View Full Version : Advice sought. The Photographers Toning Book reprinting options.
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tim rudman
01-07-2010, 10:08 AM
I'm not sure where to post this but this seemed the most appropriate forum.
I have had many enquiries and well meaning suggestions about the unavailability of this book and the very high prices asked for copies on the internet ($999.99 was the last quote sent to me, although I know there are cheaper copies out there).
It has been sold out for some time now and sadly I do not have copies to offer. However, I do have the republication rights as the publisher does not wish to reprint what is inevitably seen as a niche and shrinking market.
I have been sitting on the publishers digital masters for a little while now and am starting to explore options for making it available again. I feel such information should be 'out there' and available and commercial pressures mean that the costs of another run is unlikely to be enthusiastically taken up by another publisher, especially in a recession (although i haven't approached one for some time).
Digital print on demand seems to be the obvious choice but I have concerns about reproduction quality as faithful and consistent colour printing is especially important in a book like this (hence the unsuitability in my opinion of making available downloads to uncalibrated computers).
I have seen good and poor books from Blurb and would welcome wider views on this, but I have recently been directed to Amazon's 'Createspace' reprinting service, which is promoted for both new and out of print titles. Does anyone have experience of this please?
I have made contact and I think that it might prove too expensive for this book as only a few colour images are included in the basic package, extra ones can be individually purchased - this book has 2 or 3 hundred if I remember correctly! Cost might therefore rule this option out unless I could negotiate a deal. However, I would need quality assurances. Does anybody have experience/suggestions etc?
The link for Createspace is here (https://www.createspace.com/pub/l/books_afterlife.do?rewrite=true&ref=447520&utm_id=4910&cp=701500000008dHm&ls=Amazon&sls=Afterlife)
Many thanks in advance
Tim
Chazzy
01-07-2010, 12:21 PM
How many copies of a new printing would have to sell in order to make a new printing by a normal publisher viable? Could it be done if 1,000 copies were pre-sold?
Rolleiflexible
01-07-2010, 12:46 PM
I ruined my copy and was sad to find it unavailable
when I went to replace it a few months ago -- I am
delving deeper into sepia and would have appreciated
the book's discussion and examples. I would buy a
copy if it became available again -- it was a fantastic
reference for the subject.
MattKing
01-07-2010, 12:54 PM
Tim:
If you haver contacts in the retail side of the book business, including with photographic retailers, I would suggest seeing if they would assist you in convincing a publisher to re-print the book.
I purchased my copy from Glazer's in Seatlle. When I mentioned that it was out of print, and that you had indicated that a reprint was going to be difficult to arrange, the people at Glazer's expressed a high level of disappointment.
Matt
PS it is a great book!
PPS I wonder if Ralph Lambrecht and/or his publisher could help?
photovestad
01-07-2010, 01:07 PM
Have a look at alternativephotography.com/books I don't have any experience with them except as a customer. I just purchased their 2010 calendar which is printed on demand by Lulu.com and that will hopefully arrive any day now. I bought a photo related book a couple of years ago from Lulu (JPG Early Issues) and was happy enough with the quality.
flash26c
01-07-2010, 02:08 PM
Tim:
There are lots of publishers out there that I think would be eager to print your book. I, for one, would love to have it in any form! DVD or PDF sold from your website would be easy if you are looking to self publish. I wouldn't worry about color reproduction as "every one's results may vary". The pictures are great but I am looking for the information that goes with them! Keep us informed and count me in for at least one copy.
Ron
AshenLight
01-07-2010, 02:39 PM
I second the Lulu suggestion. I've also purchased several photo related books from them and was happy with both the quality and delivery.
Ash
grahamp
01-07-2010, 03:30 PM
As a limited consumer of PoD books:
On balance I think Blurb produces better work than Lulu, based on books I have from both. I have some colour blindness, so some of the subtleties would pass me by anyway 8-)
I suppose if each illustration included a neutral gray patch any casts would be apparent (to those with normal colour vision at least).
tim rudman
01-07-2010, 03:46 PM
How many copies of a new printing would have to sell in order to make a new printing by a normal publisher viable? Could it be done if 1,000 copies were pre-sold?
