I believe that a photoshoot, whether for a product illustration, corporate portrait, or annual report cover, starts with the vision of the final image. Begin at the end, as it were. Ansel Adams called it "previsualization" and it is what makes the difference between a great image and hours of fumbling around in a dark studio.
The first thing I ask my clients, when they come to me with a shoot idea is, "where is the picture going to be used?" Almost always, they have a specific plan as to why they want this image. It could be a brochure or sell sheet, web page or direct mail card. Or a combination of many uses.
How they plan to use it is very important to how we create the image. If the image is solely going to be used in a product catalog, then the image needs to be designed so that it can share attention on a page with other products.
However, if it is for a press release or publicity release about the product or company, or if it is for an ad or trade show sell sheet, then the final photo illustration has to practically jump off the page to get a potential buyer's attention.
The plan and rational for each decision about why we are making the image directly impacts how we produce the image.
More about the Anatomy of Product Photography next time!
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Anatomy of a Product Photo Shoot - Part A - Begin at the End.
Posted by Matt McKee Photography at 7:29 AM
Labels: commercial photography, editorial photography, industrial photography, Product photography, still life, table top
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Totally agree on the requirements part. It does help to know here and how the photo is going to be used. I had faced that problem before, but not things are much more streamlined as we simply send out a specs sheet before any session.
ReplyDeleteKeep up your good work.