Photography Course Level 6: Professional Practice
Level 6, the final level of the NepShoot Photography Course: choosing a niche and pricing, client workflow, contracts and copyright, portfolio and positioning, finances, and getting work.
A complete, free photography course – from your first manual exposure to running a photography business. Structured in levels and genre tracks, built by working photographers.
Level 6, the final level of the NepShoot Photography Course: choosing a niche and pricing, client workflow, contracts and copyright, portfolio and positioning, finances, and getting work.
Level 5 of the NepShoot Photography Course: finding a personal visual language, editing a body of work down, sequencing, honest critique, printing and exhibiting.
The sixth genre track of the NepShoot Photography Course: product, still life and food photography, from a simple tabletop setup to commercial specs and shooting for real clients.
The fifth genre track of the NepShoot Photography Course: travel photography, from packing light and shooting on the move to photographing people respectfully and building a coherent story.
The fourth genre track of the NepShoot Photography Course: street and documentary photography, from zone focusing and working fast to consent, ethics, and building a photo essay.
The third genre track of the NepShoot Photography Course: wildlife and bird photography from long lens handling and AF tracking to field craft, ethics, and high-ISO editing.
The second genre track of the NepShoot Photography Course: 6 lessons on landscape and nature photography, from tripod fundamentals to astrophotography and sky-safe editing.
The first genre track of the NepShoot Photography Course: 6 lessons on portrait photography from fundamentals to studio mastery, plus weddings, family, fashion and corporate work.
The third level of the NepShoot Photography Course: 7 lessons on turning a RAW file into a finished photograph, from culling through colour grading, Photoshop and backup strategy.
The Level 3 capstone assignment: edit a single RAW file into three genuinely distinct results, natural, moody, and boldly stylised, to discover how much range one file holds.
Why colour space, file format and resolution silently ruin more photos than any editing mistake, and the export settings to use for web, print and client delivery.
The 3-2-1 backup rule applied to a real photography workflow, why RAW files and catalogs need different priority than exports, and how archiving differs from backup.