I know I promised to begin the beguine this week, but I thought it necessary to ask you to abide for one more week of the mundane. I know photographers love the how as much, if not more than, the why. So I will share a few more nuts before I promise to get to the good bolts. Firstly, I must address an issue that has perplexed me for many years; the need for photographers to describe themselves with terms that I abhor: fine art photographer, commercial photographer, editorial photographer, wedding photographer, still life and journalist, etc., and the list just keeps rolling along. The term photographer, as well as the word artist are both sacred to me. They are so overused and violated that they almost feel like curse words that need to be expunged from the vocabulary. They have grown to denote and connote nothing. Everyone who picks up a camera is a photographer, and everyone who paints, draws, sculpts, or doesn't even work is an artist. To be a photographer implies a calling, a dedication, an ability to expose oneself in a way very few people have the capacity or courage to do. If one ever becomes a photographer, it is as if one has won the Nobel Prize. At any one time there are only a few people in the world that are photographers. True, there are hundreds of thousands (if not millions) who take pictures but these are not photographers. I find it amusing and disturbing at the same time that people who work for clients can't produce anything of significance that will endure. Well, that leaves out a large list, from Michelangelo, Bellini, Titian, Goya, to Sargent, etc. This is a very twentieth century idea that art lives in this rarefied world, produced by pure souls and edited, displayed and criticized by distinguished members of an elite academy. As it was earlier and as it is today this is pure hogwash and generally at best a lie agreed upon. Some weeks down my path of life, I will tell you more about these thoughts but I want to get this final erudition of usage out into the fall air before all the leaves drop and life goes dormant. My fees are not based on the traditional photographer’s day rate. The fee is based entirely on how the picture is going to be used and for how long. For example, if a client is going to use a picture for a small one time printing for a brochure with a domestic distribution, printed in a small quantity of 5,000 copies or less, the fee to shoot that picture would be $3,500 plus additional costs for scouting, production, etc. There would also be the non-photographic costs such as a stylist, wardrobe, hair and makeup, location fees, etc. However, to shoot the exact same picture, requiring the same effort, but the usage being a complete worldwide buyout in all media except broadcast for one year, the fee…