So I spent quite a bit of time looking through hundreds of photosets on one wetlook site this morning trying to find the set that someone had posted a single picture from on Facebook. I was interested in buying this particular set but it was very difficult to find. So it dawned on me that since most wetlook producers are now watermarking their demo pictures on their websites, it would be extremely helpful if you added the set number to the watermark on those shots. That would make it a heck of a lot easier to search for on any given site for a photoset.
Thats a good idea, but from a marketing point of view, if we can get you to look thru all of our sets looking for a particular set, you might find others you might like and buy those too
wet_cowboy1 said: So I spent quite a bit of time looking through hundreds of photosets on one wetlook site this morning trying to find the set that someone had posted a single picture from on Facebook. I was interested in buying this particular set but it was very difficult to find. So it dawned on me that since most wetlook producers are now watermarking their demo pictures on their websites, it would be extremely helpful if you added the set number to the watermark on those shots. That would make it a heck of a lot easier to search for on any given site for a photoset.
Agree completely, we've been doing that on most of our promo shots right since we started. Look at the promos on http://saturationhall.com or http://langstonedale.com and all bar the first two in each set have both the set number and the set name watermarked in at the top of the image, plus another watermark bottom right stating what site the image is from.
You can also try a reverse image search - in Chrome it's as easy as right clicking on the image and selecting 'Search Google for Image'.
Or you can go to https://images.google.com/ & click the camera icon in the search bar and pass it the address of the image or even upload it to go looking.