We do have a Simple Shipping extension that could work for you: https://easydigitaldownloads.com/downloads/simple-shipping/
It provides simple shipping so it may be too simple for you, but take a look at it and let me know if it looks like it may work.
Thread Starter
Bunzer
(@bunzer)
Thanks. I’d already looked at that page. It’s difficult to say at the moment, as I’ve never used EDD.
I’ll give an example:
Let’s say I have a photo of a unicycling hippo.
It’s a popular image, so it’s in the blog AND in a gallery of popular photos.
By each gallery photo, there’s a BUY NOW button, together with a drop-down selection box.
In the selection, you can choose: postcard, greeting card, small print, medium print and large print.
Each choice has a set price, e.g. £1 for a postcard, £10 for a medium print.
Postcards are cheaper to ship than large prints.
An added bonus is the ability to add a similar buy now button automatically to every blog image.
An added bonus is the ability to provide the image as a licensed digital download, but most will not have the high-res source file available to begin with. I could upload these for the gallery, but I suspect that the blog would be the best source of stock images.
I was hoping to avoid spending another day getting to know an ecommerce package only to find out it’s unsuitable, and I don’t want to spend a bunch of cash if it’s not going to get used.
I guess I’m just going to have to install EDD to get a better feel for how it works, and then see if Simple Shipping will close the deal. I hope so, because I’ve heard good things about both EDD and WooCommerce, and EDD looks more suited to my requirements.
That’s not going to work well with EDD.
We don’t offer a way to sell images from galleries like that.
I’d suggest you check out the “Sell Media” plugin.
Thread Starter
Bunzer
(@bunzer)
I already tried and eliminated Sell Media.
Thanks for your time. I’ve set up a shop with Simple Paypal Shopping Cart, but I can only sell one product type per button. So a gallery of 40 popular images will need at least 200 shortcodes, and that’s before I’ve even started on the blog.
Back to the drawing board.