Shooting (and Lighting) for Food
I mentioned last week that I’ve been trying to get my wife to do a cookbook of her recipes, and along those lines I’ve been shooting a lot of food lately (when I tell people I’ve been shooting food, they usually look at me and say, “Food?” I tell them to think of the type of shots you’d see in a cookbook—as shown above where I mocked up some of my shots with a cookbook layout).
I’ve done a food shoot every single day this past week, and I’ve gained 14.3 lbs. (totally kidding, but I’ve got to tell you, since I’m closely watching my weight, it’s tough shooting food and not totally chowing down on it. The only saving grace is; once you’re done shooting it for an hour or two, you usually wouldn’t want to eat it).
I took the shots above (click on them for a larger version) using pretty much the same lighting set-up; natural window light, along with a Westcott Daylight Fluorescent Spiderlite with a 24″x32″ softbox as a fill light, and a small handheld white reflector to fill in the shadows on the opposite side of the light.
For example, the cereal shot above was taken in front of a open window, with the window light coming in and lighting the cereal from behind. Then, just off to the right of my camera, I positioned the Spiderlite aiming down at a 45° angle. Lastly, on the left side of the bowl, I held a small handheld reflector just outside the frame.
The cereal photo was taken with a Nikon D3, (mounted on a tripod) with a Nikon 70-200mm lens, with the screw-on Canon Closeup lens attached (which I mentioned in Vol. 1 of my digital photography book, which turns any 77mm sized lens into an instant Macro lens).
The Spiderlites are really ideal for shooting food (or any product shots for that matter), because they match the daylight light nicely; they don’t get “hot” (because they’re fluorescent), and because they’re always on (a continuous light source), which makes lighting something as tricky as food much easier. Here’s the link for more info on the Spiders.
TIP: The “milk” in the cereal you see above is actually Elmer’s Glue. Real milk makes the cereal really soggy, really fast, and it’s hard to control, where glue pretty much sticks where you want it (get it, sticks….ah forget it).
I’m doing a food shoot every day for 30 days (in between other shoots, like the two I have scheduled for tomorrow), and I’m learning a lot and having a blast. I’m going to hire a food stylist for some of the final shoots later in the month, so if you know of a kick-butt food stylist based in the Southeast, let me know.






















That’s just great, Scott. Now I am waiting for my wife to bring our son back from the ED who are trying to unstick his mouth. What kind of sicko recipe book is this with Special K and Elmer’s Glue. I know you have had me buy all your books, a D3, location and studio lighting kits but this book is just pushing me too far. I love your new recipe for “just a pear”. Inspirational.
Now yo’ve got me into this mess, tell me, can I use a sensor swab with the original Eclipse cleaning fluid for my son’s mouth or should I use the newer Eclipse 2.
Ian
Hi,
it will be tremendously helpful when you describe those light setups that you have a diagram with the relative positions of the lights. For someone like me, that is not so familiar with flashers and strobes, it would be great.
This is somethig that I miss in the McNally book too when he describes the setup.
Besides that, great work !
Greetings from Portugal
Sounds like a lot of fun Scott – I would agree that a small sketch diagram of the lighting might be helpful for your less experienced readers/shooters. Right now I am debating how to set up my one off camera flash (a 550 EX) for a shoot coming up next week.
Back OT, I like the use of Elmer’s Glue instead of milk to accomplish what you needed – and congrats on not eating the subject. (Very low brow joke purposefully avoided here…)
It’s aways fun to see your photo work – gets the creative juices flowing!
Food photography….Kelby on-line training….Hmmmmmmmmm….
Looking good Scott! If you’re looking for a food stylist, I hear that Robert Irvine (celebrity Food Network chef) could be looking for work. LOL.
Just kidding about the chef, but not about the training; not only food, but product photography, as well. That would make for a kick-butt tutorial series!
Regards,
Mike
Just read this, then another “foody” article appeared in my Google Reader list – “The Dirty Tricks of Food Photographers” – and it ain’t just glue instead of milk Scott! http://www.photocritic.org/2008/food-photo-tricks/
i recognize the pear from this weekend!
jason hanners is a chef and photographer near you i think he has styling experience as well
http://www.bigbopweb.com
Bop Nouveau Food Studio Catering
407.637.0900
So after you’ve used Elmer’s glue in a bowl, do you have to toss the bowl afterwards, or is there some efficient way to clean it up?
