Food Styling: Props, Books, & Photo Quality

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I’ve mentioned before that I’ve really been enjoying photography and that I have a discovered a passion for it.  It feels like a door has been opened that was previously closed.  Or actually, a door has been opened that I didn’t even know existed. And it’s been so fun exploring!

One of the things I have been wanting to build is my stash of cute tablecloths, linens, placemats and pretty backdrops because I think they enhance pictures so much.

I hadn’t been seeing anything too cute or original at TJ Maxx or Marshall’s, but I ventured into Flashbacks which is a retro, used clothing store.

They have an awesome array of used, vintage scarves that I thought will be perfect for tabletop and countertop photographs.

Multiple linens for food styling

They are probably from the 1960s or 1970s and Made in Italy.  And a couple of them smell just like my Grandma’s linen cabinet.

Close up on tags on linens

How could food or things I get in the mail not look better when photographed on pretty scarves?

Side of 4 different colored linens

Receipt for linens

I would have loved to find something great at TJ Maxx, Marshall’s, or Target for $1 each, but I’ll take 4 for $26.10

Because if I ever get sick of using them for backdrops and blog photo backgrounds, I can always wear them because they are scarves.

Multi colored linens on top of one another

I also ordered a couple books about food styling.

Food Styling for Photographers Book

I had hoped when I ordered this book that it was going to give me specific tips on where to place forks, knives, and cups, how to use placemats and tablecloths to add depth to shots, and where to stand and at what angles in order to get the “perfect shot” of my food.  When the book came and I thumbed through it, I am realizing it’s not that kind of book.

But it has given me a glimpse into professional food styling.  The food used in ads is far more doctored up than you’d ever imagine.  And some of it’s not even real food.  It’s plastic.  That’s how they make the food look so perfect.  It’s fake food!

Great lengths are taken to make food look the way it does in ads…

Buns are cut with scissors and grill marks applied with a blow torch

Inside book showing how to make grill marks on buns

Acrylic ice cubes are used and fake bubbles are placed in with eyedroppers for cold beverages

Inside book on how to make fake bubbles on drink glass

Ice cream is not real.   It’s a mix of frosting, food coloring, and corn syrup that’s whipped together.  And then great measures are taken to create “ice cream cones”.

Inside book showing how to make the perfect ice cream cone

Applying the fake ice cream on top of the giant wooden toothpicks that will hold it in place.

Inside book showing how to stack ice cream on cone

Cake is held together with cardboard and the frosting “stripes” are hand-applied

Inside book showing how to make the perfect slice of cake

So although the book isn’t exactly what I was looking for for my own personal needs, it has been highly interesting and eye-opening seeing how food is styled professionally.

Don’t get me wrong, there are tons of great tips and if you’re serious about making your food photography better, you will learn something or many things from this book that will help your photos and shots look better.   And you don’t even need to use giant wooden toothpicks to hold your desserts together or fake ice cubes to make your drinks look better  if that’s not your style.

All that talk of fake food and food styling is making me hungry for real food.

How about a Cheezy Vegetable Bake

Cheezy Vegetable Bake

One pan, planned leftovers, and you can use up whatever odds and ends veggies you have

Plated Cheezy Vegetable Bake

And for dessert, try a homemade Vegan “Turtle” (No Bake, GF, easy!)

Hand holding showing bottom of vegan turtle
Hand holding one Vegan Turtle

From my last post about Kitchen Disasters & Shattered Glass, I am glad that I’m not the only one who’s had some serious kitchen mishaps.  I loved hearing your tales of woe.  We can all laugh now, but in the moment, kitchen calamities are stressful!

And many of you seem to have a potty mouth Guess we’d get along great!

Questions:

1. If you’re a blogger, do you care what your blog photos look like?

I am trying to hard to make my photos look better.

I bought lighting gear

I invested in Lightroom 3 photo editing software

And of course, getting my DSLR camera helped too.

However, a point about nice cameras that I want to hammer home…

You can have the nicest camera in the world but if you don’t take time to figure out how to present your food beautifully, artistically, and with some creative flair, you will simply have ugly and unappetizing food, except that it will be in very high quality and high resolution.  Lack of staging and making things pretty will just be documented at a higher quality.

So an expensive camera will not ensure that you have beautiful pictures.  You have to do other things, too.   Like read about food styling and staging.

Use a point and shoot camera and when you really think you have exhausted the limits of it, then upgrade to a DSLR.  But don’t make that leap thinking all your food is going to turn out like Angela’s just because you have an expensive camera.  There is far more to it!  And I am not an expert, but am just sharing what I have learned and my observations.

2. As a blog reader, how important are photographs and the quality of them to you?

I think Kath said, “People come for the pictures, but stay for the writing.”  So true in my opinion!

I will read blogs that don’t have fabulous pictures, but as I said in this post recently about the wonderful food and recipes I saw in the ‘sphere last week, it makes me more inclined to keep reading and keep going back to their site when the blogger has captivating photos. 

