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DanSyron — YOUR ART HAS VALUE! (and how to price it)
Published: 2016-02-08 03:54:45 +0000 UTC; Views: 365724; Favourites: 1409; Downloads: 0
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Hello everybody!

I get asked frequently ‘how do you price your art?’  “How do I evaluate how much I should charge for commissions?” etc.  Recently, I’ve read a few disappointing posts on how some people devalue either themselves or others’ art purely because it is posted online either as digital or traditional.  We often see people with very low prices being taken advantage of by commissioners who want to obtain amazing art for pennies on the dollar without notifying the artist that maybe their prices are too low.  On the flip side, we also see people who complain that art is ‘too expensive’ when the pricing of the artist’s work in question is appropriate.


In response to these, I’ve decided to create a journal designed to help you (yes you, reader) understand that your work has value and how you should price your work as a result.  It also might shed light on a pretty widespread problem online of people who undercharge for their work unknowingly and the epidemic of people who wish to take advantage of these people, often swarming these artists unfairly in an attempt to leverage the insanely low prices to their advantage at the disadvantage of the artist.



A bit of background
Art as a medium is pretty different than it was 10 to 15 years ago.  The accessibility to art and art programs, as well as the ability for people to create art has expanded tremendously with the creation of cheaper tools, more options, more artists, etc.  There are more artists now than there have ever been before, especially as deviantArt has grown.  While activity on deviantart might have slowed, the options for art, people to follow, and outlets to view the art have all increased.

 

That sounds pretty intimidating if you’re an artist who wants to do commission work.  Almost equally so if you are someone looking to get art for yourself.  With all these artists, and all these options, is your work worth anything?

 

YES. 


While the approachability of art is steadily increasing, its often really easy to overlook your own artistic value, especially when you’re often surrounded by people you might interpret as superior to you.  Regardless, your hard work in creating art, especially for someone else, is important to recognize!  YOU are worth something, and you’re undoubtedly worth more than you think, as our own self-perception often devalues our own work.  If you are considering opening commissions, modifying your prices, or scouting for art commissions to order, here are a few things to consider.


A problem in the Community


Have you ever seen an artist on deviantArt that has huge amounts of demand for their work because of how cheap it is?  99% of you will answer yes.  More often than not, these artists are undervaluing their work either unknowingly or knowingly (but under the impression that they are not worth more). 

 

I know of one particular artist (and I won’t use names for the sake of respect), who has very complicated and valuable commissions for 8$.  The value of this work if done as freelance industry work would easily exceed 400$, yet they were not aware of their under-pricing.  As a result, hundreds of people flocked to this person in hopes of scoring a sweetheart deal on their art without realizing that the pieces in question could take upwards of a month to complete (for 8$ mind you).  Do you think these people thought that the artist would benefit from this in any way?

Deviantart has a bit of an issue with the devaluation of digital and traditional art works purely because of their online format.  There is a huge fallacy that ‘because it’s on Deviantart that the work is my its nature worth less’. 

This causes a few problems that impact a great number of groups:

:bulletred: Artists undercutting themselves unknowingly are hurting income potential.

Artists will then try to undercut the lower prices to hike demand, driving overall work price and value in the community down.


The result is hours of work by very skilled artists for less than fast-food wages, often going under 1$/hour of work, work that is specially tailored to the buyer performed by skilled individuals!



So how should we price?

How should you price your art?  There’s a few steps.

First step? (Time to wrap your noodle around this big one)  YOUR ART IS WORTH SOMETHING!  Holy crap!  Yes, your art, regardless of who you are, is worth something, and a pretty decent something, too.  Spend hours on a drawing, even a sketch?  That’s hours of your own time refining your craft.  Drawing for someone else?  You are making something special for someone else with your time and your resources and your signature creativity!  YOU HAVE VALUE, YOU ALWAYS HAVE VALUE!

Crazy huh?  Well it shouldn’t be.  In fact, if you’ve drawn anything in your life before, you’ll know that drawing and art takes a lot of time and effort.  Drawing for others?  Even more so!  It’s the most important aspect to consider when pricing and evaluating your own work.

 

Second step?  Let’s consider the following:

In the United States (which we are using as the standard in this case because of deviantArt’s centralization in California), the minimum wage is $7.25.  That means the lowest you can legally be paid for doing employed work is $7.25, which is usually fast-food job wages.

So assuming it takes you 2 hours to sketch a drawing for someone:  If we are going by the minimum wage rate, that’s:

2 hours * 7.25 = $15 for a 2 hour sketch.  Seems reasonable right?  Sadly, most artists on deviantart charge LESS THAN 10$ for a sketch that might take as long as 4 hours!  What if it takes longer? 