Well with glue on the cereal it’s going to stick to your ribs.
Just for the fun of it, to bad you didn’t set the picture up so that you could take a survey on clicks.
I bet the Strawberry Creme cake would get the most hits – it’s the one I went for
Everything else looks to healthy.
Seriously…… thanks for sharing the techniques used.
Scott, I’m jealous of so much dedicated studio time! One of my best friends is an accomplished food shooter here in Vancouver- http://www.kevinclarkedibles – check out his stuff for a little inspiration (his lighting is exceptional) and feel free to connect with him for any tips or help, we’ve talked about you before and he’d love to help you.
Hutch, good article… but we only need about half those tricks ’round here… we know Photoshop!
Nice work! Just dust off the D300 and shoot the setup, no diagrams needed.
Looks good … can’t wait to get my hands on the recipes inside! (well, minus the cereal with glue on top!)
That was milk? I thought it was frosted flakes!?
Scott,
One trick to get food to shine (your peppers) is to spray on a bit of mineral oil. It also helps if you want a wet look, Mineral oit first & spray water after.
As a hairstylist I have access to various products that contain silicone in a fine Aerosol. These are also great to produce shine, even on meat salads
Trick with meat….only cook the OUTSIDE never all the way thru, it shrinks too much, Paint Worchester sauce on a chicken makes it browner
Air brush tempera paints are also very usefull.
derek
I’ve tried shooting food before, and I can tell you it didn’t look like this. Great job with the lighting! I think it would be fun to see an action shot of real milk being poured onto the cereal… wouldn’t want to splash it on the D3, though!
Lovely photograpy and another talent displayed by you, Scott
BTW for the past three days I have been unable to view videos on Kelby Online, (I can watch similar services from other providers), emailed twice but got no reply and wonder what the problem is. I hope you can look into this.
Thank you.
Hi Scott,
What kind of white-top table are you using? Is it one you made yourself or one you bought? Just curious…
Thank you,
Terry
Great idea for creation of a recipe book and shooting photos for it. Thanks, Scott.
Scott,
Great tip on the cookbook website. I am currently working on one for the family. The site is well thoutht out. I hope that soon they will let you customize the cover page and chapter tab pages. I am not as ambitious as you about food photography and have been downloading food shots from istock.
Joe
Hi Scott,
Are you using InDesign for the cookbook? I suppose Mike’s think alike. I, too, would like to see some educational training on Kelby Training.
I’m Thinking about going to Dallas on March 20 for Terry White’s InDesign tour because I am thinking of starting a cookbook for my family too. My family tells me that I should open a restaraunt. The thank you’s I get are much more rewarding than monitary profit.
See ya,
Mike
Well done Scott! I think its great that you are trying to encourage your wife with her talents.
I’ve no doubt that her cooking skills, combined with your know-how for taking great photos will bring some success with a Cook Book. Hey I would even buy a copy!
I wish you and Kalebra great success with it!
Take care!
saw this and thought of you….
http://www.photocritic.org/2008/food-photo-tricks/
I shot a picture of some tortilla chips, and the shot reminded me of one of yours. So is there a way to show this shot to you.
Awesome shots by the way!!!!
Hi Scott,
Great article. I really like the way you’ve lit your food shots! I’ve had a lot of success with using off-the-shelf (read: Home Depot) 27W CFL bulbs rated at 5500K and shooting the light through a white umbrella. I also incorporate the bounce flash on my Nikon speedlight to fill in other areas of the plate. Natural light is the best, but I’m always shooting my own dinner when it’s already dark outside!
Anyway, thanks for the great info. I’d love to hear your feedback on my shots and recipes at http://www.scottsfoodblog.com.
Thanks,
Scott H.
Love this… We are in the process of having our website rebuilt. Though our food is amazing, the photos are not. If there are any photographers in the Baltimore area, take a look at http://www.theperfectgourmet.com. and contact us. The redesign is to start within the next 45 days.