Archive for the ‘Products’ Category

Photo Packages Are Here!

Friday, July 23rd, 2010

The new packages are now available should anyone prefer to do packaging over a la carte. They involve a slightly higher up-front cost, in general, but lead to discounts of 10-25% on prints.

Hyak Photo Packages PDF Form

Senior Portraits – Prints Included – 3 8×10, 2 5×7, 6 4×6, 24 wallets*.
$150 – 1 hr studio session
$175 – 1 hr outdoor session
$250 – 2 hr indoor/outdoor session

Studio Portraits**
$150 – 1 hr studio session – 1 11×14, 3 8×10, 2 5×7, and 6 4×6
$250 – 1 hr studio session – 1 11×14, 6 8×10, 4 5×7, 8 4×6, and 16 wallets*.
$400 – 1.5 hr studio session – 1 16×20, 1 11×14, 3 8×10, 10 5×7, 32 wallets*.

Children’s Lifestyle – Natural Unposed Photography Series
$175 – 45 minute session – 1 8×10, 2 5×7, 6 4×6, 16 wallets

Maternity
$100 – 1 hr studio session – 1 11×14, 1 8×10, 2 5×7

Newborn
$150 – 1 hr studio session – 1 11×14, 1 8×10, 4 5×7, 24 wallets*.

In Home Studio*** – Studio Portraits in the Comfort and Convenience of Home
$100 – 1 hr session – All Prints A la Carte.

Grow With Time
$550 – 1 hr studio maternity session, 1 hr studio newborn session, 30 minute         “Free Studio Saturday” sessions monthly for first year with 8×10 and 8         wallets* from each monthly session. Includes all prints normally         included with Maternity and Newborn packages.

A la Carte
Additional prints are available by the print as an add-on to any package.
Full Resolution Digital downloads (with rights) available for $750.

All Packages
All Packages include online gallery which may be public, hidden, password protected, or require username/password login at no charge.

Weddings, Rites of Passage, and other photography available upon request.

* Wallets are printed in sets of 8 per pose.
** Limit 4 people, including children. $25 per person extra. Max 4 adults 4 children.
*** Limit 4 people, including children. $25 per person extra if space is available.

Designing a new studio

Friday, July 16th, 2010

Note: This was written in May, and should have been posted some time ago, but finalizing contract issues dragged on and then the actual work getting everything setup drove me to forget to post it. Everything in it is still basically valid. Photography bookings resume in August.

We’ve signed papers on the new studio space.

No, I’m not going to do away with in-home portraiture. This has very little effect on what I see as my primary focus which is bringing in a level of fun while reducing the headaches of going to the portrait studio.

So, if business as usual, what does going from hourly rental to having our own studio mean? Reduced in-studio sitting fees! Lower minimum time requirements! It’s simple math: the current fee schedule includes up to 1 hour travel time each way for in-home sessions and matches the minimum 3 hour studio rental that we have now. A fixed location means lower set-up times, less wear and tear on equipment, etc.

I don’t know how this will affect scheduling yet. Right now when you book a session a 3-4 hour section is blocked out on the calendar. That means I can do 2 or at most 3 sessions per day. As existing clients know we make an effort to keep a number of blocks available each week so that wait times are at most 2-3 days. I will be floating the idea of “studio days” where we’ll block off, say, 8am-6pm on a Saturday and divide that time into 30 minute sessions. That’s not enough time to do a family of 6 or a full maternity set but would be enough to do as part of a series. A newly born child could schedule a full newborn session in studio or at home and then use 30 minute sessions once a month to produce a first year wall collage.

Photo Packages

Monday, May 10th, 2010

First off, I’d like to thank everyone who has called before and said how much they enjoy our a la carte pricing. I get warm fuzzy feelings every time as I have made it a personal goal of mine to work out the pricing schedule. Right now, it isn’t going anywhere.

But, there are some issues with the current pricing plan. A couple of these are obvious, but several of them are less apparent. In no specific order, the following are the big issues.

