Now that everybody owns a digital camera there are a far greater number of amateur photographers who take their own photos for their website. Whilst I strongly recommend you hire a professional photographer, I realise this is cost prohibitive for many small businesses.
Here’s some tips for making your website photos look more attractive.
- Don’t ever use blurry or out of focus photos. Always reshoot these until you’ve got a crisp subject.
- When taking a series of photos of a similar theme, keep the background and lighting the same in each photo. This is particularly important when you have a shopping cart website and are displaying many products on the same page.
- Because the photos displayed on websites are quite small, less complex photos look much better. Try for shots with a single subject and a simple, plain background.
- Putting people in your photos will help your visitors put themselves in the picture. Carefully consider the age and look of your models though, as you will put some demographics offside by choosing models who your market don’t identify with.
- Include photos of you (the business owners), your team looking smart in their uniforms and your building. The internet is anonymous so photos of the management give visitors some people contact they miss from a face-to-face transaction. It also raises your credibility through recognition.
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2 Responses for "Shooting Website Photos"
Another important point to add is….
Consider Your Lighting.
Using filtered sunlight creates the most flattering and natural feel to your photographs. Flash light and overhead fluorescent lighting creates harsh shadows and sickly blue tones.
If you are limited to flash photography try to include as much natural light as possible, small lamps for a warmer glow and use white or gold reflectors (in other words a big white sheet) to reflect natural light back up into the shadow areas of your subject.
Many digital cameras have snazzy effects built-in to the camera, or allow you to shoot “for web”, etc.
Turn all these off!
If you need to do anything to the photo to make it more effective for a website (sharpen it, enhance the colours, or reduce the filesize,) these are best done by a professional on a computer, not on the digital camera itself.
(I’m just super glad I’ve never yet seen a “drop shadow” setting on one of these digital cameras!)
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