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Viewfinder photographer
Viewfinder photographer








  1. VIEWFINDER PHOTOGRAPHER UPDATE
  2. VIEWFINDER PHOTOGRAPHER PROFESSIONAL

My clients are the best! Without you, I couldn’t do what I love every day. I am professional, flexible, and want to please. Viewfinder Photography is all about customer service. Let Viewfinder save you the time and effort, because I’m sure that you have other tasks on your to-do list that you could be working on. Wouldn’t you love to have multiple offers for a home within the first few days of listing? Of course you would! If you aren’t seeing these types of results and you are taking your own photos with your iPhone, then you might want to consider hiring Viewfinder to reach your goals. If the pictures are missing, dark, sideways, or otherwise detracting from the home’s true potential, then you could be missing sales.

VIEWFINDER PHOTOGRAPHER PROFESSIONAL

Why use a professional photographer? Your online listing is almost the ONLY way to get potential buyers to come see the home. Quick turnaround is key in Colorado’s hot real estate market. Want a digital flyer to post on social media? I can do that, too. Viewfinder can also work with you to design a custom flyer that will be unlike any others on the market. I will provide you with all of the best tips for preparing the home, up-front pricing, and beautiful high- and low-resolution photos to use on MLS, brochures, etc. My photos really move people (pun intended!). This allows you to schedule the maximum viewings and SELL QUICKLY. The goal is to show the home in the best possible light and gain the interest of potential buyers. Accurate portrayal is as important as beautiful photos. Honesty, integrity, and trust are the basis of all my work. I started this business because I wanted to bring out the best in homes – making homes (and realtors) look their best. Viewfinder Photography specializes in real estate and architectural photography in the Denver metro area.

VIEWFINDER PHOTOGRAPHER UPDATE

Update on 3/28/22: After learning of Robison’s unusual situation, Sony shipped the photographer a box with a replacement spider-free camera and a special Spider-Man comic.Well, hello there! So nice of you to come visit my site. “Personally I’m waiting for a certain Superhero franchise to write a letter and welcome me into the multi-verse.” “I’m not afraid of spiders (though it is a bit unsettling to put my eye directly up to it) and most of the replies I’ve had have ranged from complete panic to suggesting I light the camera on fire, throw it off a cliff, or a combination of the two.” “It’s been a fairly entertaining predicament to be in. “I’ve used a few times over the last week,” he says. And yes, Robison is still using the camera in the meantime. “I was hoping they’d have a little more insight into how a spider (and a fairly big one at that) could get into such a difficult location.” Learning to Live with His New Friendįor now, Robison is just living with his new spider friend and waiting to see if it will find itself a new home soon - he is planning to send the camera in for “repair” if the spider ends up dying inside. “They suggested that I simply send it to their repair center for cleaning and servicing. “I finally connected with someone via Sony’s support chat, although their response was quite mild and didn’t seem surprised at all,” Robison says. Robison finally reached out to Sony directly to see what course of action the company would suggest. I used an air puffer to try and blow air up into the area but it didn’t do anything either.” The spider inside the viewfinder chamber of the Sony a7R III. I tried leaving the lens off next to a bright light, hoping it would vacate the dark camera for somewhere brighter, again no luck.

viewfinder photographer

“Some suggested leaving the lens off near an open door or window, as maybe the spider will move out and towards something warmer (no luck). “I tried a few different things after posting my story in a photography group,” he says. Robison then spent about a week trying different ways to either get the spider to voluntarily leave the camera or forcefully evict it. “From what I can guess, the spider may have been hiding inside one of my lenses and when I switched and connected the new lens to the camera body, it crawled out and into the camera maybe towards a bit of light?” Removing a Spider from a Camera “I immediately started to Google ‘spider in my camera’ and from the very few results I found, most were dealing with a spider on the mirror or in other areas of the camera, not trapped behind glass in what should be a fairly spider-proof area,” he says. Robison examined his camera and realized that a relatively big spider was inside the viewfinder.Īfter the unsettling realization that his face had been uncomfortably close to the spider, Robison started looking into how the spider could have gotten into the viewfinder in the first place.










Viewfinder photographer