How To Capture The Best Property Photography

by Mark Bailey

Property photography goes beyond point-and-shoot actions. Proper care and planning goes into other photography niches. The property niche is not different. Your shots are supposed to impress your target audience by highlighting all the underlying attraction elements. Here are some top tips on how you can capture the best property photography.

Use the Right Equipment

To get the best results with your property photography, you need to have the basics in place. Most of top real estate photographers that supply magnificent images to top property websites, such as Spot Blue, will swear by these.

Wide-angle lens: Some of the best you can find in the market for general cropped frame shots are Nikon’s 10-24mm and Canon’s 10-22mm or 10-18mm. On the full-frame front, the Canon 17-40mm, Nikon 16-35mm lenses and Nikon 14-24mm are great options. Don’t want to shell out on those? Look for equivalents from Tamron and Sigma. These lenses allow powerful zoom out to capture large spaces without any unrealistic distortions.

Tripod: You can’t hold your camera by hand with serious interior photography. The results will look unprofessional. A tripod combined with a remote shutter eliminates the possibility of shakes during shoots.

Flash: Your camera’s standard flash is for leisurely shots. Experts invest in high quality flash to deliver truly robust shots.

Keep Flash and Ambient Light under Control

The lighting inside a room can be more than seven times darker than the outdoors even during the daytime. To get quality shots, you need to properly balance light coming in and light inside the room. You need to first of all understand how your camera’s shutter speeds affects the ambient light and how the ISO affect ambient and flash power.

Clear the Space

If there is a wide range of clutter around the property, your images will look unprofessional. Clear all clutter, arrange sofas, straighten beddings and turn on the lights for an invitingly warm shot. If there are locked doors that block light sources then get them unlocked, even if it means calling a reliable local locksmith!

Effective Composition is Vital

What are the best view points for your shot? Walk around the room to find them. In many cases, however, the best points are from corners of the room or positions that communicate the space or flow from one room to another. Take several shots from several viewpoints so you can review your images later and make more informed decisions on the perspective that works best.

Understand Your Settings

Taking your shots with ISO set on Auto will yield subpar shots. Keep it on 100 or 200 if you need shots that are devoid or noise or grain. You consider increasing your ISO from these levels if you need more power to illuminate the space. Your aperture should be set at f/8 as well for two main reasons. Firstly, that setting is the sharpest for your lens and secondly, the depth offered is wide enough to make the entire room the focus while allowing enough light for short shutter speeds.

These tips are bound to transform your property photography. Get practicing today!

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