The photojournalism angle: a picture can be
         worth a free trip

              Your attic is probably filled with photo
         albums...which in turn are filled with hundreds of
         photographs taken during your world
         travels...pictures of the Great Wall in China, the
         Tower of London, a tiny church in Dubrovnik, sunset
         over the Greek Isles, the tidy, white houses that
         line the hills of the island of Madeira, the Swiss
         Alps in winter, a lone fisherman on the Spey River
         in Scotland...
              And some of your photographs aren't half-bad.
         In fact, there are two or three that you're quite
         proud of. They're at least as good as those photos
         you see every month decorating the pages of your
         favorite travel magazines.
              So what are your travel photographs doing
         hidden away in the attic? Pull them out, dust them
         off, and put them to good use. Those old
         photographs could pay for your next overseas
         adventure.

         Becoming a free-lance photographer
              The editors of travel magazines and
         newsletters are always looking for good travel
         photographs. Many employ staff photographers whose
         job it is to travel the globe, tripods, lenses, and
         cameras in tow, in search of the perfect shot.
              Travel publications also employ free-lance
         photographers. Some of these free-lancers work on
         assignment; their editors tell them where to go,
         what to take pictures of, when the photos will be
         published, and how much they will be paid. These
         are professional photographers with years of
         experience.
              But not all free-lance travel photographers
         work on assignment. It is possible for amateur
         photographers to have their photos published. All
         it takes is a contact, a little persistence, a good
         photograph, and a bit of luck.
              If you have never been published as a travel
         photographer, your chances of receiving a photo
         assignment from the editor of a travel magazine are
         slim and none. But your chances of being published
         depend on how hard you are willing to work at it.
              It is best to make contact with the editors
         you're interested in working with before you depart
         for your trip. Contact as many as you can think of
         to increase your chances of making a sale.
              Begin with a letter of introduction. Explain
         that you are an amateur photographer, who is
         planning to go on safari in Kenya for two weeks.
         Explain also what kind of camera and equipment you
         will be using. Offer specific suggestions on photos
         you plan to take.
              Follow up on this letter with a phone call.
         You may not be able to get through to the editor
         personally. Try the art director or an editorial
         assistant. Ask if the publication uses free-lance
         photographers and how much they are paid. Also ask
         if the art director prefers color photos or black
         and white, slides or prints. Request photographer's
         guidelines and a sample issue of the publication
         and offer to contact the editor or his  assistant
         again when you return from your trip.
              The photographer's guidelines and the sample
         issues will give you a good idea of what kind of
         photographs each publication is looking for. This,
         of course, is what you also should be looking for
         while you're riding through Kenya's game parks in
         the back of a jeep.
              When you return home, develop your photos,
         choose one or two of the best, and send them off,
         in a padded envelope, with a cover letter, to each
         of the editors you contacted prior to your trip. Do
         not send more than one or two; most publications do
         not take responsibility for returning unsolicited
         material, and you probably will never see your
         photos again. In your letter, explain that these
         are only a sample of what you have available and
         that you would be happy to send additional
         photographs if the editor is interested.
              Follow up with another telephone call. In this
         game, persistence is the key. Editors receive
         unsolicited photos and letters from photographers
         every day. Editors buy photos from those
         photographers who make themselves stand out from
         the crowd.

         Making the sale
              The editor of Travel & Leisure is planning an
         issue devoted to Africa, and your photograph of the
         sunset behind Lake Bogoria in Kenya is one of the
         best he's ever seen. He calls and says he would
         like to use it and that he would also like to see
         all the other photos you took during your trip.
              Your first question should be, "How much am I
         going to be paid?" This varies tremendously,
         depending on the publication; it can range anywhere
         from $50 to $500 per photograph. Your next
         question should concern rights of ownership. Do you
         retain all rights or does the publication assume
         rights of ownership with purchase? If you retain
         the rights to your photo (as you should if at all
         possible), you can sell it again to someone else.
              You will be sent a contract to sign, verifying
         the photograph to be purchased, the fee, the
         question of rights, and the date of publication.
         Payment may be upon acceptance of the photograph or
         upon publication, again depending on the magazine.
              All it takes is one sale. Thereafter, you are
         no longer an amateur; you are a professional
         photographer. It may not be enough to get you an
         assignment from the travel editor of The New York
         Times, but it will help when next you contact the
         editor of your local paper.

         Tips on how to make it work
              It is possible to pay for your travel by
         selling your travel photographs. But, to be honest,
         it isn't easy. Travel editors buy only a small
         percentage of the number of photos and queries they
         receive.
              Why do they choose one photo over another?
              Of course, the first concern is quality. Is
         the picture clear and in focus? Is there enough
         contrast? These are the basic requirements for any
         photograph to be considered by any editor anywhere.
         But to make a sale, your photo has to offer much
         more than the basics. It should be different.
         Unique. It should provide a feeling of the place
         without being a cliche. Snapshots of the Arc de
         Triomphe are a dime a dozen. Yes, they give you a
         feeling of Paris, but it is a feeling of Paris for
         the tourist.  You'll get much further with a photo
         that conveys the feeling of Paris for the Parisian.
              How many photos you have to sell to pay for
         your travel depends on where you sell them. A
         single photograph sold to Travel & Leisure probably
         will cover all the expenses of your trip -- and
         then some. If you're dealing with smaller
         publications with tighter budgets, you'll have to
         sell several to make it worthwhile.

