Showing posts with label Skills. Show all posts

Photography 1

I feel like I have done a fair amount of research in to photography as a hobby and a potential way to make money. I do not intend to cover nearly everything today. And as of yet I have not made any money. But I have been having fun and collecting camera gear.

Key take aways so far:

Go Canon. For $125 you can get a 50mm lens that will take great quality photos and is useful for just about anything other than landscape photography. The big deal is that this lens is a 1.8. The lower the F the nicer the picture your going to get.

There are differences between cropped and uncropped sensors. For practicality and as a novice the only difference seems to be that my cropped lenses won't work if I buy an uncropped and more expensive camera at some point later on. So this does not matter.

Buy a monopod AND a tripod. More on this in a future post.

I also highly recommend buying stuff through Amazon.(I get no money from them) Easy returns and they usually have a good protection plan you can buy. Definitely worth it if this is going to a business.

You can make great money in event/wedding photography but you need a bunch of equipment and spares. But you need good networking skills and the ability to market yourself.

Vistaprint.com (Again, no money from them) allows you to make nice and easy business cards. They also will let you custom embroider shirts...But they don't allow enough customization. A shirt that said "PHOTOGRAPHER" on the back would be perfect.

I need to spend an enormous amount of time using and learning Photoshop. One key to making money in this field is by selling stock photos. Stock photography as it was has basically been destroyed by the internet. You can still make money. Get on Shutterstock and similar websites that sell mass amounts of stock photos and find a way to stand out (meaning Photoshop skills). How it works now is that you get paid so many cents per download. Make a pretty enough picture and lots of people download it. Sounds simple enough.

The barriers of entry in to Photography appear very low. Yeah, some of these cameras and lenses are thousands of dollars. And a good starter portrait lens is just over $100 and a basic camera and kit can be had for less than $1000. I am noticing a number of these professionals all have YouTube accounts/websites/teach classes/ sell their own name brand gear/sell books all at once. I am guessing that if you want to make good money as a full time photographer you need to spread out and hit many different aspects of this photography at once. Beats digging ditches for a living.

There's all sorts of gear bags. Most of them look like shit. Seriously. Will you spend $2,000 on a lens and then put it in a super thin bag? HarborFreight.com (Once again- not a dime) sells hard side Pelican-like cases for $20-$40. Buy one for each lens. Use the extra space to store accessories. Note that they have metal eyelets on the larger cases. I suspect a couple of 'S' hooks or carabiners and a lanyard or strap of some kind would make a nice shoulder strap for these. I used one of these on a weekend trip to Yosemite to protect my camera gear. Worked great.





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The Basement Dwelling Millennial

A common attack I hear baby boomers make against millennials is that they are lazy kids who need to leave their parents basement. A failure to understand and lack of concern of anything that is happening is exactly why younger generations hate boomers so damn much. One wonders who they think will be caring for them in those retirement homes. But why are these kids stuck at home?



Lets start with how screwed over young guys and gals are coming out of college.



I graduated from a four year university in 2012. I took my time going through college. I'll be honest- I never wanted to go. I enjoyed the structure of college and the continual change of going to new classes. But I had no idea what I wanted to do. I didn't really want to do anything.



I think a lot of kids feel like that and they end up going to a college simply because of pressure they get. So four years later these kids end up in massive amounts of debt and in a job they probably didn't want. And if the kid in that situation is lucky he is only in debt. Some of these kids come out diseased or addicted to drugs and alcohol because these kids are encouraged to be as degenerate as possible the whole time they are there.



I skirted at least some of that. I started working manual labor when I was fifteen. So I had no intention of agreeing to spend more money than I had ever possessed on something I didn't like in the first place. So I went to a junior college and then on to a four year school afterward. But a lot of kids don't have that sense.



Even worse- these kids get out of college in $28,000 (average in California) in debt without a job. The median income in California is $51,000 a year. That's not starting salary- that is median. Let's say that our student will be paying $250 a month after his or her first six months out of college or $3,000 per year on his student loan.



For now we won't get in to what a SCAM it is to make someone buy a $30,000 piece of paper so that they can get a job making copies and bringing people coffee in an office. This is a rotten and failing system. 



Rent on this coast varies a lot. The fairly large city I live in makes a pretty clear distinction- Over or under $1,000 a month. If you are paying less than $1,000 then you are probably living in an area where the chances of you getting robbed/raped/murdered is highest. You add on basic utilities (food, water, gas, garbage) at around $150 per month and you end up paying around $14,000 per year on stuff you don't own.



How does this graduate's costs break down? $51,000 - ~30% in taxes = $51,000-$15,300 = $35,700.



$35,700 - ($14,000 rent & utilities + $3,000 student loan)  = $18,700



Do you want internet access? You might need it for your job.



Do you own a mobile phone? You pretty much need one these days it seems. I cannot log on to my work computer without a mobile phone for security.



How about a car payment? You need to get to your job.



$60 Basic internet or $720/year



Average monthly car payment = $479/ per month or $5,748/year



Mobile phone ~ $71*12 = $852/ year



Car Insurance ~$80 *12 = $960/year



(Please note I am using a basic Google search for these numbers. Please feel free to do your own research.)



So even just with these fairly standard expenses now a single person living alone has roughly $10,000 dollars to spread out among an entire year or $800 per month for gasoline, food, and incidentals. (If you spend $20 a day on food that's $600 a month. And since many young people have no idea how to cook- guess where their money goes.) Now imagine that you rent a 500 square foot apartment you live in but cannot afford to put furniture in. At a certain age it is no longer cute to own an inflatable couch.  



Please note I have not included any money being paid in to a retirement account. They simply do not have the money to do it. You may have seen stories about how little young people have in savings- well this is it. A lot of them simply cannot afford even to live in a studio apartment alone. I used to be in this place. I remember that once I let a package of pork chops spoil in my refrigerator. I was so upset that I cried.



Can you imagine how many millions of people just like me are in that position? How many of them are angry about it? I never had a doubt that Donald Trump would win the 2016 election and this is why. Yes, even after that video. If I'd had money I would have driven to Nevada and put money on him. Trump represented change. Badly needed change.



So what do they do? They get a roommate/shack up with their significant other, they stay home, or they go in to debt to eek out a life living alone. One wonders how many people stay in toxic relationships because they cannot afford to leave.



This isn't some argument for a 'living wage'. This is simply a description of how difficult it is for the new generation to make it on their own.



So what are some things young people can do to offset this?



Here is one question I hope to tackle with this blog. I have no interest in mining crypto currency. I think it is definitely an option to offset someone's monthly expenses but at the current time I won't be doing that. I am looking at things that allow someone to improve a skill. What I will be doing is trying different crafts/trades and 'side hustle' types of jobs.



Things I intend to look in to:



Photography

Soap Making

Candle Making

Blogging/Writing

Wood Working

Leather working





I will also be covering cooking, lifestyle stuff, being a dog owner and basically anything else I can think of which is worth talking about. 

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