Real Estate Photography: Videography for Real Estate |
- Videography for Real Estate
- Which gimbal should I buy...
- Bracketing (HDR) with flash ?
- Small town iPhone pics
- Pricing
- Anyone do 360 photos with 14mm lens?
| Posted: 07 Jul 2020 06:38 PM PDT So I currently have the Nikon D5200. I've only been doing photography work but I'm wanting to expand to doing videography work as well. Would this camera do fine with simple video work like walk-in tours? I also have a DJI Mavic Air 2 so I can take aerial videos/photographs (and yes I'm FAA licensed already). [link] [comments] |
| Posted: 07 Jul 2020 01:27 PM PDT The age old question. I have a 5D III and I want to start offering video with my photos. I'm between the Crane 2, Ronin SC, and the Weebill S. Do you use any of these? Do you have one I didn't link to I should look into? Thanks! [link] [comments] |
| Posted: 07 Jul 2020 07:16 AM PDT I read a few comments of people talking about doing 5 bracketing hdr with flash. For real estate photography, I think it's can be a better option than simple HDR in term of quality and quicker than flash-ambient merge. Someone here use this technique? [link] [comments] |
| Posted: 07 Jul 2020 10:16 AM PDT Hola. Local realtors in my little town, and the entire Upper Peninsula of Michigan in general, only post the most basic, usually terribly-angled, and unflattering pictures for their listings. Even the higher end ones! I have a Tamron 15-30 and I know I can provide dramatically different pictures for them. However, I doubt they would see it as worth it and would laugh me out. I love photography and would be doing this mostly for fun. I wouldn't ask for much. But...any advice as to how I can convince them? Maybe some stats about how high quality pictures improve sales/speed of sales? Especially since young people my age browse Zillow and the like often. Pictures like that really capture all that a nice house is—and fool you with the not as nice ones. Have any of you had to make a sales pitch to a tough crowd? My plan is to offer 5 free shoots, then let them decide after. Hopefully interested buyers comment on them or notice the difference. I would even shoot for $20 per listing. Just enough to pay off my lens in a reasonable amount of time. Also, the realtors could spend their time more wisely if they didn't have to waste time taking pictures. I'm open to anything, and I appreciate your time and thoughts. tldr: help me replace shitty house pics with decent house pics [link] [comments] |
| Posted: 07 Jul 2020 09:14 AM PDT I am just getting started and have a few leads but need to nail down my pricing before I contact the agents. How does everyone determine their pricing? I am in the Atlanta area if that makes any difference. [link] [comments] |
| Anyone do 360 photos with 14mm lens? Posted: 07 Jul 2020 08:58 AM PDT Hi folks, Had a couple of people asking me if I can do 360 photos recently. Not for RE specifically but figured people on this sub would have some ideas. My widest lens is 14mm and I really don't want to buy anything wider, only use 14 occasionally for photos in tiny en-suite bathrooms. Would 14mm lens + panoramic head + PS CC be adequate for 360s? Is specialist stitching software really much better than Photoshop? Thanks [link] [comments] |
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