Let’s also consider this:  Artistry is a specialty skill.  While anyone can learn art, it takes time, patience, and effort, and not everyone has the same style.  Art is something unique to everyone, and that makes it very valuable.  Do you consider something that unique to be worth minimum wage?

So assuming that we raise the per/hour cost a bit to say, 10$/hr.  That 2 hour sketch is now worth 20$.  Now we’re getting somewhere.

So as an artist, what does that mean for me?


It means you should do the following:

• Estimate how long various artistic processes take you to complete.  For many people, doing a full drawing with color and one character takes between 5-7 hours (I personally take way way longer than that to work, but we’ll use this range as an example).  Assuming minimum wage:

5-7 hours * 7.25$ =  $36.25 - $50.75

Now this might vary depending on skill, but this is a good starting place.  Now assuming you work at lets say 10$/hr.  That becomes

5-7 hours * 10$hr = $50-$70 for a full colored 1 character commission.

For traditional, also figure in the cost of supplies it took for you to create the image, so you’d estimate the base time + cost of materials.

This leads into a rather tricky problem with the consideration of the infamous deviantArt points. The issue with deviantart points (not that they’re necessarily bad) is that 1.) its not actually currency, and to be traded back to $, deviantart takes a 20% cut and 2.) it inflates the perceived price of the work.  Example:

assuming the previous reasonable prices for a 5-7 hour piece of art evaluated at 7.25$/hr:

80 points to 1 USD = 5-7 * 7.25* 80 = 2900 – 4060 points. 

Someone who doesn’t run that conversion will say ‘holy crap that’s a lot of points’ and might be quicker to assume the work is ‘too expensive’.  Thus, the deviantart devaluation process begins.

I often see full images ranging between 500-1200 points.  While from a numeric perspective (500 and 1200 being pretty respectable numbers) running the conversion brings this to $6.25 and $15! 

for a full picture….

See the problem?  It’s incredibly important to realize that while deviantart currency is nice and convenient, its often a bit deceiving at evaluating your own work.  Not only that, the fact that the artist only gets 80% of the monetary cut means that points can be a problem for artists who use commissions as an income source, even if they are easier.  If you choose to use dA points as a pricing evaluator, just remember:

• While easier to obtain, they are worth less.

• If you are evaluating your own pricing, remember to do the 80pts to 1$USD conversion.

• When buying a commission, remember to also do the conversion, because you might be severely underpaying an artist!


There’s yet another aspect when it comes to pricing: Demand!

Time for an economics crash course.  Specifically in microeconomics, there is something called a supply and demand curve.  Basically, this is a representation of how supply of something, and the demand of something can drive prices of whatever the good is.  Usually, if the demand is high, the supply will need to be higher to deal with this pull for demand.

Now art isn’t exactly a commodity.  You can only make so much of a supply, and when you’re creating art on-the-spot for someone, that supply is usually about as fast as you’re capable of working.  So what do you do if your demand is high?  Increase your dang prices!  If the demand for your work is crazy, then it’s a good indicator that your work has a good amount of value behind it!  Remember when I said you had value?  Its true!  Take a look at some other artists pricing with your same demand structure to see how much you should increase.  However, increasing 5$ here and there to rest the waters is a good start.

 

If demand is low, don’t worry!  Odds are you may have fallen prey to the online art devaluation issue, or people just aren’t aware of your work.  Remember the basic structure for pricing based on the minimum wage scale.  If you need to feel the waters, you can slightly change the prices around that area.  Another key thing to remember is that commissioners will respect it when you value your art and understand its value!  While you might have people climbing all over you for super cheap deals, raising your prices only eliminates the ones taking advantage of you, and chances are that the people who still want your work and respect it’s value will still buy from you!


So what does this all mean?

 

Well to sum it up:

1.) YOUR ART HAS VALUE! 

Never devalue yourself because you think you’re not as skilled as other people, or because of the underpricing issues on deviantart.  You took time and care to make something special, whether its for you or for someone else!  You and your art have value!  Respect that and others will too!

 

2.) Estimate the time it takes to make something and build a good cost structure based on Money-per-hour estimates.  If you are unsure, start at 7$/hr and play with it from there.  You’ll find the sweet spot, trust me.

 Here's a cash clock you can download to help estimate your prices!
www.online-stopwatch.com/downl…

3.) ART IS NOT A COMMODITY

Art is not McDonalds, it isn’t fast food!  Art is something special, and it can’t be made in the blink of an eye on-demand.  Art is made by people who practice, try very hard, learn, and put pencil-to-paper or stylus-to-tablet for hours, if not weeks!  While most of the time you might only see the finished product, know that behind every image, there is someone who spend a lot of time and a lot of heart creating something just for you!