  • “Package Price” (older printed material) or “Second Printing” (newer and web material) prices have been found to be confusing.
  • A la carte pricing is nearly always lower per shoot than package pricing. This was in some ways the point, but I need to discuss it further below.
  • Many inquiries of the “how much would it be to…?” type come in. 90% of the time you will be receiving a response from me. The vast majority of these do not end with a booking but consume 15-30 minutes of my time working up a package for them.
  • There is no readily available path to get a DVD of selected high-resolution images.
  • Package pricing is nearly always lower per print, so it is difficult to compare ahead of time the price difference between photographers.
  • Packages make it easier to tell a friend about us because a lot of the services can be simply lumped together.
  • Many wedding consultants will not list a photographer without a fixed package fee schedule.

To touch quickly on weddings, wedding packages have been in the works for a while now and will be rolled out next year after the exciting changes here have died down. Our schedule is allowing for very few weddings this summer so it made more sense to turn that into a long-term project that will be rolled out this fall. This may remove the a la carte pricing option for all weddings booked next year.

There’s simply no way to get around that a la carte pricing always looks higher per print than the packages. The economy is down right now, we can all see it, we all know it, and we are all looking for the best deal. When I developed our a la carte pricing setup, and yeah, I will take all credit and blame for that one, my feeling was that it would appeal to budget minded people like myself. It was last night when I was ordering some minor products and was almost ready to get 500 for 50 cents each instead of the 4 for $6 that I really needed. That was the wake-up call I needed to look again at bulk package pricing. The issue is one of perceived value, and I had forgotten that there is real value to perceived value.

So, the changes. Right now a la carte pricing is not going away, it may never go away. In the next few weeks we have a print run of marketing materials coming out and these will be updated to include some initial packages and pricing. At the same time the website will be refreshed in the same way. Feedback is welcomed.

The packages are as yet unnamed, I may put my nerd hat on and name them after the periodic table, or I may make names up, or go with silver, gold, marsupial, platinum, or even just I, II, III. At first these are simply going to be based on requests I have gotten on the phone or via e-mail and so have already worked up estimated pricing for. For instance an in-home session with 1 11×14 and 1 8×10 is already $100 since the print credit covers both of those. Yesterday I worked out that a 1 hour newborn session with 1 11×14, 3 8×10, 2 5×7, and 6 4×6 was about $150. I have to differentiate between the in-home pricing and the studio pricing. Right now both are the same, but that is changing soon there may be two separate price lists or there may be package price + surcharge.

All in all I am somewhat saddened that in some ways I see this as an end to my a la carte pricing experiment, but I look forward to working with our clients to bring forth high quality photography at reasonable package prices.

Custom Framing

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

Hyak Photography has partnered with GNP Frame to offer custom framing at reasonable prices. Call (509) 205-1673 to make an in-home appointment to view framing options or hit gnpframe.com to view the whole line (we carry most of it).

The blog has been quiet as there are some exciting developments in the pipeline coming along this July. Stay tuned as there will be specials and promotions to celebrate.

Still time to get Christmas Photos!

Thursday, November 19th, 2009

While November is now booked up the first week of December is still in time to get Christmas cards photographed, printed, and sent out to your friends before Christmas day itself.

The second week of December is even still in time to get prints made to give as gifts. Remember that if you’ve just started a family your parents are going to want to have a framed 8×10 somewhere in their house!

Time For Holiday Cards

Saturday, October 17th, 2009

My wife and I have just finished working out the layout of our Christmas cards, we went with a simple traditional design with 3 photos in a 4×8 inch photo card.

peace unto you

peace unto you

We ended up ordering 50, and included photos from our wedding and the honeymoon in Australia, can’t go wrong with kangaroos!

If you and your family are looking to send out photo christmas cards you’ll need to call schedule your photo session with enough time to spare to send the cards out. I try to process images as fast as I can, but it may take up to 2 weeks after the photo session for the cards to arrive without placing a rush order. If you are sending out in time for Christmas, the first week of December would be the absolute latest time to schedule your session.

You can pick out your template ahead of time at pickyourholidaycard.com or view my printed samples of some of the most popular 4×8 and 5×7 flat card sizes before or after your photo session. Cards with envelopes start as low as $1 each.