
Which iPhone would you rather buy? Would you be willing to pay a few bucks more for the nice-looking one?
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Whether you’re already an Ebay Power Seller or simply have some old stuff you’d like to unload via Craigslist, good-looking product photos can not only increase your chances of finding a buyer, but also raising the price you can get. (If you doubt this, sadly we think you’re underestimating the shallowness of many.) Luckily, the quality of most eBay and Craigslist photos ranks somewhere between bad and yeesh. Using these tips, you can easily beat the competition—even shoot like the pros, and without breaking the bank. After all, we’re trying to make money here.
Difficulty level: Easy to medium
What you need:
> Digital camera, either point-and-shoot or DSLR
> Product(s) you want to sell
> White poster board or butcher paper
> Movable utility lights (optional but recommended)
> Tripod (optional but recommended)
1. Cut the clutter
Perhaps the most noticeable change you can make to improve your product photos has nothing to do with the product itself and everything to do with the backdrop. Photos with ugly or distracting backgrounds can detract from the perceived value of the item. Almost any backdrop that isn’t worn carpeting, a chewed-up table, or linoleum dating to the Eisenhower administration is a step in the right direction, but you can go further and create a professional-looking backdrop cheaply and easily.
Pros often shoot in studios with “infinity walls,” where the floor curves up to meet the wall to provide a seamless background. When evenly lit, they provide the illusion of blank, infinite nothingness. If you’re shooting something small, you can create your own infinity wall with a piece of poster board, or even butcher paper.
Lay the poster board on the floor or on a table. Place an open-topped cardboard box behind it. Then, smoothly and without creasing, bend the poster board up from the “floor” to become a “wall” and clamp the top of the board to the cardboard box. It can be difficult when shooting many products to keep white poster board clean, but it’s cheap enough to easily replace when necessary.
This brings up another point: Clean your items to match the clean backdrop you’ve just created. Lint, smudges, and fingerprints make the item look bad and make you look like a slob. Nobody wants to buy used stuff from a slob.

Step 1. DIY infinity wall: It's a good thing.
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2. De-dingify your item
Most of us think nothing of the incandescent lightbulbs in our homes and may even associate the warm light they provide with nice, quiet evenings. Such light has a less charming effect, however, when used for product photos, making your items look yellowish and dingy.
A couple of solutions, besides avoiding incandescent light completely (see step 4): First, change your camera’s white balance setting, which tells the camera what type of light you’re shooting in so it can calibrate colors accordingly. This setting will be easy to access either through the camera’s menu or, if you use a DSLR, with the dials or buttons. Choose the preset that’s closest to your lighting; the “incandescent” setting, for example, will likely be designated by a light bulb icon.
Alternatively, you can get even more ambitious and set a custom white balance. It’s a little more involved, but will always give you the most accurate color for your lighting conditions. Doing so might require digging through the camera’s manual—different makes and models have slightly different processes, but they all involve taking a picture of something pure white. This picture will be easy to capture if you’re using the white poster board solution described in step 1: Just take a picture of your backdrop without the product in the frame.

Step 2. The incandescent light gave our before photo (left) a yellowish cast that doesn't represent the item's true color.
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3. Don't be harsh
Hard-edged shadows in product shots look amateurish. If you don’t believe us, check out some magazine ads and you’ll see almost exclusively small, soft shadows or none at all. Avoiding harsh shadows is easy: Don’t let any direct light fall onto the item when photographing it. The problem, then, becomes lighting the product adequately. Pros use umbrellas and softboxes to bathe the product in diffused, “wrap-around” light, but you have several cheaper options.
First, photograph the item during daylight near a window but not when direct sunlight is coming through. Shoot from the window toward the product to avoid backlighting. If you can place the product near two windows letting in indirect sunlight, that’s even better. You’ll want to use the “shadow” white balance setting on your camera or, again, set a custom white balance.
Second, if indirect daylight isn’t an option or isn’t bright enough, use a room with white walls and a white ceiling as a giant photo umbrella. Use two, three, or more utility lights pointed upward and away from the product to bounce their light off the walls and ceiling behind you. The bounced light will wrap around the product, creating even illumination and good-looking shadows. Just make sure the lights don’t shine into the camera, causing a bunch of flare. And, again, try different white balance presets or set a custom one. Some trial-and-error may be called for with this setup, but don’t worry—unlike pets and people, products don’t get impatient waiting for you to get it right.

Step 3. That harsh shadow is distracting from Gargie's natural beauty.
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Next: More tips on perfecting your lighting, focus, angle, and sharpness.
Don't hold your breath
Submitted by Scion of Tytehran on Tue, 2008-11-11 17:39
Actually, do hold your breath but do it a little differently. Take a good breath and then let it out and snap the pic. This will help to keep the camera more steady than if you were holding on the intake. This is an old trick from steadying a firearm during target practice.