I've had my own studio for the past 11 months and I can't wait for the yearly contract to expire soon. Lost a ton of money on it for the sake of ridiculous ego. Thanks for the level headed and honest videos that not many others dare or care to say.
That a shame. I've had mine for a little over a year. There are times I feel will I have it next month but I need it for what I do. Ideally it makes money on its own due to renting it out. Are you able to rent your out?
I’ve been freelance for a year. Now haven’t bought any kit. Have just rented everything and I’m glad I heeded your advice to keep my overheads as low as possible.
Thanks Scott - this has been really useful. I'm constantly renting spaces and schleping kit from space to space at the minute, and debating going into renting a Studio with a photographer friend, and this has been really insightful into all the pros and cons. One of my fave videos!
Haven’t had a commercial studio space in 25+ years/Seattle. What changed?; Fire code regs and insane rents; commercial lofts were no longer deemed habitable work/live spaces…and that’s when rental studios popped up. Me?; I converted my whole living room into my photo work space…and can write off 40%. Like yourself- it’s “my space” to dream, experiment, test shoot, etc. I think everyone needs a space- especially if studio centric.
I've had my studio both onsite at home and away in the form of a commercially rented space. my biggest gripe with working offsite is it literally takes me minimum of an hour, once I walk into a room to motivate me to transition into a photography mindset. Where as, at home, when I'm ready, I walk into another room.
I have a studio and share with 2 other photographers. It is my safe space. My creative space where I can make what I want. It gives me comfort. Like a security blanket. Yet I agree with you that it is a liability. Long term it has been the right choice for me for some client work. Other work I use rentals here in NYC that have theme rooms or stylized interior for the proper job. I don't want to built sets if I can avoid it. I would rather travel to a location and shoot there. As always another great video and good insights. Love your information.
I have a food photography studio in my basement and only rent a day studio when I have a big shoot with clients and a crew present. It really helps with keeping overhead down. Cheers!
Giving up my studio was a painful process both mentally and financially. My contract required full professional redecoration, new flooring and I paid for 6 months rent while living hundreds of miles away. Not having the overheads of a studio over COVID however was a godsend.
My studio is in my finished basement. I have all my kit set up, and as I create, I just need to move things around. Its roughly half, at about 700sq ft and its only down side is my 71/2 ft cieling. If I need hieght, I lower the set. It works for me. As I start to grow in business, my plan is to shoot smaller jobs since I have been retired since 2021, and now restarting again. Its more than sufficient for what I'm looking to do. My biggest challenge at the moment...getting the work to keep busy.
To me it sounds more like your studio is your men's shed/office. It has been part of your process in the development of your skills as a commercial photographer. You said it doesn't make sense financially and perhaps it doesn't, but the sense I get is creatively it does make sense. Test shoots in your home studio (men's shed), that then land you the big commercial jobs in London.
Funny to see you going black. I've converted my garage for test shooting that was the easiest decision for me (smaller space, even worse for reflections and cramped for flags), but weirdly most photographers I commented it with found it off to have a black studio.
IM with you on this I have a studio not because I need one but because it’s my space. I live in rented accommodation it has an out building it’s like my man shed the place where I can go to just play with ideas practice my craft and get away from life. I’m now retired but was always a semi pro. I was about to turn pro when covid hit (lucky escape as my day job was nhs so could continue to work) my portrait work is done on location. Having to have lease for a photography space would scare the crap out of me. Do like your common sense you tubes and you honesty regarding gear refreshing to her your thoughts thanks
I constantly struggle with computing power and my edits. If I’m shooting volume I end up using an aps-c lense to decrease file size. Still use full frame for portraits though
I have a 7m x 7m x 4m space that is my studio, with all the trappings of studios, Elinchrom lights. Does it pay its way, in the end no. But I can have a crap day at my real job, head in to the studio for a play and come home in a significantly better mood.. my wife says it’s worth it for that reason alone.
