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Are good photographs the key to selling your real estate property online?

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You must have been familiar with the proverb “a picture's worth more than a thousand words”. Photos, when incorporated in websites or newspapers change the total worth of the news or the content as visitors or readers feel more interested in reading something when it is supported by an image. Similarly, if you have a website and you want to boost the sales of your company online, you should integrate some good photographs that are professionally presented. If things look shabby and unprofessional, not only will the buyers find the property to be unappealing, but also associate you and your company with unprofessionalism. According to a Realtor's Association survey, it has been revealed that when it comes to the online features that most visitors consider, 85% of them cited pictures or images, 80% cited a Will you go for article exchange ?detailed representation of the real estate property and 55% cited virtual tours. As the real estate buyers begin to search and narrow down

What Ever Happened To The Art of Black & White

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Gone are the days when photographers used black and white film. The introduction of color, around thirty to forty years ago, replaced black and white in the global market, the same has occurred today, with digital replacing color film. Everywhere you go, you see digital cameras and camcorders. The only place you will see black and white film being used almost exclusively is in the area of newspaper photojournalism. Even some of the worlds best magazines use digital photographs. An Internet search is about the only other place you will find people using B&W, or by visiting the local art galleries and museums. There are very few B&W photographers left. But I guess that's progress. What happened? Most of the great B&W photographers, including American photographer Ansel Adams, French photographer Eugene Atget, British photographer and Bill Brandt, have died, leaving just their legacies. Today, people have realized the ease of digital, thus making B&W a lost art.