From a technical point of view, yes, I can use any images that you have shot on your digital camera and try to do something with them. I can do a lot in Photoshop to tidy these up, but sometimes it is more cost effective just to re-shoot the images properly than to undertake extensive photo-retouching.

In most cases, I will need to assess the quality of the images for the purpose we are intending them for. Inadequate images will only end up doing your marketing more harm than good, making you look amateur and shoddy, and this is not something that I would let pass.

The saying goes ‘A picture can say a thousand words’ but the most important aspect is what the ‘thousand words’ actually are, and what they are saying about your business.

The second issue on this is Resolution; if the resolution of the images is too low the images will be ‘jaggy’ and unattractive. For more information on this, read what is resolution and why is it important?

If you have obtained high-resolution stock images off the web and have a copyright license to use them, I can do so by all means. Just copying 72dpi images from other people’s websites or Google Images onto your hard disk is not acceptable though. Not only from a production point of view (they are too low resolution) but from a legal perspective also.

You can use https://wetransfer.com To send images easily if needed.