Okay so it all started a couple weeks ago when a press agency approached me asking about a picture they'd seen on
500px - That shot received editor's choice and within a day went from 200 odd views to over 2000. Within the week the popularity of the shot rocketed and every day my inbox fills with notifications in double digits - I had to create a dedicate label in Gmail just to manage it all :S
Anyway,they wanted to feature that picture and forward it to their clients who are magazines/newspapers and so on. I don't have much experience with press agencies or how they work so this was a new learning experience. Up until now I've only put stock stuff up on Getty which is quite different.
The first publication was a feature on Telegraph's picture of the day
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/pic...-of-the-day-12-August-2013.html?frame=2641505 (number 11) and soon followed a larger article by
The Daily Mail which featured more photos from the day but they got the text a bit wrong, missed out some amendments I'd sent which led to a couple of caving groups getting up in arms about disturbing the bat community down there (we are aware of them and did observe where we were exploring). I think it was mostly politics getting in the way, such communities don't seem to want the mine given public exposure because they think it will get closed down.
The political side of things died down after a couple of days
I don't know who else featured the pictures or wrote about the set further, I understand I'll be given a digest every month so should find out in due course.
There is some commission involved, I don't know how much exactly as it varies depending on press coverage but I was happy with the deal in place and I retain full copyright to all images.
They're looking forward to further European explores so I have to keep this all in mind now when I shoot stuff but I honestly don't know how I can match the expanse of what Box Mine had to offer that day unless I go to super exotic locations. I'll have to think of something and do more research.
I've also most recently been approached by a publisher in Bath about featuring the photos in a book - Looking forward to seeing where that leads.