![]() |
![]() We're upgrading our email machine (find out more details here...) | ||
|
Photojojo finds the best photo DIY Projects, Tips, and Gear.
"We're addicted to Photojojo"
-- Heather Champ
Flickr
"Take Photos? You Need this Newsletter."
-- Jim Heid
Columnist, Los Angeles Times
"use your photos to their best advantage..."
-- ReadyMade Blog
"I'm never disappointed by Photojojo."
-- Dave Johnson
PC World |
Food has an agenda. It wants you to eat it, and it wants you to eat it now. If you dilly-dally around Food, trying to photograph it instead of eating it, its defense mechanism kicks in. It immediately looks terrible in pictures, forcing you to give up, put down the camera, and eat the Food. Natural selection at work. The time has come to subvert Food’s Evil Agenda. Read our tips, take up your cameras, and join the glorious food photography revolution! Ten Tasty Tips for Photographing Your Food
Fortunately, few of us know how to accomplish styling atrocities of that ilk. We’re just ordinary Joes, trying to make restaurant food look as good as it smells, or capture the deliciousness of Aunt Sally’s fresh-baked biscuits. It takes a little doing to make food photogenic, but it’s easy once you know how. The Ten Tastiest Food Photography Tips1: Setting
Use plates whose color contrasts with or harmonizes with your food, but not ones that are the same color. Before you start shooting, make sure there isn’t any distracting clutter in the background of the shot (stray people, silverware, whatever). Using a wider aperture to blur the background will help. 2: Light
If you can’t get natural light, don’t be tempted to use your flash. Flash photography is too harsh for food’s delicate sensibilities. It flattens everything out and makes for unappealing shiny spots. 3: Color Balance
4: Don’t MoveHold still. In low-light situations like restaurants and kitchens, long exposures will register any camera movement as blur. Use a tripod whenever possible. If you don’t have one, try resting your camera on a water glass or the back of a chair. Or make yourself a string tripod. 5: Shoot A Lot
6: Zoom In
7: Preparation
8: Be Quick
Use an empty plate to help you set up your shot before the food is ready. At the last minute, slip in the real plate of food. 9: Details
10: Don’t ShootKnow what not to shoot. Some things will just never look delicious, no matter how hard you try. Meals that are all the same color and brown sauces are best left alone. And tasty though they may be, we defy you to make a haggis look good. More Resources
Photo Credits: Feature and tips 5 through 9: Smitten Kitchen, tips 1 and 2: Delicious Days, tip 3: Phil Lees. → See more Photo projects, DIY ideas, and Gear ← → Get it all free: Subscribe by email or RSS ← Fun with Food Photography… or, How to Capture Your Culinary Creations on Camera 12 Essential Photo Rules from Popular Photography Take Better Vacation and Travel Photos in Every Situation Published on March 25, 2008 — See more Tips
|
|
|||||||||||
No comments yet.
RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI
You must be logged in to post a comment.
|
About Us | Advertising | Press | Buttons & Badges | Contact
Us
Send in tips or ideas | Subscribe or Unsubscribe | Privacy & Editorial Made on Omicron Persei VIII. Designed on Earth. © Photojojo |
||

