Photographer Jerry Zeidler is offering outstanding
color photographs and accompanying cutlines/anecdotes
of wildlife and wildflowers as a syndicated
feature for your publication at an outstanding
price.
A retired Pennsylvania Wildlife Conservation
officer and award-winning professional photographer,
Zeidler combines experience and art with authority.
For the past decade, he has contributed photographs
to daily newspapers in Northcentral Pennsylvania
and consistently has taken awards at many acclaimed
photographic exhibitions.
Zeidler is syndicating his archived, copyrighted
photos for publications on an individual, a
weekly or a monthly basis. Along with each photograph,
he provides background and sage advice (approx.
100 words) that only a wildlife expert can offer.
These images are in formats suitable for publication
in your newspaper or magazine. They are available
on compact disc, by individual digital image
on floppy disc (PC or MAC), you can receive
the images as a digital file via an Internet
Fetch or File Transfer Protocol program, and
as an e-mail attachment within a few hours of
ordering. Images are seven inches wide, 300
dpi, RGB, JPEG. E-mail: RobinVanAuken@gmail.com.
Sample:
 |
The
underground rhizome of this all-white wildflower
must be cut to understand why it earned
the name, bloodroot. The red
liquid that flows was used by American Indians
as a pigment in body paint, hence the flowers
nickname, Indian Paint. Herbalists
used the dried rhizome and root as an expectorant,
tonic and antibacterial agent. Conversely,
today it is classified unsafe and poisonous. |