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         <description><![CDATA[<h3 align="center"><strong>Can You Take
  a<br />
  Simple Photograph?</strong></h3>  
  <h3 align="center"><em><strong>If yes, you could easily make $200 - $2,000 a week
      taking photographs in your own backyard...
      on your family vacations...<br />
    or anywhere in the world you care to travel…Just like these
  people:</strong></em></h3>
  <div class="intro">
    <p>When David Morgan traveled to Asia, he did something vacationers
        always do on their trips – he took pictures of the native people, monuments,
        and scenery. But he didn’t stop there. He used a secret (the same one you’ll
      discover in this letter) to earn more than $6,000 for those shots.</p>
    <p>He’s not alone...</p>
    <p>Tim O’Rielly loves taking pictures of his home city San Diego. He
        used this very same secret to make $2,000 for just 10 shots. And later, he
        used this secret to travel to Kauai, a Hawaiian Island renowned for its enchanting
        beauty, cascading emerald mountains, flower-bedecked streams and swaying,
      palm-fringed shores. There, he stayed for a week, all expenses paid. </p>
    <p>Of course, you don’t even have to stray far from home to
        pursue the photographer’s life. Rich Wagner made over $10,000 from a single
        photograph he took of a pumpkin patch just an hour from his home in Connecticut…
      and it's still selling.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
    <p><img src="/images/photoguy_blue.jpg" width="192" height="192" class="img-r" />These people aren’t doing anything you can’t learn to do. You don’t need
        fancy equipment. And you don’t need to know a thing about photography to
    get started. </p>
    <p>All you need is the same secret to success these folks are using to profit
      from their photos. With it, you can make money even as a novice photographer.</p>
    <p>To learn this secret – including how you can take better photographs – the
      kind that make people go, “WOW, I wish I could do that”... simply read on!</p>
  </div>
  <p>&nbsp;</p>
    <hr size="1" noshade="noshade" style="margin-bottom:22px;"/>

  <p>
    Dear Travel Writer,
  </p>  
  <p><img src="/images/4p-collage.jpg" alt="" width="199" height="490" class="img-r" />Just think if you could walk into your back yard, kneel down, and snap a photo
    of a flower in your garden... or capture a shot of your child digging in the
    sandbox... and then get paid $25... $50... even $150 or more for each one… </p>
  <p>Or imagine if, every time you went on vacation with your camera in tow, you
    could turn those pictures you snap into $150… $400… or even $800 each… </p>
  <p>The good news is: You can.  </p>
  <p>Take David Morgan. He wasn't any hot-shot photographer when, with a Vivitar
    camera in hand, he traveled across Asia for six months. He dined with the Privy
    Counsel to the King of Thailand... met the late Mother Teresa... and shook hands
    with the Dalai Lama. </p>
  <p>He took a week-long, four-wheel-drive journey across Tibet. He went trout fishing
    in a pristine mountain stream in Bumburet, a hidden valley in the Hindu Kush.
    He also got to see secret religious ceremonies rarely witnessed by outsiders.</p>
  <p>The icing on the cake was that he found a textbook publisher who needed the
    photos from his trip. Not only did his connections SAVE him money, but he actually
    MADE money... over $6,000! </p>
  <p>What’s more, a few years later, the publisher offered to pay him AGAIN when
    the book went to a second edition.</p>
  <p>You can easily do what David did... because his success isn't due to any amazing
    talent. </p>
  <p>David enjoys the freedom and perks that freelance photography provides… simply
    because he knows one of the best-kept secrets in the business. </p>
  <p>And the thing is, it's a secret that's easy to master… and one that will let
    you break into photography fast—even if you have no experience and only use a
    simple point-and-shoot camera. </p>
  <h5 align="center">Enjoy Freedom, Prestige and Luxury…<br />
    as You Travel the World Snapping Photos of Romantic,<br />
    Exotic People and Locales. And Then Get PAID For It!</h5>
  <p><img src="/images/vernon-dock.jpg" alt="" width="206" height="206" class="img-r" />I'll tell you what the secret is in just a minute. But first, I want to be sure
    I'm clear about how truly life-changing this opportunity can be: Photography
    really can open up the world to you.</p>
  <p>As a “working” photographer, you can pick-up-and-go any time you choose… get
    on a flight to any number of far-flung destinations… and enjoy the freedom of
    the photographer’s life.&nbsp; </p>
  <p>Imagine traveling to Kauai, a Hawaiian island. Renowned for its enchanting beauty,
    cascading emerald streams, flower bedecked mountains and swaying palm fringed
    shores, you stay there for a week, all expenses paid. </p>
  <p>Or how about traveling to Tahiti for a vacation, but treating it like a self-assignment.
    You shoot plenty of pictures that you can sell when you return home. </p>
  <p>Or imagine finding yourself in the Bahamas where most of your accommodations
    are paid for… plus touring a local zoo and swimming with dolphins on a nearby
    island, all for free.</p>
  <p>Each of these exotic trips are examples of trips taken by photographers I know. </p>
  <p>And two of them are brand new to photography. Yet, that’s not stopping them
    from enjoying the perks and freedom this lifestyle offers. It’s what you can
    expect too – and for doing something you probably already do anyway. After all,
    surely you pack your camera when you travel…&nbsp; </p>
  <p>I'd like to show you how to turn that habit into an income-earning venture.
    What's more, within the next few months, you could be using your photographer
    status to travel to more places on less money… sometimes without even spending
    a penny.</p>
  <p>Play your cards right, and you could find yourself on the “invitation list”
    at some of the world’s best resorts, hotels, bed-and-breakfasts, eco-retreats,
    and weekend hideaways, getting all kinds of offers of hospitality… invitations
    for overnight stays… dinner on the house and more …all compliments of the owners.</p>
  <p>This lifestyle is closer than you think. And, perhaps the best part is, your
    hometown is a goldmine of photographic opportunity too. </p>
  <h5 align="center">The World–and Your Hometown–is Jam-Packed<br />
  with Opportunities to Profit from Your Photographs </h5>
  <p><img src="/images/bahamas-sign.jpg" alt="" width="206" height="206" class="img-r" />Photo opportunities exist everywhere. On the roadside... at work... while talking
    with friends... in your backyard... a nearby zoo... special events... festivals...
