![]() ![]() –AC adaptor for camera from Amazon: $20 or so –software: PSRemote, $85 (I think it’s $95 now) Red Bull would have to be putting out a LOT of prints to go through thousands of dollars a month.įor those following along, my fixed costs are: High-quality prints, they sell a perforated paper specially designed for photobooths, and the consumables cost is pretty low, about $100 for a 3-hour event with heavy use. If you want to use this for multiple events, a Sony UPCX1 is the preferred option for photobooths. You can get cheap canon dye-sub printers that are slow but good for a single event. ![]() ![]() To do it right, you need a solid dye-sublimation printer. They’re slow, unreliable, and prone to smudges as well as bleeding when they get wet (from wet hands from holding a drink with condensation or spilling a drink on it). If you want it free, build your own and open source it, no need to mess with Chris. Ripping off M$oft is one thing, ripping off a genuinely nice guy and very hard-working programmer is pretty sleazy. His product is very fairly priced for pro-quality software and there is a free trial version if you just want to mess around with it. I couldn’t find any–if you could point to the scripting you did in Linux that would be much appreciated.īTW, if you steal the DSLR Remote Pro software using that link above, you’re stealing from a real programmer, a one-man shop run by a guy named Chris Breeze. I looked everywhere for free software (mostly out of principal, since the $85 I paid for the software was a tiny fraction of the event costs and ended up being well worth it). ![]()
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