Indie is trendy. If you hear this for the first time, you've been out of touch for quite a while and should hurry to Etsy.com to catch up. Whether it's shoes, clothes, cosmetics, jewelry, bags, gift items, perfume... indie companies are guaranteed to provide innovative offbeat products that will spice up your image.
Innovation is the key to indie success as small companies are faster on their feet than large brands. They also tend to be greener, organic and more conscious of waste.
PhotoHand is a strong supporter of indies and we have a lot of them among our clients. Indies do not have the promotion budgets of big brands but they must have the big brand image quality to sell.
Indie companies on a budget (and most of them are) do not have the resources to hire professional photographers at $100-150/hr to shoot their new products, especially as they introduce one-two new products at a time. Instead they buy professional or semi-professional photo cameras that are becoming cheaper and more powerful and take promotional photos at their make-shift corner studios.
This is a prudent approaching taking into account that even professionally shot photos still need to be photoshopped to bring out the best in the image.
PhotoHand has been assisting indie companies with this task for quite a while and we keep getting the same question from our clients: How to set up the photo shoot for the best results.
We did some research, consulted several photographers and came up with the basic set of rules that will set you on the right track.
How to set up lighting for a home photo shoot?
Lighting is of paramount importance in photography. Photographing with natural light will deliver natural colors but only if you shoot on an overcast day that is still bright. You can wait for such a day or imitate these conditions by using easily available elements:
1) A spotlight lamp with a white light bulb. A yellow light bulb will tint the original color of the product;
2) Frosted paper that will be used as a screen to diffuse the light shining on the product and this way prevent the "hot spots" in the photo;
3) A flowing background, preferably stiff paper that won't crinkle;
4) A sheet of white paper to reflect the diffused light from the spotlight lamp and partially illuminate the other side or the front of the product. This is necessary to avoid sharp light/shade contrast (unless you want it for some artistic effect).
The following diagram shows how to arrange these items for the photoshoot setup at home.
How to set your camera for the product photo shoot?
Turn off the Flash. Flash glare on objects is very hard to photo retouch because it means loss of digital information. A photo retoucher would have to fill up the blanks by using his/her imagination.
Set your camera to MACRO for the close-up view.
That's it. Happy shooting! And remember, PhotoHand is always there for you to glam up your image.
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