If you see artists that might be undercharging themselves, do them a favor and let them know respectfully!  It will not only help them better value their own work, but it will boost their confidence! 

 

When dealing with points, always ALWAYS convert to USD$ to get a better idea of the real value, not the inflated deviantart value.  And remember, points are only worth 80% of their dollar counterparts!

4.) DO NOT TAKE ADVANTAGE OF SOMEONE BECAUSE THEY HAVE LOW PRICES

Seriously, if you do, you are not only hurting and devaluing that artist, but everyone in that community because of the disrespect.  While it might be an amazing deal, and the artist might be fine with the low prices, let them know if they might be charging too little.  They will thank you for it and better understand their own value!


Your art has value!

Never let anyone tell you otherwise.  Whether its digital art, traditional art, fanart or something completely unique.  The time you take to make something and the care and emotion you create it with is worth more than any $ can determine.  It’s something special to everyone. Never forget it.



~Dan



Related content
Comments: 484

ObsidianArrows In reply to ??? [2019-09-11 00:58:22 +0000 UTC]

I know this is relatively old, but I'm currently in the process of restructuring my prices to open up commissions again and this was very helpful. Thank you!

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LeoFastfield In reply to ??? [2019-09-03 06:34:13 +0000 UTC]

I usually sell my manips for around 6-7 bucks, also because even if they can take 3 or 4 hours they're not proper "drawings" but edits. I'm not sure about the price thing cause it may be a bit overpriced to go higher than 10$?. I've seen many manipulators charging 40 and more, but i'm not sure I can since my art quality is inferior :/

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Queen-Anarchy In reply to ??? [2019-08-28 01:10:17 +0000 UTC]

i do need some help, i talked it over with several people and looked around trying to value it off things and how i see them, from time and complexity as well as min wage in my state, and just i feel like i maybe pricing it to much i dont know its its just me and my mind being weird not wanting to do it all

but i wanted to know if someone would give me a opinion honestly am i asking for to much? Anarchys Commission Prices [OPEN]


Works -


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lsaiah In reply to Queen-Anarchy [2020-01-05 05:44:44 +0000 UTC]

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Fluorescentfriend In reply to ??? [2019-08-27 04:12:19 +0000 UTC]

That is crazy! I don't think I can ever see the point system the same way. Thanks for the help and inspiration

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JovieGDN-001 In reply to ??? [2019-08-16 18:11:19 +0000 UTC]

Thank you , this was very helpful. I've just started doing commissions and had up for $3.00 head or bust and $5.00 for full bodies, haven't had any customers really and thought my price was to high and was ready to bring it all down . so again thank you😊 

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Poodlebird In reply to ??? [2019-08-03 02:04:31 +0000 UTC]

I've been selling my commissions for 40-80 points for half a year..

and nobody buys them


Am I overpricing?

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Arvemis In reply to Poodlebird [2019-09-21 03:32:05 +0000 UTC]

no you aren't, actually you're underpricing 1 point is equalt to like, 1.25 CENTS

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

Poodlebird In reply to Arvemis [2019-09-21 18:33:48 +0000 UTC]

Well then again nobody really buys them so like

I mean it’s only takes like 20 minutes to 1 hour to make (depending) so you know.

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GambitAndRika In reply to ??? [2019-07-25 02:47:01 +0000 UTC]

I needed this so much XD

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Dandalion-T In reply to ??? [2019-07-23 20:21:33 +0000 UTC]

I have been seeling my work by points. the lowest is 10 points and 70 points 
that is equivalent to .12 cents and .88 cents 
wth...

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

IzzoSStv In reply to ??? [2019-07-11 02:55:41 +0000 UTC]

Oh wow, this was actually helpful. I've been selling digital fullbody clean sketches for 2USD. And a sketch like that takes a little over 2 hours.

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AmberPone In reply to ??? [2019-06-16 23:59:36 +0000 UTC]

Wow, I'm thinking about making a Paypal account and having more fit prices for my commissions, but people will freak out if I'll suddenly charge 4000-5000 points instead of 1000 for my regular drawings xD Guess they'll have to get used to it.

👍: 0 ⏩: 1

AnnaMariaG In reply to AmberPone [2019-06-29 00:30:36 +0000 UTC]

You could raise the prices slowly. I don't usually sell on Deviant, rather on my own website & Etsy, but I've been slowly raising mine on those. Also starting new works at higher prices than older works. This practice prevents people from getting sticker shock. You're worth it!

