Marketing Photography, Part III: The Art of Keywording Photographs

Photograph - Mist and Melancholy

In my May 12th post, “Everybody Loves Keywording Photographs” I mentioned that keywording photographs is usually a tedious albeit necessary exercise to help categorize photographs and allow others to find them via your website or search engines on the Internet.  During the past two months I have revamped my website with the focus on expanding my already existing keywords and made some notes.  Today, I’m going to give some tips on what you should do to maximize the your the keywords associated with your photography.  For this exercise, I will be using the image above, “Mist and Melancholy” to help illustrate what keywords should be associated with this image.

While answering each of the 11 questions below, we need to keep four things in mind.  Primarily, we will want to be as specific as possible.  If something has a proper name, it should be used.  Secondly, we will want to explore as many synonyms as possible within each question.  Thirdly, if the plural of the subject differs significantly in spelling we will want to make note of that as well.  Lastly, spell check everything!  A mispelled word will rarely help in searches.

Keep in mind that if your keywords are too vague or inaccurate people will not think that your keywording is reliable and will be frustrated when they do not find the image they need.  Additionally, we want to use only the terms the majority of individuals would use when searching.  It is possible to go too far in keywording and have obscure words which few people would actually use.   Using such terms reduces the effectiveness of the words that you have chosen to describe the photograph. 

The questions come after the jump – be sure to click on “Read the rest of the entry”!

Read the rest of this entry »

A Forest Photowalk

Photograph - Quiet and Camoflage - Rocky Mountain Woodhouse Toad

Saturday was the third annual Scott Kelby Photowalk.  Normally, you participate by signing up at a city or location near you and you take the opportunity to photograph the surroundings with 50 other individuals.  This year I decided to have a little smaller photowalk with only my eldest daughter and me.  We took a stroll through Schramm State Recreation Area and looked at the wildflowers, mushrooms, and had some fun crossing the suspension bridge that spans a ravine deep in the forest.  On the way back, we saw something jumping across the trail which made us jump a little.  Stopping to find the hopper, we spotted a little Rocky Mountain Woodhouse Toad.  He had stopped and was lying perfectly still in the surrounding foliage.  A couple of times I even lost him in the viewfinder as I was readjusting my perspective and found it difficult to find him again.  He had some great camouflage!

Technical Details:
Canon 50D, 300 f/4l + 1.4tc, Extension Tube
Schramm SRA, Nebraska

Photo Friday: Corn Lily Patterns

Photograph - Corn Lily Patterns

Digging deep in the archives (2005), I found this image of a corn lily after a rain in Glacier National Park. I decided that it needed to have an ultra-contrast dark look to accentuate the feeling of being deep in the forest, where the plant was found.

Technical Details:
Canon 20D, 17-40 f/4l @ 22mm, f/13, 1/50 sec.
Glacier National Park, Montana

Cropping Photographs for Impact

Photograph - Hen Patterns

For the first 2-3 years after I made the switch to digital I processed all my photographs in the 2:3 ratio.  After all, I had years upon years of dealing with 35mm film which I then enlarged to 6×9 almost exclusively.  Any other format seemed foreign to me.  I had a brief stint with a 4×5 medium format, but I was never able to get the funds to go larger than 35mm even though I had yearned for the quality of the larger format.  Another contributing factor to my continued use of the 2:3 format was the relatively few megapixels of my 20D.  Don’t get me wrong, those 8 megapixels have created some pretty amazing photos, but I knew that magazines, calendar companies, etc. wanted lots of megapixels and the 20D barely cut it (if at all).  I needed to squeeze every last detail out of that camera. 

As time went on and sensors grew with my artistic endeavors, I began to explore the benefits of cropping images in other formats.  Sure, when the image was printed it may present a problem, but on the computer, the crop helped the composition.  Take the Hen image above.  This is an excellent natural example of the golden spiral.  If I were to keep a 2:3 format, I feel that I would detract from what I am attempting to achieve, showing the elegance and beauty of the pattern.  Of course, with my larger sensor (and in a point and shoot to boot!) I was able to crop this image an still keep around 9 megapixels of image data. 

Today, most of my images are still in the 2:3 format, simply because that is what the my DSLR cameras capture and its easier to compose in what is native on your equipment.  With the advent of live view and other tools, however, I am finding myself using the crop to add impact more and more.  Besides, my little G10 which captured this image is not in 2:3 either, so it has helped me to see differently and that is a good thing.

Technical Details:
Canon G11, f/3.2, 1/25 sec.
Omaha, Nebraska

Photo Friday: Ominous Overhead

Photograph - Ominous Overhead

Since I’ve had a few weekly series of photographs, I haven’t had a “Photo Friday” in a while. On Wednesday we received an incredible storm followed by an even more incredible sunset. While I was unable to be out during much of either I did hop in the car for a jaunt out of the city. Here, the clouds were still picking up the red hue of the sun even after the sun had set 45 minutes prior.

Technical Details:
Canon 5D Mark II, 17-40 f/4l @ 17mm @ 21mm, f/9, 15 seconds
Rural Sarpy County, Nebraska

Nebraska – From One Extreme to Another – Day 10 – Breakthrough

Photograph - Breakthrough

For my final image in the “From One Extreme to Another” series, I present “Breakthrough“. This is probably, my favorite image from the day I spent at Ponca State Park. The sun and fog really added to the dynamic of this image. While the composition seems simple, something keeps drawing me back to this photograph. A good example of learning to photograph where you live. Interesting images can be made virtually anywhere, one doesn’t have to travel far to see some incredible things.

Technical Details:
Canon 5D Mark II, 70-200 f/4l @ 200mm, f/8, 1/2000 sec.
Ponca State Park, Nebraska

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