    sporting events... pie-eating contests… and more...</p>
  <p>Just take a look around you – at magazines, newspapers, books, trade journals,
    technical manuals, and almost any published material. Look at the cover and flip
    through the pages. What do you see? Photographs.</p>
  <p>Someone has to take those pictures. Why not you? </p>
  <p>It’s easier to break into this field than you may think. Perhaps you’ve heard,
    “It takes many years of knocking on doors before you can become an established
    photographic contributor.” Or, “You must pay your dues.”</p>
  <p>Before I stumbled across the secret to success in photography, I used to agree
    with that. </p>
  <p>But not anymore. </p>
  <p>You see, even though a lot of professional photographers went through the system
    knocking on doors and paying their dues, had they known a very basic fact, they
    could have saved themselves years of struggling and broken into the profitable
    business of taking saleable photographs much, much sooner. </p>
  <p>That's what I'd like to help you do. Allow me to introduce myself...</p>
  <p>My name is Lori Appling, and I’m the director of the travel division at American
    Writers &amp; Artists Inc. (AWAI). For years, our travel division focused on
    travel writing – showing people how to write travel articles for publication—and
    how to use that skill as a way to fund their trips and get paid.</p>
  <p>But we realized that we were overlooking a very big opportunity when it came
    to photographs. You see, more and more, the folks who took our travel writer
    program were writing in to say they were having luck selling not just articles,
    but, increasingly, articles with photos… </p>
  <p>It turns out, editors’ love receiving photos with articles simply because it
    makes their job easier. <u>What’s more, 80% of the photos you see in publications
    are shot by freelancers</u>. A glossy magazine photo can earn you anywhere from
    $500 to $1,200… if, that is, you know what photo editors are after… something
    you’ll soon learn.&nbsp; </p>
  <div class="test-sidebar"> “As an editor, I always appreciate a writer who submits
    a great article package – a well written article with compelling photographs.
    I’ll always be happy to pay for their work because they make my work that much
    easier!”
    <p align="right"><strong>-- Tom Schueneman, Editor/ Publisher of <em>The Traveler</em> </strong></p>
    &nbsp;“I just got 450 euros ($562) for a 1,400 word piece on Edinburgh PLUS
      another 300 euros ($375) for the six photos I sent in with it. Not a bad haul
      for an amateur snapper.”
<p align="right"><strong>– Steenie Harvey, Freelance Travel Writer</strong></p>
  </div>
  <p>In fact, that’s why I’m writing to you today. <u>I’d like to share a best-kept
      secret of success in photography with you</u>. If you use this secret – and
      follow a few simple tricks of the trade to taking better photos – you can start
      immediately taking great photos that sell. </p>
  <p>People who have come to understand this best-kept secret have seen quick results.
    Just listen to this:</p>
  <p>Mary Ann Hamilton promptly got three photos shown at the Annual Holiday Members
    show at the Arts Center of St. Petersburg.</p>
  <p>Katherine Pendill sold one picture she took while she was in Paris, as well
    as two more from her trips to Italy and New England. So far she’s earned $450
    for her photographs. </p>
  <p>Terry Allen wrote to say,<strong> </strong>“Lori, this was easier than I thought.
    I just submitted 12 of my D.C. pictures to an online stock agency and five were
    accepted. Four of them were ones I took during the workshop, and the fifth was
    one I took that very next weekend.”</p>
  <p><strong>Johanna Kato from </strong>Phoenix, Arizona submitted photographs from
    a trip to Kyoto, and was published in <em>The Traveler’s</em> 2005 fall issue. </p>
  <p>And, successes continue to roll in… in such great quantity, that I have hired
    an assistant to help me stay connected with all our successful members. <u>If
    you follow the same program our members have used, you too, will soon have a
    successful story to share with me</u>. And, I look forward to hearing it.</p>
  <h5 align="center">What’s the Secret? How Can Amateurs Get Published<br />
    so Easily While Some Pros Still Knock on Doors?</h5>
  <p>The secret is so obvious, so simple – that no one really gives it any consideration.
    It may even surprise you.</p>
  <p>It's simply this: “Editors don’t buy what they don’t need.”</p>
  <p>You might be the finest photographer ever to hold a camera. You might own the
    finest equipment money can buy and shoot thousands of pictures each year. But
    if you can’t find someone who needs the images you create, you’ll be spinning
    your wheels. You’ll never sell a single photo.</p>
  <p>Sounds obvious, doesn’t it? <u>Give an editor what he needs</u>. Yet, even the
    best photographers often overlook this secret and it’s why many of them will
    tell you—or want you to believe—that it takes “years” to break into the photography
    industry or that you have to pay your “dues.” </p>
  <p>It’s not true. Simply fill a need and you’ll break into—and succeed—in photography
    far faster than you ever thought possible.</p>
  <div class="test-sidebar">
    <h6 align="center"><strong>6 Photos Sold on Ebay!</strong><strong><br />
    Made him $137.04</strong></h6>
    <p>“Three days ago, we had a massive fire in Wildwood that totally destroyed
      a popular local hotel. As a reporter, I rushed over to the scene and took many
      photos and added the best ones to my news story. </p>
    <p>I was so surprised with how great and dramatic the photos turned out that
      I realized, ‘Hey, millions of people have vacationed in the Wildwoods through
      the years. Maybe some of them would be interested in really good 8 X 10’s of
      unique events or scenes from the Wildwoods, especially an historic fire that
      burned for two days and destroyed a popular hotel that they might have stayed
      in at one time. I posted six or seven photos on Ebay for sale at a flat rate
      of $19.99 plus s/h (‘no bidding this time, if they like the photo, they’ll
      buy it,’ I thought). </p>
    <p>Within eight hours, I had orders for six photos. One man bought four and a
      lady bought two. That’s $137.04 in six hours. All I did was post them on Ebay
      and sit back and wait. Now I plan on listing all my best news and feature photos
      for sale.”</p>
    <p align="center"><strong>-- Thom Fontannaz, TheWildwoodsReporter.com</strong></p>
  </div>
  <p><u>If you fill a need – the money will start rolling in, even if you’re an amateur</u>.
    Here’s a glimpse into what’s possible when you start filling a need with your
    photos.</p>
  <p>One of our members, <strong>Kerry Stowell from </strong>Washington, D.C., noticed
    a small sentence on an NBC.com website inviting readers to submit fall photographs.
