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Think about this before setting your prices to compete with every publisher dump of “fine art prints,” or painting canvasses in assembly-line fashion and auctioning your work at EBay.
If you are a graphic artist or poster artist, you price your masters according to the income they potentially will prove to produce as net profit, but set your print prices comparable to the competition…and you’d better be good, because you’ve got a LOT of competition.
If you are a fine artist, however, you price yourself INTO the market, not OUT of it. You do this by pricing high, not low. There isn’t a legitimate gallery, collector, investor, or art agent out there interested in someone who gives their work away for pennies, yes, even their prints/reproductions of the originals.
Enough said.





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