For those of you who offer limited editions:
Do you really print all (10, 25, 50, or whatever) copies of your edition of a specific negative at once, before you offer the edition to a gallery or the public?
If you do not, then (given the supply realities of today's market) how can you guarantee your gallery owner that you will be able to fulfill an edition by printing it on the same paper, with the same chemicals, toners, etc.? Suppose, for example, you began printing an edition on Agfa paper, and then it disappeared from the market, and you had not laid in a frozen stock sufficient to compete your edition? Is it ethical to continue printing an edition on a different paper?
a limited edition is just that, one of x number of prints and that's it no more. then the stone, plate or dare i say it, negative, is broken, destroyed, scored, or somehow rendered unusable. Certificates of authenticity are a joke, you get them with framed animation cells and sporting memorabilia. and when you think of it, what's the point of numbering and signing the mattes? that's silly....does a painter put his signature on the frame? would any print stay in it's original mount over it's lifetime, very few i would suggest. Personally i would steer well clear of any marketing that included the terms limited, ist or restricted edn and i certainly would avoid individual certificates of authenticity, they're not necessary for other mediums, don't see why photography should be treated any different... just my opinion
wayne
Personally, I like limited editions since they encourage me to go out and make more images.
However, do you score or destroy your negative? That is something I could just never bring myself to do to make it a truly limited edition. I shudder at the thought of hurting my negative!
Not necessarily. It makes the purchaser happy, it makes the galleries happy, and in my case, it makes the photographer happy. Additionally, I don't how it is in Australia, but having an image as part of a limited edition doesn't necessarily mean it can't be used for other purposes - magazines, calendars, etc. Personally, I like limited editions since they encourage me to go out and make more images.
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