Last week I filled you in on the different requirements for model releases when you sell your photos for stock or for editorial. This week, I’d like to cover another difference when it comes to these two markets. I’ve offered tips on editing your photos in Photoshop before, but if you want to sell your photos for editorial, you should know a few things, first, before you go fiddling with your images. When you hear the word “editorial” what do you think of? Newspapers and magazines most likely. And that would be correct. Add to that text books, the internet, and TV news and you’re more-or-less covering the “editorial” bases. Now, when you look at photos in a newspaper that are used to illustrate a story, you expect them to be “factual.” You assume that every bit of every image is “true.” You expect that nothing was changed, taken out, put in, or in any other way altered. For editorial use, that is, in fact, industry standard. (And more than one person has lost his job for not adhering to it.) But outside of editorial, it’s a free-for-all. Editing photos in Photoshop for fine art purposes — or simply to improve some basic aesthetics — is fairly common practice. In stock, for instance, it is not only acceptable — at times it’s required if you want to sell those stock shots for commercial purposes. Take this picture of a little boy in his baseball uniform… 



Travel Photography Resources
5 Dos and 2 Don’ts for Travel Photography
Take Great Photos And Get Paid More For Your Travel Articles
Turning a Photography Hobby into a Monthly Income
The Pros Of Selling Your Images As Stock Photography
16 Mobile Photography Tips And Tricks Every Photographer Should Know

