Tutorial 3
Key ingredients for great food photography!
Food Photography touches upon the
most primal emotions desires and senses in people. Without a doubt, it can be
one of the most difficult types of photography to get right as a beginner, but
if you keep a few good tips in mind, food photography can be quite easy to do
well and satisfying to complete. In this article, we'll introduce the elements
critical to good food photography.
Key ingredients for great food photography:
A solid understanding of your camera.
You'll need a good grounding in the operation of the features of your camera,
especially those concerning basic operation, focus, exposure compensation, white
balance, image resolution and size, and macro and flash modes operation.
Pick the highest resolution image format on your camera along with the lowest
image compression setting. Often, images are enlarged and cropped for
publication and the extra pixels produce better pictures.
Because food deteriorates quickly, you want to be ready to take pictures quickly
without much delay after the food has been setup and arranged.
Freshly prepared, cleanly presented foods.
Just the same as attending a wedding, everything in food photography should be
made fresh, and presented cleanly and promptly.
Food oxidizes and changes color and texture quickly, especially fruits. Ice
cream melts at a rapid rate, so the shorter the time between scooping and
picture taking, the better. (Unless melted ice cream is the point of the photo
shoot.)
At the same time, you can't rush so fast that you leave bits of food here and
there.
Keep the scene as pristine as possible. You'll find that a moment spent wiping
the edge of a bowl clean, removing a stray bit of food, etc. will be time worth
spending now vs. many more minutes in a photo editing program doing retouching
work. Wipe up any stray gravies and sauces, remove any stray debris.
Balanced colour choices.
A quick beginner's art class or book will have a basic colour circle and
complementary colour chart for reference. In most cases, having a good selection
of colours will enhance the presentation of the food.
For example, if you're taking pictures of red apples, a red background of almost
the same color probably won't add as much spark to the apples as would another
colour such as yellow, green or even plain black.
Naturally, you can play around with the variations in colour until you find a
combination that suits your taste, or, if you've been a studious beginner, you
can refer to your clippings folder (where you've collected numerous examples of
photographs, advertisements, and other graphic images for just this purpose) to
quickly find and come up with ideas when you can't do so right away.
Carefully placed focus & depth of field.
You'll find that with careful use of focus and depth of field adjustments, you
can bring snap into an otherwise dull photograph.
On cameras lacking manual focus, you can usually depress the shutter button
halfway down when you have the autofocus marks centered upon the area of
interest to lock focus at that distance. You can recompose later by moving the
camera about while keeping the shutter button depressed halfway. Depth of field
or aperture settings on automatic cameras are usually missing, so you'll have to
take whatever you get.
On cameras with manual focus, you will adjust the focus to the point you want,
then simply let the focus distance remain fixed while you move the camera about.
Most cameras with manual focus will have manual depth of field or aperture
control, and again, you can simply set them at whatever is most appropriate for
your picture. Wider or more open for a shallow depth of field, smaller or more
closed for a deeper one.
When you look at a scene, take a look to see if any part of it grabs your
attention right away. It may be the yellow colour of a lemon, or the succulent
look of a burger, or even the shape and texture of a fruit.
Whatever it is, look again at the entire scene and think about whether blurring
them out of focus and out of attention would make them less distracting.
Sometimes, you'll find that by doing so, you'll have a much stronger image - one
that almost pulls the viewer's eyes directly to the point of sharp focus and
attention. On the other hand, if the entire subject needs to be in sharp focus,
you may find that you'll need to set the aperture as small as possible to get a
wide depth of field, with sharp focus from near to far.
You'll soon learn that for many foods, you can blur most of the scene, crop
closely, and come out with an even better picture than you'd otherwise imagine.
Summary
- Lighting is the most important factor
in great food shots.
- Use freshly prepared, cleanly
presented foods.
- Bring a solid understanding of your
camera to the shoot.
- Utilize focus and depth of field to
the best advantage.
Recommendations
- Use filtered or shaded natural light
from the sunlight as a cheap light source that works well. Set your digital
camera on sunlight white balance when taking pictures.
Source:
Silverace.com |