You can offer photo editing if itâs something you can handle. Hughes uses a very simple process in Adobe Photoshop. âYou can also do it as you are scanning them,â she said. Adding, that many scanners have color correction options.
You may have to limit the number of photos to digitize if the client wants to save on time and your fee. If the photos are organized in albums, ask the client to mark which ones to exclude with sticky-notes. If they are loose in boxes, suggest you select which ones to use.
A high schooler or college student might charge to an hour, or approximately 0 to 0 for 200 photos. Allow an extra hour for computer glitches, labeling files and calling the client with questions.
âSometimes itâs easier for a third party to make the decisions in narrowing things down,â Hughes said. You can pick what you think is the best of the three or four repetitive photos.
Perhaps the most daunting version of unorganized photographic memories are slides. Once the butt of so many jokes about boring dinner parties, now they are covered in dust with no hope of ever seeing the light of a projector again.
To organize and select from loose photos overflowing shoe boxes or laundry baskets, Hughes hand sorts them into piles based on the clothes people are wearing, the backgrounds and the time of year.
Digitized photos make a great Motherâs Day, Fatherâs Day or Christmas gift. Promote your business online and in emails during these times and throughout the year.
The first step to starting your photo scanning business is setting aside a space in your home. It can be as small as a corner of your bedroom or a desktop if an actual office or spare room isnât possible.
Hereâs how to make photo scanning and digitizing your new side hustle.
This was originally published on The Penny Hoarder, which helps millions of readers worldwide earn and save money by sharing unique job opportunities, personal stories, freebies and more. The Inc. 5000 ranked The Penny Hoarder as the fastest-growing private media company in the U.S. in 2017.
Then there are the videos filmed on various versions of clunky cameras over the decades.
Next, create a storage system for clientsâ photos and video tapes while your work is in progress. Of course clear boxes that stack are great, but they come with a cost. Cardboard shipping boxes work just as well. Place white adhesive labels on the ends with the name of the client and the date the work started. You can place new labels over these when one project is done and the next clientâs photos go into the boxes.
Five years ago, professional photo curator Sabrina Hughes decided she could make a business out of helping people organize their photos, videos and slides. Her company, PhotoXO, has a compelling slogan: âShow your photos the love they deserve.â
To digitize photos and slides, scan each one with the scanner to upload it to your computer. Make files for certain years or topics such as â1970s beach tripsâ or âkidsâ birthday parties.â Drag and drop the photos into the appropriate file.
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As simple as it sounds â and actually is â most people are overwhelmed by the thought of taking hundreds or even thousands of photos and organizing them into searchable, digital files.
Hughes started out charging by the hour, but found clients were spending so much time âpre-organizingâ their photos themselves to save money, it would take them six months or more before they were finally ready for her to start archiving. So she switched to a flat fee of ,222 for unlimited archiving of slides, photos or videos. To do all three formats, she charges ,777. She also offers small projects a-la-carte based on the amount of work.
Itâs smart to charge by the hour when you start out, and give an estimate of how long the project will take.
You might have to offer to digitize photos for one or two friends at no cost first to get an idea of how long the process takes and what you will charge.
Hughes offers a self-paced online class called Disaster to Done for 7, which includes lifetime access to course materials. But sheâs also sharing her tips with The Penny Hoarder.
Warn your clients that digitized videos wonât look so great on a TV, especially if itâs high definition, because the videos were filmed with lower resolution. They look best viewed on a phone or a computer screen.
For videos, they have to be played the whole way through on the camera that originally filmed them and the adapter will transport the movies to a computer. If you donât have the camera, you can play them on a VCR connected to the computer with the adapter.
Then spread the word on social media. Give an estimated price of how many photos you can do for a certain price. Ask your early clients to share something about how wonderful it feels to finally have photos organized and saved forever.
Well, anyone armed with a 9 scanner and a computer can make searchable digital files of photos and slides. To turn videos into digital files, it takes the original camera they were filmed with or a VCR, an adapter and a computer.
Her years as a photographer, plus a graduate degree in art history and experience as a curatorial assistant at the Museum of Fine Arts in St. Petersburg, Fla., combine to make her an astute photo archivist. But all of this expertise and experience is not required.
Determine ahead of time how many photos you can scan in an hour. If you are sorting and scanning, that may be harder to estimate, but it probably adds another 30 minutes onto each hour of scanning. Say you can scan 40 photos an hour, then it would take you five hours to digitize 200 photos that donât require sorting.
âThereâs a certain point when Iâm not doing anything you canât figure out on your own,â she said. âA college student or really anyone could do this to make extra money.â