Now more than ever, at a time when magazines do not have the budgets to send out-of-town photographers on assignment to Your Town, USA, it is important that you have good photographic coverage of your area. After all, no matter how good an out-of-town photographer might be, the advantage is yours when it comes to being there when the light is perfect or your town is under two feet of snow and everything looks like a postcard. Here are three tips for photographing your hometown and maximizing this built-in advantage: ** 1. Photograph each of your town’s famous landmarks and public buildings in depth. What most photographers do when visiting a new place is to make sure they capture all the “usual suspects” first (like the St. Francis Cathedral here in Santa Fe). They don’t usually have time for much more. You, on the other hand, have the luxury of photographing everything — even lesser-known but just as photogenic (and marketable) subjects in your hometown. In my case, in addition to the Cathedral, I have images of Loretto Chapel, Guadalupe Church, San Miguel Mission, and many other area churches. To boot, I have interior shots of all of them. This first sample photo depicts Santa Fe’s Cathedral. I have images of the cathedral from different angles, from its interior, with and without people, etc… 


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