Food photography tips for bloggers


Food PR and food photography have recently gained popularity.

It’s all about the sunshine ! My best tip for beginners is to become conscious of the intensity of the light and the way it hits the food, and learn to regulate accordingly. Here are some tips for getting started.

Take photos under natural light. don't use overhead lights or lamps or your built-in flash. Ever!
Move around to seek out the simplest light . Don’t feel confined to taking photos in your kitchen. Perhaps the sunshine is best in your bedroom within the morning, and in your front room within the afternoon.

Try taking photos from multiple angles. 
Some plates of food look better from above (like, pizza), or from the side (burgers), or at a 45-degree angle (drinks). Try traveling the plate and taking photos at various angles so you'll pick your favorite later.
Minimize clutter. If that spoon, napkin or busy background doesn’t increase the photo, it detracts from the photo. specialise in what's most vital , but don’t concentrate so close that viewers can’t tell what the food is.
 
Your photos are blurry. 
Blurry photos are caused by camera shake. Solutions include: 
1) hold your camera steadier (easier said than done)
2) use a tripod with a foreign so your camera stays completely still while you’re shooting.
3) use a faster shutter speed, which can require opening up your aperture and/or moving to a neighborhood with more light, or 4) raise your ISO to decrease the quantity of sunshine needed (this will reduce image quality, however).

Your colors aren’t faithful life. When you’re editing your photos, if your plate of food looks very blue, yellow, pink or green, use your software’s white balance tools to repair it! Colors wake up when the white balance is a out properly. If you shoot in RAW format, you’ll have a neater time adjusting color balance later.
Your photos just don’t “pop” like professional food photos. Experienced food photographers use lenses that allow them to narrow their depth of field to spotlight the topic of the photo. Then they use photography software to tweak the contrast, levels and sharpness of their photos. Sometimes a couple of little edits can really make a photograph pop.


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