I used to rent a studio without earning as much as you. And also didn't have wanted to rent it. And I decided to close it down as it was way too much cost.
I rent desk space with access to additional space that could be used as a studio when needed. The main reason is work life balance. Work, studio, focussed, get it done. This is particularly important for admin items that are not interesting, as it helps me focus. Need it? - no, but it does improve time efficiency. The danger with working from home is that it is open ended. You start work and never stop. That is not great.
Having a studio of my own is good for my mental health. I tried it without one and tried sharing one, and neither scenario worked for me. I'm depressed without one.
My studio walls are 50% gray. Works fine, especially since it’s a lot smaller than yours and much lower ceilings. But it’s absolutely sufficient for my purposes and my rental is 5 minutes walk away, I just have to bring my kit and it’s 22€/hour 😂
The only large studio (and I use the word generously as it doubles as a club venue) in my town is pity black. It is depressing in there. Can wait to build my own space 😅
I’ve just been told by my land lord that after nine years my studio is not suitable for my needs and gave me one month to move out, this means I now have to sort out all my gear and choose what I want to keep and what to get rid of which is good because it will slim down my kit to what I actually need and not what I wanted and used once. Not having a studio means I won’t have somewhere to shoot when I needed for clients and that will make things harder as people seem to want to shoot in the studio, on the other hand for my personal work I will now be able to hire locations I want to shoot at as I won’t have the overhead of the studio.
The Fuji ??? ... The Mamiya RB67 standard lens (90mm) is the DBs for medium format but for miniature format (36x24mm), have you thought about renting out (to start with) some Leica glass? Sigma and Panasonic do bodies that are compatible with the L-Mount so you don't have to use Leica bodies if you really don't want to but compared to other miniature format lenses, the quality of the Leica lenses is outstanding. If you are using similar lenses to your RB67 lenses for miniature (or 'Full Frame' as they like to call it) then a 50mm and a 35 would do - otherwise, you know what you want. Beware, though, trying out Leica glass is a one way street in the same way that giving your cat expensive cat food is. They are expensive but as you are into hard lighting, a lens that gives exceptional local contrast would complement it very well. Give it a go and look at the quality of your pictures.
i whent different route , i have a studio but i also live in my studio , got a 100m3 place, big room 5x10m use for photo and seating , got a room with my desk , and room on the back wher i sleep , am single without kids just have 2 cats , so it works for me , renting a apartment and a studio make no sense at this point ,
Hey I’ve watched most of your videos and always listen to your advice, based on your opinion “unless your making 30k a year a 5d mkiii will be just fine” I got that camera and for weddings it’s amazing however I’ve been taking photos of gigs and the camera in that situation is horrific, always struggles to focus or I can’t take a burst of photos without it struggling to load. Could you recommend what you should look into for low light photography. I know this isn’t your area however I feel you offer the best business advice on RUclips and don’t promote products above and beyond what’s needed.
11:24 one channel i follow on here, they have a dedicated youtube channel for their dog, if you feel like doing it, go and do it, you never know, you may find a dedicated people that just want to watch pets
Nice to hear you label it rightly a liability. But something you are yet to talk about in these videos are other business expenses such as insurance. All that kit is expensive, indeed. And I'm sure you don't take it home every night and lock it in a safe guarded by your new puppy! What other invisible or non-tangible expenses do you incur regularly as part of your fixed costs? Electricity is not part of your rental, but is heating? I imagine your cleaner doesn't clean your kit for you, do they? Who does the windows?
hey Scott, you say your M1 get's the job done for your still editing needs. I don't have M1, I have a PC but a decent one. I've found that editing stills while doing HEAVY masking work (3-4 seperate masks with hundreds of edits in all of them) turns into nighmare. What am I missing ?
I have a space its 11ft by 9ft which I rent I can't call it a studio but I live in Scotland where it rains allot or just cold so it a useful space but not part of my business it complicated😂
You are a business owner who needs space for what you do,look at your storage space and atmosphere in the studio,fantastic.Work from home in your business is not practical,far to much gear,love what you have created.
