy.You don't need to be a great photographer to market photography, but you would need to be a skilled photographer and/or chemist to pull off daguerreotypes while still hoping to make a profit.
By the way, I have had a daguerreotype portrait done, drove 5h for that and paid for it.
But I'm rare breed anyway...
But better marketing would help.
I would be tempted to do the same. But most people don't even know how to spell dagereotype (or film, it seems) so I can't imagine a mass market. I don't think there has been a mass market for dags since 1858 or so... so why should there be one now?
Is it okay if we don't want to make images with the Dag or do we have to check with you first?
There is a niche for these older processes. I shoot wet plate, but not commercially. Why not Daguerreotypes? Like Jim Jones said, mercury doesn't play nice inside the human body.
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