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Cuddlablover In reply to ??? [2019-05-29 20:29:45 +0000 UTC]

How much would My art sell for? *Same with my gatcha edits?*
My art and such is on my account!

👍: 0 ⏩: 2

KOLOREDKAT In reply to Cuddlablover [2019-10-12 16:32:58 +0000 UTC]

You shouldn't charge anything for gatcha edits. You're profiting off of something that isn't yours.

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Raven-Starz In reply to Cuddlablover [2019-09-04 13:44:08 +0000 UTC]

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Veya-Rain In reply to ??? [2019-05-24 16:30:51 +0000 UTC]

Wow! Thanks for this! I’ll definitely keep this in mind!

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ShadowRealm-Ink In reply to ??? [2019-05-24 07:11:30 +0000 UTC]

What madman/madwoman sells art commissions at $8 a pop?

I wouldn't even sell a sketch that took me an hour for $8? Unless I drew it on a post-it note.

Also, I’m surprised you didn’t talk about the media the art is of. Because that plays a massive role in selling art. A commission of random characters is one thing. But, selling artwork of popular characters is a completely different thing.

 

For example: if I was doing random action/dynamic posed commissions of martial artists. I could sell it for $20 apiece. And get like 5 or so commissions. But, if I was doing an Avatar, or DBZ themed commissions of martial artists. I could sell it for double or triple. And, get 20 or so commissions. Just because of the show’s popularity alone.

It really helps to understand that. Especially on DA which is pretty much “Fan-art.com/Anime-Comics-cartoons-and-more”

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RayningFyre In reply to ShadowRealm-Ink [2019-08-23 21:07:51 +0000 UTC]

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Arrowheadssss In reply to ??? [2019-05-22 17:41:41 +0000 UTC]

What would y'all pay for something like this TwT

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RayningFyre In reply to Arrowheadssss [2019-08-23 21:05:11 +0000 UTC]

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W0lfexe In reply to Arrowheadssss [2019-07-22 01:24:57 +0000 UTC]

I definitely would and I just met you!! >:0

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Rhasuni In reply to Arrowheadssss [2019-05-27 20:57:14 +0000 UTC]

yeah!

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AlicesKnightmare101 In reply to ??? [2019-05-15 20:43:45 +0000 UTC]

Thank you! <3

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kokirizelda [2019-05-15 19:53:47 +0000 UTC]

Hello! I really want to start taking commissions to put towards my cosplay plan next year ( But I don't have the money, nor can I work just yet ) I would like to know what I should likely charge to give me some idea on prices. Most my work takes around 8-12+ hours depending on complexity. I don't use this account any more so here is my updated new Artstation where I post my work!
www.artstation.com/bumb1ebee
Thank you in advance!!
 

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phamto [2019-05-04 22:46:06 +0000 UTC]

i just have one question, where can i sell my art?

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ProjectAwesomes In reply to phamto [2019-05-07 12:26:52 +0000 UTC]

i think you need a social circle

whether it be dA, instagram, Twitter


if you do fan-art, you can do tags, if its the latest games which are in heat and your artworks legit, you'll get some attention. thats where you bust in the commission post i assume

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WhiteThornDeer In reply to ??? [2019-04-22 08:25:48 +0000 UTC]

And what if someone draws faster than average? Or slower? Someone may spend half hour on what someone else will spend one or someone else two.
I know I need to price up my coms. The problem is that, while I tend to loose sense of time while drawing, people around me notice that I may have done a lot within seconds or minutes... The only stuff that take me more than an hour (usually) are photo realism and comic pages... I don't sell such tho. 

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ProjectAwesomes In reply to WhiteThornDeer [2019-05-07 12:25:54 +0000 UTC]

thats what ive been thinking

i think its mainly looking at your strong suit.



if you do a lot of photo realism and comics, your portfolio is full of it to show your work, and you have "experience" drawing these type of style, and people looking through your page know that your expertise (or you can mention it in your commission page/post)


you're probably comfortable drawing these type of artworks, so in general you're probably quicker than most competitors.



in all honesty, you should evaluate how long it took you to make each drawing in your portfolio, calculate each hour into dollars, and mention it in the commission post

if your detailed sketches took you 3-4 hours, say like 22.5/30 dollars for a detailed sketch. if you feel slow, maybe learn shortcuts or watch other videos to boost your confidence

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WhiteThornDeer In reply to ProjectAwesomes [2019-05-07 13:10:00 +0000 UTC]

Thanks for the help! Althought I rarely do photorealism, I usually do semi-cartoonism.

