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  • Welcome to the new site. Here's a thread about the update where you can post your feedback, ask questions or spot those nasty bugs!

First food shot sales!

janet Smith

pro member
As some of you will be aware I am relocating to the north west Highlands of Scotland in about 18 months time, and having given up my previous career, am in the fortunate position of being able to spend the next 18 months working on my photography. As we'll be moving to a very remote location with few people, I need to develop areas of photography such as landscape, flowers, and food.

I am delighted to have recently sold images of langoustine, and breakfast shots and have just sold the soup shots below. I go to the far north west of Scotland again late next week, staying near Applecross and visiting the Isle of Skye again, so when I come back (hopefully with some good landscapes - light and weather permitting!) I have decided to concentrate on food photography over the coming months, I enjoy cooking so it's an obvious choice for me to work on during the winter months.

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This shot of Butternut Squash soup has just sold through Alamy, my first food sale with them so I'm delighted!

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This one has also just sold!!
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Strawberries and lemon syllabub
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I'd appreciate your thoughts about these, and any advice about technique.....
 

Asher Kelman

OPF Owner/Editor-in-Chief
Delicious! Scrumptious! How many can you cook for?

..congrats on the sale. The shots are uncluttered. Technic? You sold them :)

If you ask anyway, my modest $0.02:

The reflection/ light on the soup is attractive and not distracting. I'd moisten the fruit and watch the few highlghts on the fruit. I'd prefer to see the large foreground strawberry in magnificent 3D shading and sharpness for the part near the bowl.

Did you have a T/S lens

Asher
 

janet Smith

pro member
Delicious! Scrumptious! How many can you cook for? Asher

Hi Asher

Can always find a space for one more at our table!!

There is no one more surprised than me that they sold, so I'll try my luck again and do some more, hopefully better ones, I've a feeling that my family will become very tired of soup!! Brocolli and stilton, and Asparagus and Leek coming up in the next few days!! We'll be taking Macallan whisky and champagne with us to Scotland, so I'll probably try my hand with those too!!

Yes I agree with you, in retrospect the strawbs would have been better moistened, I'll make sure I do so next time, you're also right about the highlights etc, I'll pay more attention next time.....

The soup was taken with Canon 18-55 @ 39mm @ f4.5. The strawbs were taken with Canon 100 - 300 @f8.

Thanks for your encouragement, as always much appreciated.
 
This is so kewl that started to sell pictures, congratulations Janet!

Hope that the flippin weather changes a bit when you are up, it is a bit of a drag recently.

As for the shots, it works for me. However, here is an idea, I find most food shots boring to look at, may be someone needs to bring some fresh winds into it, compositing gives you all the freedom to work creative on food....

Asparagus, yummy.... Here is what I do to it with champagne. "Bear's Asparagus"

Large pot with boiling salt water and a teaspoon brown sugar (asparagus needs that!) green asparagus 4 minutes, no longer.... drain... Parma Ham.... wrap 3-4 asparagus in 2-3 slices Parma.... large pan...hot butter.... whack parma packs in butter, really hot, short before burning, 1-2 minutes, squeeze a glas veuves cliquot on it and reduce 30 seconds, take of the heat... add cream, white pepper, no salt and sprinkle with generous amount of parmesan cheese shavings.... in the fan assisted overn 175 degrees celsius, 15 minutes.... serve with herb ciabatta (I make that myself 3 hours before) and generous amounts veuves cliquot <grins>
 

janet Smith

pro member
Georg, you're a cook too!! thank you for your encouragement, ideas, and the recipe!

How funny I do something very similar with Asparagus too, but add a dash of brandy and a touch of mustard, just 1/2 teaspoon or so to the sauce, great as a prelude to Langoustine or Scallops. When we were on the Isle of Skye in June we got a carrier bag of huge live langoustine from the fisherman at Elgol, also live scallops from a diver. Our favourite thing is to open scallops and clean them, then grill in their shells with a little butter and garlic, serve with a good squeeze of lemon, crusty bread & salad, divine!

If the weather is bad in Scotland, I'm taking reflectors, backgrounds and 2 flashguns with me, it's my husbands birthday while we're away, so there'll be plenty of Champagne and whisky around, for food and drink photography!

Thank you for your ideas, sometimes I get discouraged, so it helps to have feedback/ideas from others <grins too>
 
Sounds yummy <smile>

Here is one more from my personal cook book:

----Drunken Piggy---- 4 persons

2 Porksteaks
Dijon mustard
500g brown cap mushrooms
Red oinions
Garlic
Tarragon
200ml Sweet Cider
250ml cream
250g Appenzeller

500g red skin tatos
200g plain flower
salt
ground black pepper
fresh basil

1.
Spice with pepper/salt/mustard and whack piggy into very hot butter, brown all around for 5 minutes, add mushrooms, chopped onion and garlic, reduce to medium heat. When onions are glazed transfer the whole into a deep baking tray, cover with alu foil and whack into 180c fan assisted onto medium shelf. Add Cider after 15 minutes . Bake for another 20 minutes.

2.
Slize the porksteak in 3"-4" chunks and put back into juices. Add Tarragon leaves and cream, cover with generous amount of Appenzeller shavings. Continue to bake uncovered for 10-15 minutes at 180c on lower shelf until sauce has rendered and cheese is nice.

3.
Boil the tatos until tender then drain. Mash very well, as smooth texture as possible! Chopp basil and add with pepper/salt to flower, mix mash and flower and make a dough. Roll dough into sausages and cut 1" slizes, simmer in hot water for about 2 minutes, when they rise to surface they are done.

Est voilas, homemade Basil Gnocchi.

