Baking it Down with Sugar Cookie Marketing ๐Ÿช

234. Baking it Down - Food-tography

โ€ข Heather and Corrie Miracle โ€ข Season 12 โ€ข Episode 15

Send us a text

๐Ÿ“ธ Food-tography - Staging, props, gear, software.

In this week's Baking it Down Podcast - Episode 234 - Food-Tography, we're concluding our "๐Ÿ“… Content Theme" for the month of October, which focused on... well, focusing that camera lens. ๐Ÿ’ก Check out #OctoberPhotographyMonth in the Sugar Cookie Marketing (Group) to see more content on staging and gear.

๐Ÿ“ธ Food photography is a must when it comes to slingin' sugar cookies. Our customers "buy with their eyes," meaning that the photos have a big part in selling our bakes. If your photo quality and staging are poor = your business bank account will soon follow.

While we may be able to get around not having a website, posting up lackluster photos will rob you of sales. So investing in quality gear to produce quality product photos is a business-savvy expenditure. ๐Ÿค‘ But we do talk about the cost-conscious approach in this week's Baking it Down podcast episode on cookie photography.

๐Ÿ“ธ The Power of Photography

Good photos sell food! Consistent, high-quality photography can act as a watermark for your brand (especially when you dial in your own photography style), making your products instantly recognizable. Easily recognizable = branding. You're seein' how this all works together, right?  

When your photos do the talking, you won't have to pitch as hard. Consider your own buying process. When you want a car, you search up "Mercedes" and see glamorous photos of beautiful red cars with big boys and sparkly wheels. What you don't see is the car covered in a layer of dirt and bird poop. 

Showing the car and our cookies in their best light will increase sales.

๐Ÿ“ธ Lighting

The best option happens to be the cheapest option = โ˜€๏ธ the sun. Indirect natural sunlight is a phrase you've heard us spout for YEARS on this podcast. Having a mobile setup (backdrops help with this), where you can follow the ever-moving sunlight around your house, will help with "chasing daylight." 

๐Ÿ•ฏ๏ธ Otherwise, you may need to consider a lighting system, a diffuser, and/or a light box (harder to use - I always find myself frustrated with them).

๐Ÿ“ธ Cameras

Cell phone cameras have come a long way and can really hold their own next to dedicated cameras. That said, for me, the dedicated camera still adds that extra pizzazz that manufactured blur and digital zoom just can't recreate (yet). 

If you have an older cell phone, with how quickly technology and built-in cell phone camera abilities have increased, it may be worth the upgrade to the latest model. Otherwise, consider a dedicated camera - specifically with a macro zoom lens - to really capture that cookie.

๐Ÿ“ธ Stands

While 92% of bakers opted for hand-held photography (meaning no stands), when it comes to videography, you may have to consider a stand setup. Moft is a neat stand that uses the cell phone's mag-safe magnet for quick setup. ShopCanvas lamps have a built-in light and a goose-neck clamp, and dedicated tripods can help with heavier cameras. Have an Arkon mount? You can make that work too, although the ball joints don't lend themselves to easy adjustment. 

๐Ÿ“ธ Software

If you're not taking your photos through software (cell or desktop), you're leaving money on the table. Post-processing software like Lightroom or Snapseed can make the difference between dull pics and products that pop off the page. I'd wager just about every creator you jealously look at and think, "They take such good photos," is using a post-processing software to level up their photography game. 

๐Ÿ‘‚ Snag this podcast on any major podcast player (Spotify, Apple Music, Audible, Amazon Music, or watch it on YouTube) by searching for B