    They <em>needed </em>fall photos. And because Kerry filled this need—and of course,
    also submitted <em>great </em>photos, she ended up with three of her photos displayed
    on the NBC news – with full credit. </p>
  <p>Since then, she’s also sold several photos for between $25 and $100 and she’s
    received photo credits for several more.</p>
  <p>Francis Caldwell is a photographer specializing in world travel and stock photographs.
    Because he meets the needs of his clients, he has become well known and is used
    to receiving requests for strange subjects. </p>
  <p>For example, last November he received a request from Adeet Deshmukh, photo
    editor at <em>Feldmans </em>(a book publisher) for a child’s old bicycle with
    no wheels. Because there was a need for this kind of photo, Francis made some
    fast cash. </p>
  <p>Just listen to this: He writes, “My granddaughter’s abandoned bike was laying
    out in the yard. I removed the wheels, took a digital photo, sent it, and within
    an hour received confirmation of a sale, for $150.”</p>
  <p>Tim O’Rielly, a freelance photographer from San Diego, is good at finding out
    what book publishers, newspapers, and magazines need – and he’s paid well as
    a result.</p>
  <p>He says, “The book market is very good. I was paid a one-time single-usage fee
    for each photo. For example, they wanted around 10 photos for their book and
    I was paid around $2,000.” </p>
  <p>Tim went on to say, “The newspapers pay according to the size of an image and
    its location within the paper – from $100 to $500 per image. The magazine pays
    for the article and the images that accompany it – from $200 to $500. For the <em>Vegan
    Fusion</em> work, I was sent to Kauai for a week all- expenses-paid – and took
    photographs for the publication.”</p>
  <p>If you think those fees sound good, how does $20,000 a project sound? In commercial
    photography, that kind of fee is not uncommon. More on that in a minute. First
    however, what is it that editors need? And how do you know? </p>
  <div class="test-sidebar">
    <h6 align="center">Shoot to Sell in Three Days</h6>
    <p>Now when you sign up for our new FREE monthly e-letter, Photos for Profit,
      you’ll get David Morgan’s Shoot to Sell in Three Days email course for Free.&nbsp; This
      mini-course includes tips you can put into practice immediately to jump-start
      your new career. </p>
    <p>You’ll learn two of the most lucrative ways you can earn a profit as a travel
      photographer... even if your travel never takes you past the city limits of
      your hometown and several other easy-to-follow tricks from the pros.</p>
    <p>If you'd like to receive this exciting and informative newsletter, then simply
      enter you email address below and we'll get your first e-alert to you immediately.</p>
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  </div>
  <img src="../../images/photo-course.png" alt="" width="98" height="98" class="img-l" /><p>That’s exactly what you’ll discover in our photography program <strong><em>Turn
        Your Pictures into Cash: A Comprehensive Program in Taking and Selling Amazing
        Photographs</em></strong>. You don’t need years of experience and you don’t
        need high-tech equipment to start making money as a photographer… at least,
        not when you have this useful program by your side.</p>
  <p>Up until now, photography might have seemed a “complicated profession.” Or,
    a profession reserved only for those who had the most rigorous training, the
    best equipment, and the most artistic eye. </p>
  <p>It’s simply not true. In <strong><em>Turn Your Pictures into Cash</em></strong>,
    we have simplified the process so <u>you can</u> <u>start taking saleable photographs
    within days, even if you only have a simple point-and-shoot camera</u>. </p>
  <p>If you’re at all interested in learning how to supplement your income, get your
    travel funded, and take truly breathtaking photographs that sell for hundreds,
    even thousands of dollars, <strong><em>Turn Your Pictures into Cash</em></strong> is
    a great place to start your new, lucrative hobby. </p>
  <p>Use this program and you’ll start taking saleable photographs within a month,
    even if all you can do is turn your camera on and set it to &quot;automatic.&quot; </p>
  <p>You see, in <strong><em>Turn Your Pictures into Cash</em></strong> we have compiled
    the secrets gathered from a cadre of successful, globe-trotting photographers. </p>
  <p>Among them is Rich Wagner. One of his best-kept secrets is that people love
    hometown photography. And they’ll pay a lot of money for it.</p>
  <h5 align="center">Turn Your Hometown into<br /> 
  a $700/Day GOLDMINE</h5>
  <p>Rich sells photographs of his hometown in Connecticut for $400-$700 a piece.
    Who buys them? The very same people who live in that very same hometown. </p>
  <p>In fact, it’s such a smart way to sell photographs… there’s really no excuse
    for NOT getting published or making money with hometown shots. Just listen to
    this:</p>
  <p>Judy Dubois just cashed her first check for $350 for an article and the four
    photographs she sent with it. Photos she took close to home.</p>
  <p>Lynnia Allison from Miami, Florida attended and photographed a “Miss Florida
    2005 for Transsexuals” contest and was subsequently invited to do a gallery exhibit.
    Of those she included in the exhibit, four of <u>her photos have sold for $500
    each</u> – and one was auctioned at a benefit for tax credit. </p>
  <div class="test-sidebar"> “Rich Wagner really knows his stuff, and can teach an
    average person how to take better photos with just a few lessons.”
    <p align="right"><strong>–Robin Rothwell,<br />
      Stevenson Ranch CA</strong></p>
  </div>
  <p><strong>Zara Altair</strong> from Carlsbad, California can definitely testify
    to opportunities materializing out of nowhere. Her neighbor, a former professional
    photographer, noticed the <strong><em>Turn Your Pictures into Cash</em></strong> binder
    on her table, and asked Zara to shoot the inside and outside of her house because
    it was going to be listed for sale. Result: Zara’s first check, for $50! </p>
  <p><u>In <strong><em>Turn Your Pictures into Cash</em></strong></u><u>, you’ll
      learn how to sell locally, so you can easily make $400-$700 from a single shot.