Serve with Chablis premiere Crux.... Bon appetit

Desert? "Yes, my ususal please Charles, thank you."
.... Remy Martin
....Espresso
....smoke
smokin.gif
<grins>
 

Kathy Rappaport

pro member
What time are you serving?

I think I might have to go to the British Isles and Ireland for vacation (or Holiday as you say).

Those recipes sound wonderful. Tranlation of grams to ounces is always an interesting exercise.

Cooking (and eating) are a passion of mine too. I've been playing with some food shots here and there, but, never thought to cook and shoot. Mostly when dining out. My next trip, in November includes a cruise with a Cordon Bleu class for 6 sessions.
 

janet Smith

pro member
Hi Georg

Thanks again for another of your lovely recipes, sounds nice, I think when I come back from Scotland, and have more time I will have to try cooking your recipes, and of course photograph them for you, and then you can inspect my work! It is surprisingly difficult to photograph food and make it look appetitising. Being a busy Mum my food is cooked up and usually served quickly, but the "styling" of the food for photographic purposes is quite another matter, and I have found the styling and lighting to be the most difficult aspects. That and slipping on dog dribble on the floor!! my dog Kim thinks all this playing with food is just bizarre, but loves to eat the cold offerings after shooting!

It will be after my holiday before I get round to photographing "Bear's Asparagus" and "Drunken Piggy" but rest assured I will!!

Another thing Georg, have you tried your hand at photographing your recipes? It would be interesting to compare your interpretation and mine of the same recipe?
 

janet Smith

pro member
Hello Kathy

Another cook, how nice, will you be photographing the food you cook on your cookery course?

If you come to the UK let me know, it would be nice to meet you, perhaps I'll be off in the far northern Highlands permanently by then, so be prepared for Highland hospitality!
 
If you come to the UK let me know, it would be nice to meet you, perhaps I'll be off in the far northern Highlands permanently by then, so be prepared for Highland hospitality!

Kathy,

don't forget huge quantities of Aspirin, this scottish hospitality usually ends up with vast amounts of whisky, hehehe.
 

Doug Kerr

Well-known member
Hi, Jan,

Great work.

As I scrolled down through your message and at first saw only the image of the soup, I immediately recognized what kind of soup it was! The shot is evidently a great representation, among other things.

Best of luck with this new area of photography for you - and with life in the Highlands.
 

janet Smith

pro member
Hello Doug

Thank you so much for your kind comments, really appreciated and helps to keep me going. I'll probably bore you all silly with food shots over the coming months as I continue working on my technique.
 

Kathy Rappaport

pro member
2009 - 2010

Well, I doubt that I will make it there until 2009 to 2010 (lol) since I plan a year or more out and have deposited for 2008 to go to St. Petersberg.

But as far as cooking class, yes, I will take some photos since much of it is about styling the food for serving. I do bring my camera frequently when we are doing day/street shooting and will do grab shots of plates that I think are pretty.

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D

Deleted member 55

Guest
All this good looking food is making me hungry.

So here is one of my food shots.

Now off to the kitchen to eat.

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D

Deleted member 55

Guest
Hi Janet, The hard part is that I have tasted the the hot dogs courtesy of the customer and must say they are the best I have ever had. This makes it very hard to look at them in photos without getting very hungry. The owner told me that he has Hoffy make them with a special combo of spices that makes them very addictive.

Here is another I shot for the same customer.

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D

Deleted member 55

Guest
Janet should we start a new thread in the wide angel section titled "A Self Portrait, Before and After a Food Shoot"!

Too bad I shot mine a few years ago.

Here is another.

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janet Smith

pro member
Hi Will, how funny!! Here's what I had for my lunch today, how's this for an antidote to all that Cholesterol!!

Roast Red Pepper huomous and carrot and celery sticks, not the most photogenic of substances, or the best photo, but I was too hungry to mess around any more, could easily be mistaken for cat sick couldn't it!! Luckily tasted lovely!! (haha).......

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D

Deleted member 55

Guest
Janet, Not for me to eat but looks like something my Mother and Sisters would love. (the hummus, I love carrots and celery sticks with cream cheese)

Here is another.

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janet Smith

pro member
Hmmm Will - Looks like we're back to the hips and thighs again!!! Not for me! not too sure what this is, are they cinnamon chocolate curls to have with coffee? I'm just making prawn salad and you're making me think of sweet things again!
 

Kathy Rappaport

pro member
Janet

Those strips of fried dough are similar to donuts and are called "Churros" - they are very sugary and are an import to the USA via Mexico - very popular in California.

Asher - I dine on lettuce far more than I choose to but I am working on becoming my husband's favorite model.
 

Paul Bestwick

pro member
A couple of nice shots here & congratulations Janet on your first sale.

What a funny coincidence. I saw this thread a couple of days ago & only yesterday ended up booking a food shoot myself.

It is shots of Sushi which are destined to be used on a menu in the window of the restaurant. Being menu shots & fairly tight shots, the emphasis needed to be on the food rather than the ambience of the setting.

Anyhow, shoot done today. Wow, that MK3 with live view is amazing. Very cool.
Tomorrow, I will post a couple of shots.
 

Paul Bestwick

pro member
well it is a funny situation owning a photography studio. What I mean is this. Most other professions people specialize, you know, a surgeon that deals with the heart would be totally unqualified to operate on the brain. You could make lots of analogies to get the point across.

The point..... well the point is this. I get a call from a Japanese restaurant who need some sushi shots for the menu in the window. ( I shoot people... almost exclusively)

Option A : sorry I don't do that phone this guy.

Option B : thinks, Sushi, are you serious, what do I know about shooting food. Says, sure when would it be convenient for you. Does: quickly visits commercial photographer friend & gets the lowdown.

Result: Bank balance increases, customer gets nice sushi photos for menu.

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