I have this little side-business (actually, not much of a business since I lose more money on it than I earn). I have a shop on
Etsy.com where I sell hand-crafted
Catholic rosary bracelets. I've been dabbling in this for several years with almost modest success and it truly is more a labor of love than an actual money-making enterprise.
As with generally all online shops, the mantra on Etsy.com, is "have excellent photos of what you are selling". Of course, unlike the brick-and-mortar shops, customers can't touch, feel and smell(?) your products so your pictures must tell the story. Up until now, I have to be honest, my online pictures were amateurish,
at best. One enterprising fellow Etsy-er contacted me recently to
offer photography services, at a cost. The idea being better pictures will lead to more business. Nice idea but a shop in the red can't really outsource the photos.
Despite my sad listing pictures, the
Holy Spirit moved someone out there in cyber space and late last week as I was feeling pretty low due to a
job loss, an order came in through
my Etsy shop.
So, as I was getting ready to ship my latest creation this afternoon, I decided to break out my beat-up Canon digi-cam with the broken zoom feature and give new pictures the old college try. For the first time ever, I played with adjusting the exposure, used a small tri-pod that one of my kids had been using as a Lego accessory, and actually tried out the 2 second delay. I added extra spot light on the scene with an old desk lamp and tried to pay attention to where the camera auto-focused when it snapped the pic.
Here's the sub-amateur "before" photo:
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| BEFORE |
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And here's my effort from today:
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| AFTER |
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Well, at this size, you are going to just have to take my word for it. Blown up to 1000pix wide, the AFTER photo is much better: clear, detailed and true-to-life colors.
I'm still pretty ignorant when it comes to photography but I feel happy that I took a step in a new direction today and tried something new, not solely relying on the AUTO features on my sad little battered camera.
Now that the pictures in my listing are no longer over exposed, perhaps I'll get more exposure among potential customers....or at least not offend the artistic sensibilities of those who are surfing by!