sarahfoto
Allowing Ads
few things are mre optimistic than photographic edition limits.
Even better, fake your death, then show up as your long-lost twin.I plan to never edition and die earlier than expected as to avoid editioning and selling my photographs at a premium.
Limited editions are good for business people who happen to be dealing in photography. Open editions are great for photographers with faith in the quality of their photographs.
Peter Lik sells his prints as 1/500 haha!
I agree it's hard to make editions with printed media now, and I for one don't have those storage capacities available to make a full run like that.
~Stone
I'm selling prints through a gallery, I made one edition 1/12 and they seemed to think it was a very small edition. I realise that there is not one right answer but how many prints would you limit yourself to?
Is it usual to sell out a full edition? (as you notice I haven't sold that many yet...)
// Sarah
hi jim
i don't understand this at all.
what if a photographer didn't want to be pinned down
and have to print the same old boring negative 500 or 200 or 100 or 20 times ?
when i was making single edition prints, it was because the idea of a singular image
really differentiates a photograph as a hand made object, unlike something that can be
obtained by pressing a button &c. i still believe this today ( 20+ years later ) ...
it always makes me laugh when i hear of someone with an edition of 500 images.
what's the point, to flood the marketplace with "loved images" ?
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