      If you sell just one a day, that's $2,000-$3,500 a week</u>! </p>
  <p>And, that’s not including the income you’ll make from any photos you resell...
    which leads us to another secret Rich Wagner is a master of.</p>
  <h5 align="center">The Secret Behind the $10,000 Photograph</h5>
  <p>Rich can boast sales of more than $10,000 for a single photo. How does he do
    it?</p>
  <p>First, he looks for a great shot. In his $10,000 example, Rich stood in a pumpkin
    patch in New England during the fall. From this beautiful, scenic view, a large
    tower known to everyone in the local community was visible in the distance. </p>
  <p>Because it was a well-known landmark, and because this picture was so breathtaking
    with the pumpkin patch setting, his photo became a big seller. So big, that Rich
    has made over $10,000 on that single photograph. </p>
  <p>Rich said, “I’ve sold it many times over the past two-and-a-half years in prices
    ranging from $130 to $500, including rights to use it on the web. Total sales
    of this photo have come to over $10,000.”</p>
  <div class="test-sidebar"> “Rich is very professional, with a strong knowledge base in digital technology
      and in classic film photography.”    
    <p align="right"><strong>–Katherine Pendill,<br />
      New York, NY</strong><strong> </strong></p>
  </div><p>Although Rich has mastered the art of reselling photographs to both galleries
    and web publications, still other options exist for reselling.</p>
  
  <p>You can resell photos to textbooks. That’s what David Morgan did, the photographer
    I introduced you to earlier who trekked across Asia and made thousands from his
    photos. Carol Shields is another example. Carol’s most lucrative shot was of
    an infant sleeping, sucking her thumb. She resold that photo repeatedly to a
    textbook publisher who reprinted the textbook five times. </p>
  <p>There are also stock agencies who resell your photos for you. And once an image
  is in the system, it can make you money for 20 years or more.”</p>
  <h5 align="center">A Single Shot Can Make You Money for<br />
    20 Years or More… That’s the Power of Reselling!</h5>
  <p>You’ll learn how to sell and resell your photos to all kinds of markets in <strong><em>Turn
        Your Pictures into Cash</em></strong>. You’ll also learn how to take amazing
        landscape shots... heart-stopping portraits… action shots… and more. You’ll
        learn how to develop a photographer’s eye… set your fees… present your work
        professionally… and that’s just for starters… </p>
  <p>You’ll learn how to break into all kinds of fun markets. There are sports...
    glamour... nature... wedding photography… an incredible wide range of opportunity.
    One of the most lucrative markets is commercial photography. </p>
  <p>Consider this: Randy, a photographer who is now the manager of a prestigious
    photo lab in Northern Ontario, used to work in commercial photography. Here’s
    what he’d do: He’d find a big company that needed photos taken of their product
    for advertising purposes. He’d quote them $20,000 to set up their display, get
    the right lighting, and more. </p>
  <p>In many cases, they agreed to this amount. He would then take these photos.
    Go to the printers. And return with posters featuring photos of their products.
    Total expense? About $6,000. Which meant Randy walked away with a $14,000 profit. </p>
  <p><img src="/images/bermuda-ship.jpg" alt="" width="206" height="206" class="img-r" />What’s more, it only took him two weeks to work on this kind of a project. </p>
  <p>Imagine getting $14,000 in two weeks – in exchange for your photography skills.
    What would you do with that kind of money? Travel? Invest? Pay off your credit
    cards? Use it as a down payment on a new home? If this is the field you pursue,
    what you dream about now can materialize... fast.</p>
  <p>All kinds of opportunities exit… publicity shots of models, airlines, news anchors
    and more. </p>
  <p>Take for instance, stock photography. In stock photography, images as simple
    as tissue paper, your pets, or a kitchen table can sell for money. </p>
  <p>You can even take photos and display them for sale in galleries. Here again,
    you don’t need years of experience to break in. <strong>Kay Fellows from </strong>Northwestern
    Illinois wrote to say she took our advice about online stock photo agencies and
    submitted photos to Big Stock Photo. They’ve accepted 78 so far!</p>
  <p><strong>And Susanna Fieramosco Naranjo</strong> from Lugano, Switzerland has
    seen her photographs accepted at a stock agency, too. And some have already sold,
    earning her a royalty!</p>
  <p>Stock photography offers a great opportunity because you can get started right
    from your easy chair or in your own backyard. In <strong><em>Turn Your Pictures
    into Cash</em></strong><em>,</em> you’ll learn how to turn ordinary objects such
    as a doorknob, a garden tool, a vase, a bicycle, and countless other everyday
    items into beautiful, PROFITABLE shots.</p>
  <p>In fact, with each passing month, you’ll find your photos becoming more and
    more sophisticated... &nbsp;more professional... more creative. Twelve short
    months from now people will call you a pro. Though the truth is, you don’t have
    to wait that long to see results.</p>
  <p><u>While you’re working your way up to “pro” status, you can still enjoy seeing
      your work published and making money even as a beginning apprentice. That’s
      right – you can literally get paid as you work your way from novice to professional</u>. </p>
  <div class="insert-c">
    <h3 align="center">Become a Celebrity in Your Hometown!</h3>
    <p>With a camera slung around your neck, and pictures hanging in nearby coffee
      shops and galleries, expect attention, opportunity and sales!</p>
    <p>David Morgan says, “I got my start selling photographs from the walls of coffee
      houses and restaurants. My photos sold like hotcakes. They sold so fast I had
      to raise the price to keep sales down – I couldn’t keep up with my orders.
      I soon found out that I could do less work for more money!</p>
    <p>At one time I was making about $300 a day from one coffee shop alone, and
      that was my first public show, ever! That first show landed me a job taking
      photos for an interior designer’s portfolio. Two couples called me asking me
      to shoot their weddings. (Now THERE’S a profitable market!) And an author happened
      to enter the coffee house one day and bought several of my photos for her book.
