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Photography book prices rising beyond the grasp of real enthusiasts.


The numbers are minuscule compared to mass market books.
Additionally, they cost much more to produce because of the content, especially if there are illustrations.
 

I am a little puzzled by the use of the words "over priced". Are these books selling at these prices? If they are, evidently they are not over-priced. If they aren't, then one reason may be their price. Maybe they just aren't worth what is being asked for them. Prices of all sorts are normally not aimed at whether a buyer is an enthusiast or not. Prices are based on cost plus a profit. If the "old bookstores" had made enough profit, you would not be able to drink coffee where they once were. Now if the problem is that the books I want are selling for more than I can afford, then that is my problem, not the world's........Regard!
 
So far the one book I want that has escaped me is James Nachtwey's "Inferno,"

My only photo indulgence that is not a tax deduction are photo books.

When I was at the very first Look3 some ten years ago, Nachtwey had a bunch of first editions of Inferno at his table, they were $100. I hesitated because it was a sizable book to be packing in my luggage but I went for it anyway. Now among other *very* expensive photo books, over 100 also signed, it sits amid them. I hung out and had a beer with him later that night, asked him if he would ever venture off into another genre if this one got to be too much for him.

He said "Nah, all I will ever be is a war photographer."

Photo books are expensive and life is short so you make your choices and live that life.
 
My only photo indulgence that is not a tax deduction are photo books.

All my photography is my non tax deductible photography, equipment, supplies, books, ...
 
Unlike most photobooks, the (often multiple) authors of such textbooks expect to get paid fairly for their work. Many times the new editions are caused by changes in laws/ regulations/ new science etc, etc.

A few years back I spent 14 months working as a copyeditor on a high school biology textbook. Along with a staff of six or seven editors. The total production budget for this book was on the order of $10 million. But it was more or less guaranteed to be profitable for the publisher. Yes, science and law texts need to be kept up to date, but there are also accountants looking at spreadsheets showing how long it's going to take them to recoup the investment on a new edition, state buying cycles, projected lifespan of the products, and so on and so forth. Literally like a depreciation schedule. At that level, decisions are driven more by profit than topical needs.
 
Best examples of 'overpriced'...text books in college bookstores. Photography books are bargains by comparison!

I just went to the online bookstore for UC Berkeley, and a freshman 2nd semester biology book is $109.
A book for Chemistry 105 is $440/
The new textbook we are adopting for B&W film photography is Bruce Warren's Photography: The Concise Guide (with Resource Center Printed Access Card) 2nd Edition it's $130 for a book most of these student's will not want to keep, I tried to argue for something cheaper or one of the two older books he had written with almost identical content but we need something the bookstore can stock so that students can use their loan money to purchase the book. It's a damn shame, it's not worth that kind of money.
 
That situation is very close to criminally wrong!

The best is when your textbook is only available in hardcover, and costs $100, oh and written by your prof. Then you go to class and he has an obviously cheaper but not available softcover version.
 
The best is when your textbook is only available in hardcover, and costs $100, oh and written by your prof. Then you go to class and he has an obviously cheaper but not available softcover version.

This happens because he can't afford a hardback version of his own book. He is still trying to pay off his student loan/loans. Some people are never able to pay them off.........Regards!
 
This happens because he can't afford a hardback version of his own book. He is still trying to pay off his student loan/loans. Some people are never able to pay them off.........Regards!
Yeah, i remember when Obama, with just a year or two left in his Presidency, said something like.....He and his wife had Just Paid Off Their Student Loans, right before occupying The Whitehouse for the first time.
I did not go to school, but i have sympathy for "regular people" that endure that scenario.
 
Masahisa Fukase's 2017 reprint of Ravens, priced at £75/$85.

This is a small book with 80 plates in it. How come is it so expensive?