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ProjectAwesomes In reply to WhiteThornDeer [2019-05-07 16:57:13 +0000 UTC]

np

i think there's always people who want their OC's drawn, just develop your strong-suit and people will take to that

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mewsley [2019-04-19 15:20:41 +0000 UTC]

i price my art at 100-500 points... gosh.

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gdpr-46890971 In reply to ??? [2019-04-11 23:43:47 +0000 UTC]

my commissions are like.. 100-500 points..
so like one dollar to 5 dollars
i take more than 4 hours-gosh.

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DigitalKeroko In reply to ??? [2019-04-06 08:58:58 +0000 UTC]

I've just gotten started doing digital art, and I'm not sure if I'm pricing everything reasonably. I know it isn't a commission, but could anyone let me know if my first piece is at a good price point?

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Sonicookie In reply to DigitalKeroko [2019-05-27 12:04:43 +0000 UTC]

Just try to think about how long it took you to make the art and then try to go with around minimum wage prices for now.

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RedCrono-JM In reply to ??? [2019-03-31 06:23:57 +0000 UTC]

i need help trying post my art and ask for commissions, its very struggling, and im lacking social media and others. How you make art stand on its own. 

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Crazylilly733 In reply to ??? [2019-03-30 18:06:58 +0000 UTC]

This was really helpful for me since I've been planning to open commissions myself. My step-father once said that an artist should never be left to judge their own work, or they may never see the real value in it. I'm curious though, how much is a dollar in deviant art points? I'm not the smarted when it comes to stuff like this, so if someone could answer, that'd be great.

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AmiableArtist1 In reply to Crazylilly733 [2019-04-17 20:50:02 +0000 UTC]

$1 is about 100 DeviantArt points c:

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Crazylilly733 In reply to AmiableArtist1 [2019-04-17 22:08:01 +0000 UTC]

thank you!

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Crazylilly733 In reply to AmiableArtist1 [2019-04-17 22:07:27 +0000 UTC]

thank you so much!

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BlueM0usE In reply to ??? [2019-03-29 01:13:44 +0000 UTC]

I'm so glad I ran into this!

I'm planning on doing commissions this summer and I'm trying yo inform myself beforehand on how commissions and such works before I just dive into the waters! I want to use this opportunity to not only make money for myself, but to save up so I can move out of my parents housing someday. Because boy oh boy, can it be frustrating here -_- 

I just hope everything works out for me when I start QwQ

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PixelDragonCreations In reply to ??? [2019-03-26 05:42:49 +0000 UTC]

I have had this problem as well my pricing goes from $10 for chibis to $45+ for more detailed background art (plus all of my artwork is fully colored and shaded) and I was told that I was too expensive for commissions, it kinda throws you off at first because you value your time and love that you put into each piece of art. not to mention if it's part of what you do for a living. If people will pay over hundreds of dollars an hour just to have a musician play at a wedding art should be no different if it is your skill that you are using to benefit both you and the customer.

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Colorblind-Pasta In reply to ??? [2019-03-15 20:28:19 +0000 UTC]

H,i i'm new here and in the world of digital art, i've posted 3 of my art in like..4 days?.. my skills need to improve, i'm too imperfect..nevertheless, i've been contact by someone that what me to redraw one of his arts in my style tho..
it sound really suspicious to me... it ask me the price and i don't know what to do..halp

👍: 0 ⏩: 0

Kiamsoda In reply to ??? [2019-03-14 05:42:49 +0000 UTC]

 Could anyone please check out my art and tell me if I'm under-pricing? I would really appreciate it. I'm currently offering full-body commissions for 18 USD, Half-body commissions for 14 USD, Bust commission for 10 USD and Head-shot commission for 7 USD

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Lousiq In reply to Kiamsoda [2019-05-04 13:14:47 +0000 UTC]

Definitely underpricing. You should do full body for atleast 20 USD

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Kiamsoda In reply to Lousiq [2019-05-04 22:23:51 +0000 UTC]

thank you for your input. I'll update my pricing 

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Hitsku [2019-03-11 19:40:56 +0000 UTC]

hahaah

no one would buy them

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lizzicusart In reply to ??? [2019-03-11 01:10:39 +0000 UTC]

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laibash In reply to ??? [2019-03-04 14:56:14 +0000 UTC]

Whether you are a beginner or it has been long time since being an Artist, you surely need to know how to set the right prices for you artwork. So that it is neither too low to waste your efforts nor too high that people are unable to buy it. Click on the link below for a proper guide.

www.showflipper.com/blog/How-T…

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