      The publisher even flew down from New York to visit me in my hometown.”</p>
    <p>Ward Thurman is another photographer good at finding opportunities in his
      hometown. He takes photographs for businesses and charges anywhere from $200
      to $1,000 and even up to $5,000 for business photos depending on his client’s
      needs. He does general portraits too, starting at $200 for an hour of studio
      time and a photo album. High school senior portraits start at $500. He even
      does wedding packages starting at $1,999. </p>
    <p>To learn more about how YOU can cash in on the lucrative opportunities that
      exist within your hometown, send for your risk-free copy of <strong><em>Turn
      Your Pictures into Cash</em></strong> today!</p>
  </div>
  <h5 align="center">Start Using These Tricks of the Trade –<br />
    and Work Your Way Up to “Pro” Status,<br />
    While You Publish and Sell Your “Practice” Shots!</h5>
  <p><img src="/images/stat-liberty.jpg" alt="" width="206" height="206" class="img-r" />For example, you’ll learn:</p>
  <ul>
    <li>From amateur to pro: The three crucial components in every saleable photograph
      (and how, exactly, to master them) – Lesson #5</li>
    <li>The difference between a great shot and a $5,000 photograph – Lesson #9</li>
    <li>Classic principles from great artists, painters, sculptors and architects
      for capturing a real-life image and reproducing it in a way that moves people
      – Lesson #10</li>
    <li>How to organize your photos for faster profits — Lesson #12</li>
    <li>Never take a bad picture again: 3 things about exposure that revolutionize
      your photos — Lesson #13</li>
    <li>Perfectly exposed photos: A  guide to working with your camera to
      ensure the best exposure possible – even under bad conditions – Lessons #15
      and #16</li>
    <li>
      Spice up your landscapes: Five ways to be sure your landscapes will stand
      out and sell better – Lesson #17</li>
    <li>Two completely different professional focusing techniques and when you should
      — and shouldn’t – use them. Choose the wrong one, and your picture won’t sell
      — Lesson #19</li>
    <li>Break into the untapped sports photography market! Learn how to get the best,
      most dramatic shots at any sports game—whether it’s outdoors on the soccer
      field or indoors in the basketball court — Lesson #21</li>
    <li>Discover how to shoot stunning close-up shots of nature, family and pets
      — Lesson #22</li>
    <li>Take studio-quality portraits: Learn how to set up and get paid for portraits
      with tips from lighting to posing – Lesson #26</li>
    <li>Speed up your learning curve: 13 templates that’ll turn any photographer
      into a pro – Lesson # 30</li>
    <li>Learn how to capture a city’s mood in your photographs and turn them into
      money-making postcards, posters and greeting cards – Lesson #42</li>
    <li>Two of the most lucrative markets: Secrets for getting into commercial photography
      (where $20,000 a project is not uncommon) ... and stock photography (where
      images as simple as tissue paper, a leaf in your yard, or your kitchen table
      can sell for super-fast cash!) – Lesson #48 </li>
    <li>What you might not know about film: The right film can make every image you
      shoot richer (Hint: What’s “right” has nothing to do with film speed.) — Lesson
      #50</li>
    <li>Little-known secrets that photographers use to land free meals, vacations,
      and other fun perks – Lesson #53</li>
  </ul>
  <p><img src="/images/paris-cafe.jpg" alt="" width="206" height="206" class="img-r" />You’ll also discover…</p>
  <ul>
    <li>Cash and prizes for photographers: Three of the best places to track down
      regular contests that pay in the thousands of dollars – plus an inside edge
      on how to win.</li>
    <li>The in’s and out’s of editing, PhotoShop, labeling, and submitting your photos
      to clients.</li>
    <li>How to set your fees and market your work. Where to find payment information
      so you know what a publication pays before you submit anything. (You can actually
      choose the clients that pay the highest fees and aim for them.)</li>
    <li>Specific advice on a dozen broad photographic markets and how best to break
      into them.</li>
    <li>Plus much, much more…</li>
  </ul>
  <p>This program contains all of the secrets, tips, techniques, and strategies you
    need to take profitable photographs and turn pro. Including where to find PAYING
    clients right now… and how to know what they need from you. </p>
  <h5 align="center">Follow the Program’s Lead…<br />
    and You’ll Soon Sell Your Photographs to Major<br />
    Newspapers and Magazines all Over the World</h5>
  <div class="test-sidebar"> “Digital technology can now do anything a film camera
    can do. And Adobe PhotoShop can do much more than you could ever dream of doing
    in a darkroom. Composition is the key, and I’m so grateful Rich [has] taught
    us how to do it – simple secrets the best photographers use but never share.”
    <p align="right"><strong>--David Morgan, <br />
      Freelance Photographer</strong></p>
  </div>
  <p>If you apply what you learn and sell a few photos a month, it’s possible to
    make $150 to $800 per photo. That’s fantastic money, especially if you’re pursuing
  photography as a part-time hobby. </p>
  <p>Sell just 3-4 photos a week and you’ll bring in $800-$2,000 a week. </p>
  <p>Take for instance Shelly Perry. Shelly earns on average $0.75 per photo per
    month from sales through online stock agencies. As of this writing, she has over
    400 photos on file with those agencies, which amounts to over $500/month in passive
    income. She doesn’t have to lift another finger and still she’ll continue to
    earn $500/month. </p>
  <p>Five hundred dollars a month in passive income… If Shelly stopped taking photos
    today, she’d still continue to earn royalties for the life of her photographs.
    That $500 is a car payment… a weekend getaway… a generous credit card payment…
    money to save. </p>
  <p>Shelly told us that her two best-selling pictures were probably the easiest
    to take. One was of her niece smiling at the camera and the other was nothing
    more than a picture of a standard-issue red velvet curtain. She says, <u>“I keep
    telling my friends: ‘You guys need to do this!’ It’s so easy and it’s fun too.</u>”</p>
  <p>She just takes a few pictures and uploads them to a website. A few days later,
    she gets a check. Not a bad gig.</p>
  <p><u>The goal of <em><strong>Turn Your Pictures into Cash</strong></em>: is to
      show you how to break into the fun and lucrative field of photography—even
      if you’ve never snapped a picture in your life, or only have a standard-issue
      35mm camera or a simple point-and-shoot digital</u>.</p>
  <p>Most professional photographers wouldn’t dream of giving up their secrets. But
    in reality, there’s no reason why they should hold them back. There are plenty
    of opportunities for all of us. In fact, we’ll start you off with some solid
    leads…</p>
  <h6 align="center" style="color:#121212;"><strong>Meet the Photography Experts<br />
    You’ll Hear From Over the Next Few Months</strong></h6>
  <p><strong>He’s a pro at reselling, gallery photography and using digital:</strong></p>
  <blockquote>
    <p><strong>Rich Wagner</strong> is the photographer who took the “$10,000 photo”.
        He began his photographic career in college as a freelance photographer for
        Pittsburgh newspapers. After graduation, photography remained a hobby during
      his 20-year career in retail. </p>
    <p>In 1984, Rich opened a custom framing and fine art gallery. His current
        shop, Imagine It Framed, located in Simsbury, CT, recently had the honor
        of being designated as one of “America’s Top 100” custom framers by <em>Décor</em> magazine.