         Can you write?
              Of course, the editors of travel magazines and
         newsletters are also always in the market for good
         travel articles. They depend on staff writers for
         much of their material, but they also depend
         heavily on free-lance writers, both professional
         and amateur, to fill their pages.
              Selling the story of your recent adventure
         bicycling through Holland is handled in much the
         same way as selling the photographs you took of the
         famed cheese carriers of Gouda. You must query as
         many editors as you can name (the secret of paying
         for your travel as a free-lance writer is lining up
         as many assignments as possible for each trip you
         take), follow up with telephone calls, and request
         writer's guidelines and sample issues to give you
         an idea of each publication's focus and style.
              In the case of the free-lance writer, however,
         the query is much more important than for the free-
         lance photographer. Your query must show that you
         can write. That you have a good command of
         language. And that you have something to say. You
         want to tantalize and tempt. The letter of query is
         the free-lance journalist's strongest marketing
         tool. It must sell the editor, both on the article
         idea and on the writer's ability.
              In addition, the query should be as specific
         as you can make it. The editor you are addressing
         reads dozens of queries every day. Your offer to
         write an article on Britain will be tossed
         immediately in the nearest waste-paper basket. But
         your offer to tell that editor's readers about a
         driving tour through the Peak District of
         Derbyshire, the first national park to be
         designated in the country, will likely catch his
         attention.
              Once he's hooked, tease him further by
         mentioning Melbourne Hall, in the southeast corner
         of the Peak District, which boasts one of Britain's
         most outstanding formal gardens, laid out in the
         manner of Le Notre's design for Versailles...or
         Speedwell Cavern, also in this region, where a boat
         takes you on a subterranean canal tour of the
         ancient lead mines...or the ruins of Peveril
         Castle, high above the village of Castleton,
         situated in the northwest corner of the Peak
         District and immortalized in Sir Walter Scott's
         Peveril of the Peak.
              If your query does its job, you will be
         rewarded with a letter of interest -- perhaps even
         a letter of assignment. With this in your pocket,
         you're ready to take off on your trip.
              While traveling, keep copious notes and
         collect all the brochures and literature you can
         get your hands on. When you return home, sit down
         at your word processor and go at it. Then package
         your manuscript with a cover letter and send it
         off.
              Your work is done. You've nothing left to do
         but sit back and wait for payment.

         The writer's edge
              The free-lance writer has an edge over the
         free-lance photographer. Rarely do editors
         advertise for photographers for short-term
         assignments, but editors advertise frequently for
         writers. One of the best places to look for
         specific writing assignments is the TravelWriter
         MarketLetter, published by Robert Scott Milne.
         Contact him at the Waldorf-Astoria, Suite 1850, New
         York, NY 10022. A one-year subscription to the
         newsletter is $60 in the United States, $70
         overseas. Each issue lists travel publications
         across the United States that are looking for
         articles on specific topics. Information is
         included on how long the article should be,
         payment, and rights.
              In addition, the TravelWriter MarketLetter
         also  includes information on trips that are
         available free to writers traveling on assignment.
         To apply for one of these free trips (recent
         offerings have included free stays at the Hotel
         Metropole, a five-star hotel in Geneva, a free ride
         on the Venice-Simplon Orient Express, and a
         complimentary stay at the Seiont Manor Hotel near
         the Isle of Anglesey in Wales), you must have a
         letter of assignment from the editor of a travel
         publication. If you have never been published
         before, this will be difficult to arrange. But if
         you can produce even one clip (or copy of an
         article you have had published), and you can
         convince the editor that you know how to write, you
         have a good chance of getting your letter.

         Other sources
              Once you've exhausted the listings in the
         TravelWriter MarketLetter, visit your local
         newsstand and pick up the latest issues of all
         internationally oriented magazines and newspapers.
         The classified sections of these publications are
         usually filled with listings for free-lance travel
         writers.
              Publications to try include The New York
         Times, New York, NY 10108; the International Herald
         Tribune, Box 309, 36 Long Acre, London WC2E 9JH,
         England; and The Sunday Times, 200 Gray's Inn Road,
         London, England.  Other good markets are in-flight
         magazines, and you should check with airlines serving
         the destination you are covering for the editorial
         addresses of their inflight publications.

         Never let a story die
              Suppose you travel this summer to the island
         of Bermuda with your two young daughters. You
         arrange to sell two pieces when you return: one on
         the most affordable lodgings on the island, the
         other reviewing the island's many first-class
         restaurants. You earn $250 for each article and
         pack your notes from the trip away in the attic.
              Two years from now, go back up to the attic
         and pull your notes out again. Send out another
         batch of query letters. What you'll find is that
         the new editor of Caribbean Travel & Life is
         looking for a piece on family travel and would like
         you to write a piece titled "Ten ways to amuse your
         children on the island of Bermuda." And he's
         willing to pay you $300, bringing the total
         income for the trip up to $800.

         And it's tax-free, to boot
              If you can manage to sell one photograph or
         one travel article as a result of your trip, you
         can deduct all your costs -- airfare, hotel,
         transportation, meals, even sightseeing -- from
         your taxes as a business expense (in most
         countries).
              In others you must apportion your time and
         expense between business and personal.  For help
         with this, talk to your lawyer or accountant.