Staging Divas Top Photography Tips For Home Stagers: Part 1

Staging Divas Top Photography Tips For Home Stagers: Part 1

The photos you put in your professional home staging portfolio are among the most important photos you will ever take. Your portfolio is used to show your prospective clients what a talented home stager you are and whoever is looking at it is expecting dramatic transformations to justify investing in your home staging services.

Even great home stagers can detract from their portfolios and in turn their own image by simply not having the basic digital photography skills to make their photos fabulous. A good portfolio shot should demonstrate your home staging skills. A great photo will compel people to look at it because it says something. It should be well lit straight in focus interesting and free of distracting details.

The following tips should improve the quality of your photos dramatically:

Think before you shoot. Get to know your camera. Take the time to set up some practice shots in your own home and experiment with shooting the same image from slightly different angles with and without the flash with the lights on and off with and without a wideangle lens and even try standing on a chair or ladder to see how the shot will turn out. You can also try different resolutions settings. Before shooting your image make detailed notes to remind you what you did. When you load the images on your computer and look at your notes you can compare what they look like on screen and when theyre printed. Youll start to learn how your camera works and what can be accomplished by doing a couple of things differently.

Be mindful of these digital camera basics. Were all in hurry these days but when youre shooting images for your portfolio slow down a bit. Pay attention to how youre holding your camera and be sure that you have it straight and you arent covering the lens or flash with your finger. Dont move after focusing or while youre shooting the image move into position before you shoot and stay still. Avoid shooting towards a window because everything will come out too dark if you do.

If you can change the resolution setting put it on the highest or next to highest setting and see what size the image will be. Usually an image size of 1 MB is sufficient quality for anything youll need in a portfolio. Youll use more memory at higher resolutions so buy a larger memory card or even a second one so you wont be stuck with insufficient memory when youre on your shoot. You will get a crisper more detailed image at higher resolutions and you can always reduce the resolution later. If an image is shot at a low resolution originally you cant make it higher later. This is a problem if you want to make a printed image larger or if you need to supply images to the media.

In part two of this article series youll learn about the importance of your attention to detail and capturing strong staging stories when taking photos for your home staging portfolio.

For help putting your portfolio together the Staging Diva Ultimate Portfolio Guide can help you determine what to include in your portfolio and it has an entire chapter devoted to photography in staging.

About the writer:  Internationally recognized home staging expert Debra Gould president of Six Elements Home Staging and creator of The Staging Diva Home Staging Business Training Program developed the Staging Diva Ultimate Portfolio Guide to help home stagers dazzle homeowners with their professionalism. She also offers a Directory of Home Stagers which acts as an online portfolio for homeowners to view when searching for home staging services in their area. To learn more visit http://www.stagingdiva.com.

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