        Today, Rich’s images hang in public corporations and private foundations
        from San Diego to Boston, and in homes from the Americas to the Far East.
        He began shooting digitally in the late 90’s and since 2001 has worked almost
      exclusively in that format. </p>
  </blockquote>
  <p>Like Steenie, travel the world with a pen and camera in hand:</p>
  <blockquote>
    <p><strong>Steenie Harvey </strong>is a well-traveled, prolific, and highly
        successful freelance travel writer, and now photographer! She’s seen her
        articles published in <em>The Washington Post </em>and <em>The Daily Telegraph</em>,
        among many other top-notch publications in the States, Ireland, Britain,
        Australia, and Germany. She’s currently <em>International Living</em>’s roving
        editor in Europe. And the author of three travel books, including: <em>European
        Vacation Rentals; Adapter Kit: Ireland: A Traveler’s Tools for Living Like
        a Local; and Live Well in Ireland: How to Relocate, Retire, and Increase
      Your Standard of Living</em>. </p>
  </blockquote>
  <p>Like Tom, enhance your photography through writing:</p>
  <blockquote>
    <p><strong>Tom Schueneman </strong>boasts by-lines in all sorts of publications
        and even publishes his own travel e-zine, <em>The Traveler </em>which <em>Writer’s
        Weekly</em>, recently rated one of the best places for new writers to get
        published. He started out as a writer, but his interest in photography quickly
        blossomed. He found that by taking pictures and looking for good pictures
        to take, his discovery of a new place was enhanced and thus so was his writing.
        He’s received honorable mentions in photography contests, and he also submits
        some of his work to stock houses, which he recommends all new travel writers
      and photographers look into. </p>
  </blockquote>
  <p>Persuasive skills… coming right up… so you land more bylines and checks:</p>
  <blockquote>
    <p><strong>John Forde</strong>, based full-time in Paris, France, works primarily
        as a copywriter (he’s super-persuasive!), writing travel pieces on the side.
        He has written several million-dollar controls (sales letters that out-perform
        all others), many of which have been translated and successfully mailed to
        the French, German, and online markets. He has also served as Senior Copywriter
        and Group Publisher for Agora Financial, and has trained writers in London,
      Paris, Bonn, and Baltimore. </p>
  </blockquote>
  <p>You too could enjoy award winning work:</p>
  <blockquote>
    <p><strong>Ward Thurman </strong>is one of the most professionally agile freelance
        photographers in the Northwest, serving both artistic and commercial markets.
        In addition to providing wedding and portrait photography, his award-winning
        work is consistently found in corporate communications, websites, and consumer
        and business publications ranging from travel guides to regional and national
        magazines. In addition to participating on the board for <strong><em>Turn
        Your Pictures into Cash</em></strong>, he serves on the Montana Photography
        Exposition board, and is a member of the Montana Professional Photographer’s
      Association. </p>
  </blockquote>
  <p>Insider tips from a Fortune 500 photographer:</p>
  <blockquote>
    <p><strong>Carol Shields</strong> has a Bachelor’s degree in Fine Arts, majoring
        in photography. During college, she got a lucky break and became a staff
        photographer in a Fortune 500 aviation company, AlliedSignal Aerospace. Here
        for almost ten years, Carol picked up many more  skills and saw
        many of her photographs appear on the inside and on the cover of many aviation
      magazines including Avionics and ICAO (International Civil Aeronautics Organization).</p>
    <p>Carol has seen her photography open other doors of opportunity too. She
        once worked on a professional video about growing orchids, called <em>Jewels
        of the Rainforest</em>. Her talents were used not only in photography and
      in co-authoring the script, but also in front of the camera.</p>
    <p>Carol also learned quickly that submitting articles with her photos was
        a great way to boost her income and get published faster. Her photography,
        sometimes with articles, have appeared in regional and national camping magazines
        and newsletters (RV West, Camperways) general interest magazines (Florida
        Keys, The Florida Naturalist, Flower &amp; Garden, Craftworks,) and Education
        and Health magazines (Current Health, Young Children [NAEYC]). Today, most
      of Carol’s photo sales are accompanied by articles.</p>
  </blockquote>
  <p>Do you sell products? Learn how to take better pictures of them:</p>
  <blockquote>
    <p><strong>Reece Guth’s</strong> photography ability led him to start an import-export
        business. He’d been offered a part-time job photographing the progress of
        a development project on Nicaragua’s Pacific coast. When his liaison there
        found out he had an interest in ceramics (he used to be a professional potter)
        she immediately insisted on driving him two hours to a quiet little village
        nestled in the hills between two sleeping volcanoes, to a spot that literally
      wasn’t on the map. </p>
    <p>There, in San Juan de Oriente, he discovered the locals made beautiful pottery,
        a ceramic tradition that dates back to 1,000 BC. Fascinated, he brought some
        of the pottery back home with him as a souvenir… and an import-business was
        born. Today, Reece is a master of taking photos of his products to assist
      him in making more sales. </p>
  </blockquote>
  <p>Learn the fine art of black and white photography:</p>
  <blockquote>
    <p><strong>Hugo Ghiara</strong> worked exclusively with the Zone System specializing
        in black and white fine art prints, after studying at the School of Visual
        Arts in New York. He continued to study extensively on all aspects of photography
        and worked with every format of camera. Even so, his main interest is still
      black and white photography.</p>
  </blockquote>
  <p>Passion for traveling blossoms into photography:</p>
  <blockquote>
    <p><strong>David Morgan</strong> is a freelance travel writer, photographer,
        and copywriter based near Knoxville, Tennessee. He got his first taste for
        travel by studying in a Buddhist monastery for a semester in India while
        working toward a B.A. in religion at Middlebury College in Vermont. Later
        he studied photojournalism at the University of Tennessee. He trained as
      a writer while working at Agora Inc. in Baltimore, MD.</p>
    <p>Since then his photographs have been published in textbooks and newspapers
        in the U.S. and abroad. He is represented by stock agents in the U.S. and
        U.K., and his articles have appeared in the <em>Lonely Planet</em> and <em>International
        Living</em>, among other places. “The beauty of this lifestyle is the freedom
        it affords,” he writes. “I’ve been able to spend extended periods of time
        in France, India, and Central America – traveling in style on next to nothing...