That said, you don’t have to be a genius with your camera, because personality, “blog voice”, recipe quality, and other things all matter too.  But nice photos definitely help the cause, too. And they don’t even have to be “amazing” but just not dark, grainy, or teeny tiny ones.

3. For everyone, do you pay attention to the quality of the photos you take, in general?

Same as with blog pics, I now care much more what all the photos I take look like.  Even if I have no intention of posting something on my blog, I still want to have my pictures look as good as possible so that when I look back at the pictures, they represent how the event or moment really was and in as best quality as possible.

4. Where is your favorite place to buy pretty dishes, tablecloths, kitchen untensils, tools, picture “props”, and so forth?

Usually TJ Maxx, Marshalls, Homegoods, or Target are good bets but sometimes I find things at random dollar stores, the Pier 1 clearance rack, on sale at Anthropologie (must be on sale at that store!) or even Flashbacks like with the scarves being multi-purposed as tablecloths, i.e. picturetakingcloths.

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Comments

  1. I do love me some pretty pictures of food!!!! Thank you so much for the insight. Sadly the food pics on my own blow are less than pretty. I am documenting my efforts to eat right, exercise, and find balance as a super busy bee attorney. Needless to say, the plating on many of my meals is less than fancy. I do strive to find creative angles and proper lighting. Which such little time it’s the best I can do. I totally agree that it’s the eye not the camera in front of it that makes a beautiful photo.

  2. Cute scarves, I have a collection of vintage my mom gave me and I love the funky prints – fun to tie on purses to jazz them up. And too funny, I have that same Food Styling book! Hubby got it for me for Christmas to go with the camera. I also found then Foodbuzz photography session really helpful for food photography with lighting, colors, etc.

    1. Yes, I’ve learned tons and become much more picky about my photography since starting the blog.
    2. Pretty important to make the food look appetizing. I really look for pics that emphasize vibrant, natural color and make the food look closer to nature.
    3. Yes, I look for clarity, color, positioning and focus.
    4. Tough call, I have Fiestaware now that I like for bright, but solid color – I like being able to pair contrasting colors with the food while not having a print on the dish that’s too busy.

  3. Now I know why food always looks so damn good in magazines!!! HA! I do try to take nice pics for my blog, but I’m not willing to invest in an expensive camera for it. Maybe if I had a much higher readership I’d consider it. And I do like nice photos in blogs, but I’m mainly there for the content, not the pics so it’s not a “make or break” situation by any means….

  4. I would say that pictures aren’t important, but when I first happen upon a blog, it’s the pictures that hook me in. So I think that quote is quite right.

  5. Love this post! I’m still exploring my camera and taking in as much as I can about food styling. To me, it seems kinda sad that so many gorgeous pics are of food that’s not even edible- seems a bit like false advertising. Oh well. I strive to take pics of the actual food I prepare and make it as pretty as I can by adjusting the lighting and props. No fake food on Keep It Simple Foods!

  6. averie, i love how photography has become a new passion for you. it’s so important to find and develop new interests over time, not stagnate with the same-old. thanks for sharing some of the info from the styling book! i always love looks at “behind the scenes” stuff!
    photo quality is not important to me right now. i have my point and shoot and have decided not to go for a dslr at this time. photo CONTENT and writing CONTENT are what interest me for my own blog. i try to include pics i find fun and that fit in with my blog post.
    nice work finding those scarves! i love the colours. i’m trying to collect bright and eclectic dishes; wish i could get to a target to source some more!

  7. I love all of those food styling tricks you shared with us! They seem so wrong, don’t they?
    I think your pictures are great! I’m so happy you have a new interest in food photography.

  8. There is nothing more aggravating to me than bad lighting. I get very annoyed when I’m out dining and the lighting is non-existent! So that answers your question. But I don’t really care too much about the pictures in other blogs, weirdly enough, because I prefer reading than viewing.

  9. Hi Averie, I am new to blogging and i wanted to learn more about food blogging photography I found two blogs that are very helpful and you might like them.(food bloggers unite-has some great tips & still*life~style-her blog is about props)You may have heard or seen these already.I just thought i would share.Love your blog!!! Tanya

  10. I care about how my photos look, and I prefer blogs that have good photography. I will stay even if the photos aren’t great, but if the writing or recipes are really good. I am more likely to make a recipe if there are many mouth-watering recipes of it however!

  11. Paper scraps and fabric scraps are what I use. Lately, I’ve been really time crunched, and I’ve been doing the Minimalist look – everything on white. I kind of like it though. It makes the food stand out that much more.

    If I had more time, I’d get WAY into food styling. That book has actually been on my amazon wish list for about a year now!

  12. First off – I tired (and posted about!) your DELICIOUS flax cookies. OMG – I’m trying NOT to eat all of them at once. :)

    Second – I do care about photo quality… but sometimes it is so hard / time-consuming / impossible-to-get-good-lighting. Pics DO draw me in, but it is definitely the content that keeps me coming back.