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    Friday, October 16, 2020

    Real Estate Photography: Nikon D3400: good enough?

    Real Estate Photography: Nikon D3400: good enough?


    Nikon D3400: good enough?

    Posted: 16 Oct 2020 08:06 PM PDT

    I'm currently a real estate agent who would like to be able to shoot my own listings, and possibly transition into being a part time photographer for other agents in my office eventually. I have a Nikon D3400 but I have absolutely no idea how to use it so I've been working on figuring that out. My question is, is that a good enough camera for entry level stuff? Also, I've been looking at lenses, is a 10-20mm (or something similar) what I need to be looking at? Any other equipment I should get ASAP?

    submitted by /u/fartkidwonder
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    auto-booking software / do any of you use pixifi?

    Posted: 16 Oct 2020 10:44 AM PDT

    hi all!

    i'm currently using calendly as an auto-booking software. it works extremely well. however i am now starting to add to my team with another photographer and hopefully a third and fourth photographer in the next year. calendly doesn't work for multiple staff members.

    we've been playing around with pixifi, which is most commonly used for wedding photography (i find a lot of other photography management software is built for wedding photographers). pixifi allows us to have multiple staff members scheduled and pulls from multiple google calendars for availability. we just haven't found the ability for a client to enter the home address so that it shows as the event location.

    has anyone either used pixifi for real estate photography or used a similar software that has better auto-booking / auto-scheduling options?

    thanks!

    edit: we reached out to pixifi and they are building this feature in at our request and should be usable in the next 2 weeks... honestly amazed at that level of customization and customer service they offer.

    submitted by /u/punflower
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    Hosting a Portfolio as a Newb

    Posted: 16 Oct 2020 10:01 AM PDT

    So I am just wondering. I did some searching but found nothing that answers this directly

    When you start out; ya know after you did your practice pictures of your friends and family's place etc and you want to start cold calling agents or start marketing to generate business. How do you get your initial portfolio up and online? Is an Instagram page good to start? should one have a basic website up and running already that way when agents or clients look at your business card you have a professional image? Or do you just say screw it and send them a dropbox file?

    What say ye?

    submitted by /u/slamturbo
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    Are Fujifilm cameras good for realestatephotography?

    Posted: 16 Oct 2020 09:09 AM PDT

    I'm lookin in buying a fujifilm xt-2 for real estate photography and would like to know If theres some better cameras but in The same Price range like Sony A7 II. Would like to know from someone who has a fujifilm or another camera thats about The same price. Any comment is welcome and Will Be greatly appreciated:)

    submitted by /u/Kemnx
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