I take mine next to a window with natural light and it always highlights the flaws.
by luisagarcia8
5 Comments
sewswell1955
My daughter gets amazing photos. She has a special light set up . It won’t let me add a photo. She has surfaces she used.
gabrodgil
These are beautiful cookies!!
Dry-Ad-4510
It’s good to use natural light. Put a piece of poster board in the window to block some of the direct light. Then you can edit the photo to brighten it up. I like to lay down a photo back drop as well.
Rachel_ann0320
I lay mine on a flat light color surface next to a window, for the natural light. Then I use the Snapseed app to edit.
vaporwavecookiedough
I’ve worked as a professional photographer for over a decade and I would love to help you out with some tips and tricks.
From what I can see in your photo, the lighting looks to be overhead (above) more than from the side.
A good way to check lighting is to turn off all of the surrounding lights and use your phone’s flashlight to illuminate the cookies, moving it around until you find the most complimentary angle.
Once you find that, move your set up to a location in your home that mimics that setup.
Continue to keep other lights off (the color difference in the lighting will cause your colors to look wonky and flat) while shooting.
5 Comments
My daughter gets amazing photos. She has a special light set up . It won’t let me add a photo. She has surfaces she used.
These are beautiful cookies!!
It’s good to use natural light. Put a piece of poster board in the window to block some of the direct light. Then you can edit the photo to brighten it up. I like to lay down a photo back drop as well.
I lay mine on a flat light color surface next to a window, for the natural light. Then I use the Snapseed app to edit.
I’ve worked as a professional photographer for over a decade and I would love to help you out with some tips and tricks.
From what I can see in your photo, the lighting looks to be overhead (above) more than from the side.
A good way to check lighting is to turn off all of the surrounding lights and use your phone’s flashlight to illuminate the cookies, moving it around until you find the most complimentary angle.
Once you find that, move your set up to a location in your home that mimics that setup.
Continue to keep other lights off (the color difference in the lighting will cause your colors to look wonky and flat) while shooting.