What about Moggy? Does she still come to the studio. I like your cat. Do the cat and dog get along? I like your philosophy on the studio. I like having a studio in my home and having the equipment for me. I have what I need when I need it and I know it works. My walls are white also. I don't want to be in a cave.
Great video! I still cant understand the rationale of paying £7k on rent. You can easily buy it and then rent or sell it and at least the money goes back to you, it does not go towads enriching your landlord.
After all the faff, insurance, repairs etc its not a great deal to own just one. Unless I owned the entier building for example, but I dont want to be a landlord.
Definitely start a dog/cat channel. RUclips, instagram, etc. If you're already making the videos and images, upload them. You get enough followers and views you'll end up with enough free pet food for life.
Well thought bringing this studio question, I think many people starting out may have their carrears held back by not having a proper space to work. I'm lucky, the institute where I made my courses let the students who need to book time in their studio. But if I didnt have that sweetie it whould have been complicated as my home is very small and paying twice the profit at the begining isnt exactly friendly. Cheers for teddy 🦮
If you want to learn how to get into the industry head here tinhouse-studio.com/
I've had my own studio for the past 11 months and I can't wait for the yearly contract to expire soon. Lost a ton of money on it for the sake of ridiculous ego. Thanks for the level headed and honest videos that not many others dare or care to say.
That a shame. I've had mine for a little over a year. There are times I feel will I have it next month but I need it for what I do. Ideally it makes money on its own due to renting it out. Are you able to rent your out?
I’ve been freelance for a year. Now haven’t bought any kit. Have just rented everything and I’m glad I heeded your advice to keep my overheads as low as possible.
"What i make is for others. How i make it is for myself. "
Thanks Scott - this has been really useful. I'm constantly renting spaces and schleping kit from space to space at the minute, and debating going into renting a Studio with a photographer friend, and this has been really insightful into all the pros and cons. One of my fave videos!
Haven’t had a commercial studio space in 25+ years/Seattle. What changed?; Fire code regs and insane rents; commercial lofts were no longer deemed habitable work/live spaces…and that’s when rental studios popped up. Me?; I converted my whole living room into my photo work space…and can write off 40%. Like yourself- it’s “my space” to dream, experiment, test shoot, etc. I think everyone needs a space- especially if studio centric.
I've had my studio both onsite at home and away in the form of a commercially rented space. my biggest gripe with working offsite is it literally takes me minimum of an hour, once I walk into a room to motivate me to transition into a photography mindset. Where as, at home, when I'm ready, I walk into another room.
I have a studio and share with 2 other photographers. It is my safe space. My creative space where I can make what I want. It gives me comfort. Like a security blanket. Yet I agree with you that it is a liability. Long term it has been the right choice for me for some client work. Other work I use rentals here in NYC that have theme rooms or stylized interior for the proper job. I don't want to built sets if I can avoid it. I would rather travel to a location and shoot there. As always another great video and good insights. Love your information.
I have a food photography studio in my basement and only rent a day studio when I have a big shoot with clients and a crew present. It really helps with keeping overhead down. Cheers!
Giving up my studio was a painful process both mentally and financially. My contract required full professional redecoration, new flooring and I paid for 6 months rent while living hundreds of miles away. Not having the overheads of a studio over COVID however was a godsend.
Does the internet want more puppy videos? You know it does!
My studio is in my finished basement. I have all my kit set up, and as I create, I just need to move things around. Its roughly half, at about 700sq ft and its only down side is my 71/2 ft cieling. If I need hieght, I lower the set. It works for me. As I start to grow in business, my plan is to shoot smaller jobs since I have been retired since 2021, and now restarting again. Its more than sufficient for what I'm looking to do. My biggest challenge at the moment...getting the work to keep busy.