      or even for a profit.”</p>
  </blockquote>
  <p>Imagine charging $6,000 a DAY for your time…</p>
  <blockquote>
    <p><strong>Alf B. Meier</strong> was capable of doing studio and lab work by
        age 13. His father, who’d earned his way through college as a daily newspaper
      photographer, taught Alf how. </p>
    <p>When Alf was in college, he interned at the newspaper La Voz de Aviles (Aviles,
        Spain) as a writer-photographer. After earning his diploma, he freelanced
        for a major European press agency. He took his camera to Asia, Africa, South
        America and the Middle East – where ever there were riots, battles or other
      conflicts to cover. </p>
    <p>In the early 1980s Alf was approached by the art director of an advertising
        agency to do commercial photography. He stayed in this industry for a decade,
        specializing in advertising and fashion photography. Since 1995, he has concentrated
      on travel and travel-related advertising photography. </p>
    <p>Seeing his pictures published in approximately 60 normal magazines, five
        glossy magazines (including two photos of Portugal in <em>National Geographic</em>)
        as well as hundreds of brochures and postcards, Alf’s fees are impressive.
        If his agent is approached, he will demand 5,000 euro (approximately U.S.
        $6,000) for a day of taking pictures and half of that if he only has to hang
      around the set. </p>
  </blockquote>
  <p>Now that you’ve met the Board of Advisors, I hope that you can see you’re
      in for a real treat. That’s because <strong><em>Turn Your Pictures into Cash</em></strong> has
      compiled all their hard-earned photography secrets into one resource… all yours
    for the taking!</p>
  <h5 align="center">Get Published and Make Money – or Your Money Back!</h5>
  <div class="test-sidebar">
    <h6 align="center"><strong>Worried About Competition? Don’t Be!</strong></h6>
    <p><strong>There are 16,000 Opportunities for You to Get Your Photos Published...
        EVERY DAY!</strong></p>
    <p>More than six million photographs are published every year in the U.S. print
      media alone. <strong>That’s more than 16,000 per day. </strong>And more than
      40,000 photos are published a day world-wide. </p>
    <p>What’s more, most of them are produced by freelance photographers!</p>
    <p>Stock photo agencies are constantly on the lookout for new talent.</p>
    <p>Gallery owners, too, are always on the lookout for new artists (yes, photography
      is an art form) to fill their walls with saleable pictures.</p>
    <p>In the past few years, the web has become a market of its own — one which
      even the more modest digital point-and-shoot cameras can take ample advantage
      of.</p>
    <p>There’s a whole new world of opportunity out there waiting for you. </p>
    <p>That means there are plenty of opportunities for you to sell your photos...
      once you know how to fill a client’s needs and take saleable photos... which
      is exactly what you’ll learn in <strong><em>Turn Your Pictures into Cash</em></strong>!</p>
  </div>
  <img src="../../images/save30.png" alt="Save $30" width="121" height="123" class="img-l" /><p>Here’s the deal.</p>
  <p>In exchange for <s>$79</s> $49 (you save $30 by acting now!), we’ll send you the first
    installment – but at our risk. Not yours. You’re going to go out and start practicing
    a few of the techniques you’ll learn. You’re going to capture a sunrise or sunset
    on film... a park at dawn or dusk... a local landmark or monument on an overcast
    day... and use a real pro’s technique for stunning high-angle shots.</p>
  <p>If you faithfully follow the techniques this program gives you – you should
    have a saleable photograph. This means you can go out and sell it for $150...
    $400... $600... $800... perhaps even more.</p>
  <p>With this program, you'll get started fast. In fact, with your very first installment
    you’re going to explore the different needs photography clients have – so you
    can start delivering what they’re after right away. Remember, when you find a
    need – and meet it – breaking into photography is EASY!</p>
  <p>If, before the end of 30 days, you don’t think you have at least one saleable
    photograph, you may return the unmarked program materials and we’ll promptly
    refund your money. No questions asked.</p>
  <p>On the other hand, if you’re thrilled that you have a winning photograph, and
    you can’t wait to bump your skill up another notch, we’ll continue sending you
    the remaining 11 installments ($39 each), one each month. </p>
  <p>Even then, you’re still under no risk. Because, if at any time you decide you’ve
    reached your “pro” status and you’re making so much money that you want to take
    off on your own, let us know and we’ll cancel all future installments.</p>
  <p>Now, that’s a fair offer. What’s more, sell just one photo a month for $150
    and you’re literally getting the program for free! Speaking of free... </p>
  <p>Earlier I spoke to you about travel writing. Submitting articles with your photos
    is a great way to ratchet up your income on the same job and get published even
    faster! Now, I realize you may not have any writing experience, which is why
    <span class="free-gift">I’ve reserved a bonus guide in your name... </span><em>The Photographer’s Shortcut to
    Travel Writing Success: Go From Beginner to Professional Writer... Fast</em>. </p>
  <p>With this report, you’ll learn how to write great articles—even if you have
    no writing experience. You’ll also learn how to create a can’t-miss package—selling
    photographs and articles together. </p>
  <p>Anyone – photographers... mothers... financial consultants... university professors...
    travel agents ... acupuncturists... actresses... carpenters... psychotherapists...
    dentists... teachers... event planners... small-business owners... realtors...
    restaurant managers – absolutely anyone, can develop the knack for travel writing
    with this handy guide.</p>
  <div class="insert-c">
    <h3 align="center">Get Connected with Other Members</h3>
    You’ll never be left alone to wonder if you’re doing things right. You can simply
    turn to our active Members-Only Forum. Here, you’ll meet other photographers
    who’ll share photos, answer questions, offer travel tips, and critique each other’s
    photos. It’s your opportunity to connect with other budding photographers who
    are as eager as you to live the photographer’s life… and to connect with successful
    photographers who can share their advice about what’s worked for them.</div>
  <h5 align="center">Four More Gifts – Yours FREE –<br />
    If You Respond Within the Next 10 Days!</h5>
  <p>I also have four more FREE gifts reserved in your name. There is one catch though.
