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The Past and Future City: How Historic Preservation is Reviving America's Communities

[ebooks] The Past and Future City: How Historic Preservation is Reviving America's Communities by Stephanie Meeks; Kevin C. Murphy at Arts-Photography

Description

Sell your photos again and again! Live anywhere. Pick your hours. Be your own boss. Earn more money. See your pictures in print. Discover the freedom of a profitable photo business by learning the secrets behind making and selling editorial stock photography. For more than three decades; industry classic Sell Re-Sell Your Photos has been giving new and veteran photographers the tools to sell their pictures consistently to markets they enjoy. Rohn Enghs master text; with updates from independent photographer Mikael Karlsson; outlines the time-tested formula for successfully marketing your work to publishers world-wide. This completely revised and expanded 6th edition features up-to-date advice; brand new photos and charts and tables to help you achieve your goals. Learn how to:Create enduring images--the ones photo buyers always needPrice your photos like a professionalFind your niche and corner that marketTake and market your work with modern technologyConfidently submit to agencies and publishersDigitally store your archiveProtect yourself and your photos with basic copyright laws and regulationsIncludes a detailed five-week action plan to get you organized and sellingMaster the stock photography market: Take pictures today that you can sell for many tomorrows to come!


#673769 in eBooks 2016-10-04 2016-10-04File Name: B01LAZ9E6Y


Review
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful. Historic preservation preserves stories. drives economies. and values the earth.By barefootmegHistoric preservation holds the seeds of renewal. By rehabilitating and restoring buildings that are already imbued with history. character. and a deep sense of place. a community can reinvigorate a flagging economy. create a hub of pedestrian activity. reduce overall energy expenditures. and retain local dollars which in turn creates more jobs. more activity. and more of a sense of ownership throughout the community. Stephanie Meeks drills down into the overwhelmingly positive economic impacts that historic preservation and building reuse can have in American cities. She explains the energy savings that come from reusing an older building rather than scraping it and rebuilding with newly harvested materials. She also cautions preservationists to guard against ignoring cultural sites of value that lie outside the usual focus of rich. powerful. white guys. She encourages communities to involve neighborhoods and property owners at the grassroots level. And she wades headlong into the debate about whether historic preservation leads to gentrification and a loss of affordable housing.This is a very well rounded book that looks at historic preservation from multiple angles. Its rich with data points. real-world examples from across the United States. and encouragements for how preservationists should move forward. I highly recommend it.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Good ReadBy CustomerStephanie Meeks does a good job articulating the arguments for preserving historic buildings within our urban cores. Historic preservation is a critical component to growth within our cities and adaptive reuse of existing real estate is one of the most environmentally friendly endeavors to expand our housing stock. I applaud her book. though wish it focused more on the good economics related to the Historic Tax Credit.1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. This book belongs in every Historic Preservation Commissioners library. ...By Nancy J MortonThis book belongs in every Historic Preservation Commissioners library. It is a contemporary reference for viable urban living today and tomorrow.

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