Bloomingdale

Featured Bloomingdale Real Estate Photographer Listing

Below are some real estate photographers in Bloomingdale that you may wish to consider speaking to!


Related Businesses

  • Michael E. Tunnell - Real Estate Photography
  • Total: 25    Avg: (4.8)
  • 3663 Rusty Grackle Dr, Palm Harbor, FL 34683, USA
  • (727) 504-3015,
  • Febre Frameworks
  • Total: 120    Avg: (4.9)
  • 3802 Ehrlich Rd #308, Tampa, FL 33624, USA
  • (813) 906-8300,
  • Michael E. Tunnell - Real Estate Photography
  • Total: 5    Avg: (5)
  • 415 20th Ave N, St. Petersburg, FL 33704, USA
  • (727) 504-3015,
  • Huth & Booth Photography
  • Total: 0    Avg: (0)
  • 11705 Boyette Rd # 481, Riverview, FL 33569, USA
  • (813) 571-2100,
  • Tim Barrios Photography
  • Total: 4    Avg: (5)
  • 10518 Boyette Creek Blvd, Riverview, FL 33569, USA
  • (813) 655-0639,
  • RE/MAX ALL PROS - Serving the Greater Tampa Bay area & Valrico Florida
  • Total: 5    Avg: (5)
  • 1526 Bloomingdale Ave, Valrico, FL 33596, USA
  • (813) 493-5000,
  • Coldwell Banker Residential Real Estate
  • Total: 12    Avg: (4.7)
  • 213 W Bloomingdale Ave, Brandon, FL 33511, USA
  • (813) 662-1610,
  • Visions of Home - Real Estate and Property Photography
  • Total: 1    Avg: (5)
  • 11532 Balintore Dr, Riverview, FL 33579, USA
  • (570) 793-3450,
  • Property Marketing Partners
  • Total: 2    Avg: (2.5)
  • 1020 W Coral St, Tampa, FL 33602, USA
  • (813) 846-1229,

A recent report by the National Association of Realtors® (NAR) states that over 44% of homebuyers start their search for a new home online. Add that with the fact that a huge number of prospective homebuyers that may be searching online don’t bother looking at properties that don’t have any photographs, it means if your home that you put up for sale doesn’t have any associated photos to show the prospective client what they could be buying, then you might be reducing the chances of selling the home quickly. So, not only do you want to add photographs to your listings, you need to be sure those photographs show the home in the best possible light. This is why hiring an experienced real estate photographer will probably benefit you. Real estate photography is different from other genres of photography, so be sure to ask to previous work from the Bloomingdale real estate photographer that you might be considering working with. Real estate photographers know they have to deliver high-quality work in a very short period of time (usually within 24-business hours) because they know the property listing has to get up on the MLS as soon as possible to attract potential buyers. When you speak to your local Bloomingdale real estate photographer, make sure you ask them if they do any kind of post-shoot editing services using Photoshop or other types of software, and you may also want to consider a home video tour or 3D-tour if you think the property warrants it – so make sure to ask the photographer if they can provide those services.

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More About Bloomingdale

 

Bloomingdale is an unincorporated census-designated place in Hillsborough County, Florida, United States. The population was 22,711 at the 2010 census.[3] The ZIP Codes serving the community are 33511 (which is addressed to Brandon)[4] and 33596 (which is addressed to Valrico).[5]

Bloomingdale was settled some time before 1850 by John Vickers, John Carney, and others. Carney was killed on April 17, 1856, by Seminoles during the Third Seminole War. Bloomingdale School was founded in 1884, which in 1897 became a teacher’s institute, training an average of 54 teachers at a time from as far north as Gainesville and as far south as Dade County.[6] In 1890 the railway was routed through Brandon, and Bloomingdale began to decline as businessmen like D.J. Galvin, who owned a feed store on the property that is now Mulrennan Middle School, moved to Brandon for access to all the benefits provided by the railroad. In 1910, the post office closed. In 1920, the school closed and the students were sent to Brandon instead. The community declined, or at best remained stable until the 1960s, when it became a bedroom community for Tampa.