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Advanced Product Shoots And Image Optimisation For Amazon Sellers

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Manage episode 328847944 series 1724606
Content provided by Danny McMillan. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Danny McMillan or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Marius Serban is a designer and a photographer with 22 years experience in the field. Regardless of the task at hand, designing a checkout page for a 9 figure Silicon Valley company, or photographing for Amazon sellers, his goals was and remains the same: conversion.” should be "his goal was and remains the same: conversion

A technical approach of product photography...

Lighting • Lighting is the MOST important key of a great product photo. If you take a picture with a $50,000 camera in very poor light conditions, that picture will turn worse than a picture taken with an iPhone in great light conditions. • Source of light - the bigger the light modifier, the softer the light, which will compliment the model better. As a general rule, I use 3x 7’ umbrellas for my lighting. However, if I shoot something like a sport product, where I need more defined shadows, I either use a smaller umbrella, or a small reflector. • 3x 600w strobe lights will be enough for most scenarios, but sometimes I’m using 4-5 depending on how much space I need to cover.

Aperture • Aperture will determine the amount of blur your picture will have in the background. • The smaller the aperture, f11-f14, the sharper the background will be. However the smaller the aperture, the more light you will need. • A lot of photographer choose to use higher aperture (which will make the background blurry) just because they don’t have enough light.

ISO • The higher the ISO, the more noise you will have in the picture. • For my studio shots, I am at ISO 100 with an aperture of f14-f16. For my on-location pictures, I will go to about 320ISO max, so the pictures will be clean as much as possible.

Lenses • I am using my 24-70mm lens for about 90% of my pictures. The tighter the space you have, the smaller the focal lens will need to be. Sometimes, like if I’m shooting in a tight laundry room or party, 24mm is barely enough. • However, I am always trying to shoot at over 50mm (59mm is the equivalent of what our human eyes see). • The wider the lens, the more deformed the subject will be (which is not ideal!) • For super detailed shots, I love to use my 100mm lens

www.amz.photography info@amz.photography +1-916-833-6127 WhatsApp (the fastest way to reach me)

  continue reading

1047 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 328847944 series 1724606
Content provided by Danny McMillan. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Danny McMillan or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

Marius Serban is a designer and a photographer with 22 years experience in the field. Regardless of the task at hand, designing a checkout page for a 9 figure Silicon Valley company, or photographing for Amazon sellers, his goals was and remains the same: conversion.” should be "his goal was and remains the same: conversion

A technical approach of product photography...

Lighting • Lighting is the MOST important key of a great product photo. If you take a picture with a $50,000 camera in very poor light conditions, that picture will turn worse than a picture taken with an iPhone in great light conditions. • Source of light - the bigger the light modifier, the softer the light, which will compliment the model better. As a general rule, I use 3x 7’ umbrellas for my lighting. However, if I shoot something like a sport product, where I need more defined shadows, I either use a smaller umbrella, or a small reflector. • 3x 600w strobe lights will be enough for most scenarios, but sometimes I’m using 4-5 depending on how much space I need to cover.

Aperture • Aperture will determine the amount of blur your picture will have in the background. • The smaller the aperture, f11-f14, the sharper the background will be. However the smaller the aperture, the more light you will need. • A lot of photographer choose to use higher aperture (which will make the background blurry) just because they don’t have enough light.

ISO • The higher the ISO, the more noise you will have in the picture. • For my studio shots, I am at ISO 100 with an aperture of f14-f16. For my on-location pictures, I will go to about 320ISO max, so the pictures will be clean as much as possible.

Lenses • I am using my 24-70mm lens for about 90% of my pictures. The tighter the space you have, the smaller the focal lens will need to be. Sometimes, like if I’m shooting in a tight laundry room or party, 24mm is barely enough. • However, I am always trying to shoot at over 50mm (59mm is the equivalent of what our human eyes see). • The wider the lens, the more deformed the subject will be (which is not ideal!) • For super detailed shots, I love to use my 100mm lens

www.amz.photography info@amz.photography +1-916-833-6127 WhatsApp (the fastest way to reach me)

  continue reading

1047 episodes

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