You like my best clever friend whom I like to listen to and you are so right
To me it sounds more like your studio is your men's shed/office. It has been part of your process in the development of your skills as a commercial photographer. You said it doesn't make sense financially and perhaps it doesn't, but the sense I get is creatively it does make sense. Test shoots in your home studio (men's shed), that then land you the big commercial jobs in London.
Funny to see you going black. I've converted my garage for test shooting that was the easiest decision for me (smaller space, even worse for reflections and cramped for flags), but weirdly most photographers I commented it with found it off to have a black studio.
IM with you on this I have a studio not because I need one but because it’s my space. I live in rented accommodation it has an out building it’s like my man shed the place where I can go to just play with ideas practice my craft and get away from life. I’m now retired but was always a semi pro. I was about to turn pro when covid hit (lucky escape as my day job was nhs so could continue to work) my portrait work is done on location. Having to have lease for a photography space would scare the crap out of me.
Do like your common sense you tubes and you honesty regarding gear refreshing to her your thoughts thanks
I constantly struggle with computing power and my edits. If I’m shooting volume I end up using an aps-c lense to decrease file size. Still use full frame for portraits though
Such a great comment to e relevant topic 🙌
I have a 7m x 7m x 4m space that is my studio, with all the trappings of studios, Elinchrom lights. Does it pay its way, in the end no. But I can have a crap day at my real job, head in to the studio for a play and come home in a significantly better mood.. my wife says it’s worth it for that reason alone.
if you're goeeting a second GFX, go for the 1st gen GFX100 (not an S). It has a 5.76m dot EVF, much higher res than the 100S and probably cheaper
I used to rent a studio without earning as much as you. And also didn't have wanted to rent it. And I decided to close it down as it was way too much cost.
I rent desk space with access to additional space that could be used as a studio when needed. The main reason is work life balance. Work, studio, focussed, get it done. This is particularly important for admin items that are not interesting, as it helps me focus. Need it? - no, but it does improve time efficiency. The danger with working from home is that it is open ended. You start work and never stop. That is not great.
Having a studio of my own is good for my mental health. I tried it without one and tried sharing one, and neither scenario worked for me. I'm depressed without one.
My studio walls are 50% gray. Works fine, especially since it’s a lot smaller than yours and much lower ceilings. But it’s absolutely sufficient for my purposes and my rental is 5 minutes walk away, I just have to bring my kit and it’s 22€/hour 😂
Excellent commentary Scott!
The only large studio (and I use the word generously as it doubles as a club venue) in my town is pity black. It is depressing in there.
Can wait to build my own space 😅
I had no idea people prefer black walls. I bounce lights off of my white walls and ceiling like crazy I couldn’t shoot without it
I’ve just been told by my land lord that after nine years my studio is not suitable for my needs and gave me one month to move out, this means I now have to sort out all my gear and choose what I want to keep and what to get rid of which is good because it will slim down my kit to what I actually need and not what I wanted and used once. Not having a studio means I won’t have somewhere to shoot when I needed for clients and that will make things harder as people seem to want to shoot in the studio, on the other hand for my personal work I will now be able to hire locations I want to shoot at as I won’t have the overhead of the studio.
The Fuji ??? ... The Mamiya RB67 standard lens (90mm) is the DBs for medium format but for miniature format (36x24mm), have you thought about renting out (to start with) some Leica glass? Sigma and Panasonic do bodies that are compatible with the L-Mount so you don't have to use Leica bodies if you really don't want to but compared to other miniature format lenses, the quality of the Leica lenses is outstanding. If you are using similar lenses to your RB67 lenses for miniature (or 'Full Frame' as they like to call it) then a 50mm and a 35 would do - otherwise, you know what you want. Beware, though, trying out Leica glass is a one way street in the same way that giving your cat expensive cat food is. They are expensive but as you are into hard lighting, a lens that gives exceptional local contrast would complement it very well. Give it a go and look at the quality of your pictures.
