Ciao,
Graywolf
http://pages.prodigy.net/graywolfphoto


----- Original Message -----
From: "frank theriault" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> I think, in common English parlance, a professional photographer is one
who
> derives his primary income from photography.  An amateur is everyone else.
So,
> an amateur is now one who does something and does not derive their primary
> income from that activity.

I have always had a problem with that definition. Let's see if some poor
bozo like me makes $7000 selling photographs part time then by this
difinition he is a pro. Now if some rich guy, works at it 80 hours a week
and makes $100 - 150,000 a year, but has an income from investments of say
1/2 million a year, he is a amateur?

Now to me, if you do photography with the intent to make money, then you are
a pro. Yes, even if no one buys your photos. That just means you are a
unsuccessful pro. If you do photography for your own reasons and never sell
them, then you are a amateur. Can you be both an amateur and a pro? The old
Olympic rules excepted, I don't see why not.

So what is a professional camera. Well, really, in my opinion, it is a
camera designed to take the day in, day out grind of professional use for a
reasonalble length of time. In other words, durablity makes the difference.
Of course, in advertising speak it means, made for suckers who can not
figure this out for theirselves.


Reply via email to