    You need to respond within the next 10 days to get all five gifts. If you do,
    you’ll also receive:</p>
  <ul>
    <li><span class="free-gift">FREE GIFT #2</span> – Our free e-letter, <em>Photos
        for Profits</em>. Every week, you’ll get the latest tip on improving your
        photography... details on contests... profiles of markets you can contact
        (and get published in!)... techniques for exploring the world without spending
        a dime... a heads up on what other members of this program are up to, including
        what you can learn from them... and more! </li>
    <li><span class="free-gift">FREE GIFT #3</span> – <em>Your Photographic Publisher’s
        Pack: Everything You Need to Know to Sell Your Photographs to Eight Diverse
        Publications</em>. (With this guide, you’re getting solid client leads, and
        we’re happy to give you them!)</li>
    <li><span class="free-gift">FREE GIFT #4</span> – <em>How to Get Published Using
        a Cereal Box...A Tube of Toothpaste...and the Back of a Coke Can</em>. As
        outrageous as this sounds, this special e-report will teach you the shortcuts
        to getting published in four days. That means you could see your photos published
        before the end of next week!</li>
    <li><span class="free-gift"><strong>FREE GIFT #5</strong> </span>– <em>The Ultimate
        PhotoShop Guide</em>. This is an exclusive DVD set that was designed by professional
        photographers to turn you into a PRO fast. What’s more, it was created just
        for us. You won’t find this anywhere else. But, it can be yours FREE when
        you act now!</li>
  </ul>
  <h5 align="center">This Truly is a Remarkable Opportunity for<br />
    You to Unleash the Budding Photographer in You...<br />
    But I Urge You to ACT NOW!</h5>
  <p><img src="/images/forrest-mist.jpg" alt="" width="206" height="206" class="img-r" />Photography can provide an excellent means to transform your travels into paid
    vacations. It also provides a measure of freedom I suspect you value highly.
    You can live wherever you like, work whenever you feel like it...</p>
  <p>Plus I can say from my own experience that exploring the world on behalf of
    AWAI – always with a pen in hand and a camera around my neck – has given me many
    of my very fondest memories... and some unbelievable perks, too.</p>
  <p>Photography is amazing. It can feed the soul and inspire people…</p>
  <p>Pat Crosby found her photos making a difference for mothers and worthy endeavors:
    “A cry came out from the founding mothers of La Leche League for a series of
    photos for their new international handbook of breastfeeding. So I took my trusted
    camera over to different women’s houses and snapped a series of bonding family
    pics. </p>
  <p>“The editors in Chicago chose seven or eight of these photos, which appeared
    in the international edition of <em>The Womanly Art of Breastfeeding</em> (the
    international manual for new moms) – helping women, babies, and new families
    in many different countries of the world. </p>
  <p>“One of these photos was picked up by <em>Mothering</em> magazine for a featured
    article on family-bonding practices with newborns. I chose to donate my honorarium
    back to the non-profit organization to further their important work.”</p>
  <p>And think about how famous photographer Anne Geddes changed the way both childhood
    and motherhood are appreciated photographically. You could inspire people the
    same way.</p>
  <p>The possibilities are endless. That’s why I urge you to act now. </p>
  <p>If you love creativity… if you love taking pictures (and wouldn’t mind turning
    into a pro within the next 12 months)... </p>
  <p>If you love exploring your community and the beauty of this world... </p>
  <p>If you would enjoy people treating you like a VIP... sending you across the
    globe at <u>their</u> expense... </p>
  <p>…then <strong><em>Turn Your Pictures into Cash</em></strong> is the best place
    to begin your adventure. </p>
  <p>Simply call 1-866-879-2924 toll-free now or click on the order button below.</p>
  <p>Wishing You Profitable Pictures, </p>
  <p>Lori Appling<br />
    Director, AWAI’s Travel Division</p>
  <p align="center"><a href="/_a/?dirname=photography&amp;subject=Order:%20Photoguide%20-%20phc/blog&amp;referredby=WPHCH_89BL"><img src="/images/ortoday_blk.png" alt="Order Today!" width="199" height="39" border="0" /></a></p>
  <p><strong>PS:</strong> Remember, you can start practicing taking photos on your
    next trip. Or, even near your home – a fabulous beach, a nearby park, shopping
    center, vacant field, or construction site. Capture children playing in the park...
    birds and other animals in their natural settings... or the progress of a building
    under construction. </p>
  <p>You can experiment with the different lighting techniques, lenses, and filters.
    We’ll show you how, even if you can only spare 10 or 15 minutes a day. </p>
  <p>And you can practice taking shots in your home – of the hand railing on a banister,
    your pets, the view from your kitchen window, a doorknob, a vase, or even tissue
    paper. It’s exhilarating. It’s fun. And you’ll go back to your day feeling refreshed.
    Plus, you’ll be on your way to taking better pictures... and making some FAST
    CASH! </p>
  <p><strong>PPS:</strong> Now, just suppose, out of those 15 minutes you spend taking
    photographs, you come up with one saleable shot. Let’s say it sells for $150.
    But, you have a saleable shot for every day of the week – each worth $150. At
    the end of those seven days, you’d have made $1,050. Not bad. And it’s POSSIBLE. </p>
  <p>Isn’t it time you started making money from your photographs, living the photographer’s
    life of prestige and perks? You bet it is! Call 1-866-879-2924 toll-free TODAY
    or click on the order button below!</p>
  <h3 align="center"><a href="/_a/?dirname=photography&subject=Order:%20Photoguide%20-%20phc/blog&amp;referredby=WPHCH_89BL"><img src="/images/ortoday_blk.png" alt="Order Today!" width="199" height="39" border="0" /></a></h3>
  <hr size="1" noshade="noshade" />
  <p align="center"><strong>American Writers &amp; Artists Inc.</strong></p>
  <p align="center"><strong><a href="http://www.bbbonline.org/cks.asp?id=1040827537944639" target="_blank"><img src="http://www.awaionline.com/_images/bbb_reliability-seal.gif" alt="" width="90" height="32" border="0" /></a></strong></p>
</div>]]></description>
         <link>http://www.awaitravelwriting.com/thephotocourse/#000006</link>
         <guid>http://www.awaitravelwriting.com/thephotocourse/#000006</guid>
        
        
         <pubDate>Thu, 18 Jan 2007 18:06:56 +0000</pubDate>
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