i whent different route , i have a studio but i also live in my studio , got a 100m3 place, big room 5x10m use for photo and seating , got a room with my desk , and room on the back wher i sleep , am single without kids just have 2 cats , so it works for me , renting a apartment and a studio make no sense at this point ,
Hey I’ve watched most of your videos and always listen to your advice, based on your opinion “unless your making 30k a year a 5d mkiii will be just fine” I got that camera and for weddings it’s amazing however I’ve been taking photos of gigs and the camera in that situation is horrific, always struggles to focus or I can’t take a burst of photos without it struggling to load. Could you recommend what you should look into for low light photography. I know this isn’t your area however I feel you offer the best business advice on RUclips and don’t promote products above and beyond what’s needed.
It is a wise person that knows what they do not need!
Most people only think about what they want.
(footnote: that does not mean we wont buy it! 🙂)
Do you have a house cat and a studio cat? Now I know you're rich 😂
Are you filming these on your 100s? Or is this on the Canon? Colors look really nice man
BMPCC 6k
11:24 one channel i follow on here, they have a dedicated youtube channel for their dog, if you feel like doing it, go and do it, you never know, you may find a dedicated people that just want to watch pets
Nice to hear you label it rightly a liability. But something you are yet to talk about in these videos are other business expenses such as insurance. All that kit is expensive, indeed. And I'm sure you don't take it home every night and lock it in a safe guarded by your new puppy! What other invisible or non-tangible expenses do you incur regularly as part of your fixed costs? Electricity is not part of your rental, but is heating? I imagine your cleaner doesn't clean your kit for you, do they? Who does the windows?
hey Scott, you say your M1 get's the job done for your still editing needs. I don't have M1, I have a PC but a decent one. I've found that editing stills while doing HEAVY masking work (3-4 seperate masks with hundreds of edits in all of them) turns into nighmare. What am I missing ?
"my current goals don't need this" - I need help with this lolz
Can Moggie come too? Pleeeeease!
I have a space its 11ft by 9ft which I rent I can't call it a studio but I live in Scotland where it rains allot or just cold so it a useful space but not part of my business it complicated😂
You are a business owner who needs space for what you do,look at your storage space and atmosphere in the studio,fantastic.Work from home in your business is not practical,far to much gear,love what you have created.
Do you think if over time the budgets keep decreasing the way you say they are, that people will be more likely to opt to shoot in your space?
Yes 100%
How does puppy get on with your cat
🔥
Where is Moggi?
I just rent mine when needed
What about Moggy? Does she still come to the studio. I like your cat. Do the cat and dog get along? I like your philosophy on the studio. I like having a studio in my home and having the equipment for me. I have what I need when I need it and I know it works. My walls are white also. I don't want to be in a cave.
Great video! I still cant understand the rationale of paying £7k on rent. You can easily buy it and then rent or sell it and at least the money goes back to you, it does not go towads enriching your landlord.
After all the faff, insurance, repairs etc its not a great deal to own just one. Unless I owned the entier building for example, but I dont want to be a landlord.
Please share your edited videos.
Definitely start a dog/cat channel. RUclips, instagram, etc. If you're already making the videos and images, upload them. You get enough followers and views you'll end up with enough free pet food for life.
Most important question: Will Loki and Moggy be coming to the studio? I thought Moggy was the studio mascot.
Studio or man cave?🙂
It is very strange to hear an English accent say “craic” 😂
Overheads within an economy which is going to collapse.
With your finger raised and your beard you look so much like ayatollah. 😆😆😆😆😆 Teach us the ways of the prophet, mate! 😆😆😆😆😆
Well thought bringing this studio question, I think many people starting out may have their carrears held back by not having a proper space to work. I'm lucky, the institute where I made my courses let the students who need to book time in their studio. But if I didnt have that sweetie it whould have been complicated as my home is very small and paying twice the profit at the begining isnt exactly friendly. Cheers for teddy 🦮