Oh, I think so Chazzy. When it 1st sold out, in the UK 18 months after publication, there was a suggestion from two retailers that they might order 500 each and the publisher was interested at that time. They didn't follow through though.
tim rudman
01-07-2010, 03:53 PM
Tim:
There are lots of publishers out there that I think would be eager to print your book.
I, for one, would love to have it in any form! DVD or PDF sold from your website would be easy if you are looking to self publish. SNIP SNIP>>>
Ron
It would be nice to think so Ron, but I don't know that is actually the case. Times are hard right now in publishing as elsewhere.
Secondly, the idea of selling pdfs has been put to me and I do have an open mind but also have reservations about colour fidelity being beyond control and that is important for toning illustrations.
Tim
doughowk
01-07-2010, 05:14 PM
I should lock-up my copy whenever photographer/friends are visiting ;-) An extremely useful text. The fidelity of the image colors are so important to this work. Good luck with the reprint.
I went looking for this book not to long ago and was as disappointed as others to see it was not available.
The books put out by Lodima Press are supposedly nice-I have not seen one, too expensive-their publisher might be an option.
PDF from your site would be great. If you have the digital masters I would assume the illustrations and images are there. You could include suggestions for screenereolution etc...
RalphLambrecht
01-07-2010, 05:45 PM
I went looking for this book not to long ago and was as disappointed as others to see it was not available.
The books put out by Lodima Press are supposedly nice-I have not seen one, too expensive-their publisher might be an option.
PDF from your site would be great. If you have the digital masters I would assume the illustrations and images are there. You could include suggestions for screenereolution etc...
How would Tim make money this way?
redrockcoulee
01-07-2010, 06:20 PM
How would Tim make money this way?
Some sites have password protected PDF files that you purchase the password or else you cannot open the file
RalphLambrecht
01-07-2010, 06:23 PM
Some sites have password protected PDF files that you purchase the password or else you cannot open the file
Does that mean you can only view the file at that site, or can you download it too?
toro_mike
01-07-2010, 06:32 PM
Does that mean you can only view the file at that site, or can you download it too?
Typically you can download the file and print it if you wish. There are all kinds of controls the content owners can put on PDF's if they wish and know how to do it.
Alex Bishop-Thorpe
01-07-2010, 06:39 PM
So THAT'S the problem...I've been looking for a copy for a few weeks now, and yeah, I saw that one for $999. Impressive. I second the Lulu option, I've seen good end results from them, so I think they're worth investigating.
The selling .PDFs option is also valid, but I for one hate reading from a computer screen. Painful after a while and you cant make little notes in the margins. So, if it came in PDF I'd have to have it printed and comb bound so I could read it anyways.
I'd also give it about a week before people would be emailing it to eachother, but that's another problem.
Obviously there's demand for it, and it's your work so you should be able to profit from that. I think a good print-on-demand service makes the most sense.
toro_mike
01-07-2010, 06:49 PM
So THAT'S the problem...I've been looking for a copy for a few weeks now, and yeah, I saw that one for $999. Impressive. I second the Lulu option, I've seen good end results from them, so I think they're worth investigating.
The selling .PDFs option is also valid, but I for one hate reading from a computer screen. Painful after a while and you cant make little notes in the margins. So, if it came in PDF I'd have to have it printed and comb bound so I could read it anyways.
I'd also give it about a week before people would be emailing it to eachother, but that's another problem.
Obviously there's demand for it, and it's your work so you should be able to profit from that. I think a good print-on-demand service makes the most sense.
I agree completely with Fleath. I just discovered this book and I'd LOVE a hard copy but I cannot pay $200 and up for it (not to mention that money does the author NO good). Sometimes it really sucks being late to the game :mad:
Toffle
01-07-2010, 07:43 PM
It is some time since I investigated PoD publishing. Even a couple of years ago paper quality was a huge drawback, but I believe that this is an area where great improvements have been made. You might find that though formatting the text should not be a problem, your images may need a lot of work to be optimized for this kind of publication. Also, investigate whether you can recieve a preview copy of the book. In the past many self-publishing dreams were let down by poor print quality.
Cheers,
slumry
01-07-2010, 08:00 PM
I agree with doughowk, the images and their quality make the book work. The text is great but the step wedges and photo images make it all understandable. If the quality can not be reproducted, I would only publish if the book was reformtulated so as to not depend on the images so much. Of course if the book can be sold for $999 a copy, how many need to be sold in order to break even? :)