This week SAR readers photos selection


Tobias Rösli
Sony A6600, 500mm(750mm), ISO 320, 1/50sec, F5,6 from tripod distance to the lime tree ca.1600m

1) You can submit one single picture per week only.
2) To submit your picture for the weekly readers roundup post you can choose one of the following three options:
Instagram: Follow @sonyalphagallery and tag us on your picture to give us the permission to repost your image on the instagram gallery and on SAR (we will credit you)
Facebook: Submit your picture on our group: facebook.com/groups/sonyalphacamera. Please add the hashtag “#sonyalphagallery ” to grant the permission for reposting on SAR. Without the hashtag we will not add your picture!
Forum: Submit your picture on the SonyAlphaForum image section and add the hashtag “#sonyalphagallery
3) Like and comment the pictures from other readers here: instagram.com/sonyalphagallery, facebook.com/groups/sonyalphacamera and on SonyAlphaForum.
4) A selection of most liked pictures by the community and by me SAR admin will be posted weekly on SAR.

Note: When sending a pic feel free to also add a link to your site to promote yourself! And please do share one single picture per week only. Do not spam :)

Read more

Sony Tidbits…


Why Sony G 20 f1.8 & 24-105 f4 Are Creators’ Must Have

Sony’s new trio of G Series prime Lenses | 24mm F2.8, 40mm F2.5, 50mm F2.5 (John Sison).
Sigma 35mm f/2 DG DN Lens Review and Compared to Sony 35mm f/1.8 Lens (SonyAlphaLab).
Hands-on with the Sony FX3 cinema camera (Dpreview).
Recommended External Hard Drives for Photo, Video, and Audio Production (Explora).
How do you use a tilt-shift lens? | Ask David Bergman
Tamron 70-180mm f/2.8 Di III VXD lens review with samples (Christopher Frost).
Behind the scenes with PaperBoyo and the Sony α7C (Sony Europe).

Personal photos and tests from SAR Admin Andrea on Instagram, Facebook, Flickr and 500px.

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SAR note: This next message is not paid advertisement. I make it because he is a very young friend of mine and started a business over a year ago with great success. He builds high end laptops for photographers with a super service where you get a replacement superquick if ever needed. So if you live in Europe check it out. This is his text:

The powerful Pera OFFICE 17 contains all the components of a high-end laptop. Therefore, it is particularly suitable for graphics-intensive work such as photo editing and video editing. This laptop also offers a variety of interfaces and an excellent display. Check Pera Technologies out, where you can order your individual high-end laptop today. https://pera-technologies.com/en/shop/

This might be the future of the photography business: Kurt Cobain’s photographer sells his entire photo collection as NFT

A new way for photographers to earn money is to sell their Images on NFT platforms. This is what Kurt Cobains photographer is doing! He is selling all his pics at nft.jessefrohman.com.

If you want to create NFT of your photos the easiest way is this:

  1. You need ETHER to enter the network: If you want to buy a collection or if you yourself want to enter this market you have to first convert your FIAT in Ether tokens using an exchange like Coinbase (Click here) or Binance (Click here).
  2. Choose a NFT platform to tokenize your work: The easiest platform to join is Opensea (Click here). You have to pay some fees in ETHER to create your NFT. And if you sell it there is a 2.5% fee to pay to Opensea.

This market is like Internet in the early 90ies. It’s full of promising projects but this also means many of them will fail. I am doing my first steps on platforms like Opensea and Foundation.ap (only on invitation). But I plan to be make more serious steps into this starting form next month…because there is a cool news I will report to you about a completely new NFT platform for us photographers…stay tuned ;)

If you don’t know what NFT means here is an explanation via Shutterstock:

NFTs are digital assets whose ownership is verified by thousands of computers around the world using blockchain technology. Turning a regular digital asset into an NFT is called “minting,” which “tokenizes” the digital asset on the blockchain. NFT’s are sold using cryptocurrency, so the buyer and seller need a cryptocurrency wallet to participate in the transaction.

The digital asset itself is no different than non-NFT media, but its verification on the blockchain gives owners of the NFT legitimacy. While some people may buy NFTs because they like the content, many are treating NFTs as speculative assets, which are purchased because they may increase in value and sold for profit. With many NFTs selling as one-offs or in limited quantities, the digital scarcity increases the value of an NFT over time.