April 29 2013
This post comes to us from the BrokerageU blog:
Noel Coward once said, "Love is a question of lighting." If done right, it can inspire love, but if done incorrectly, it can turn a photo of a beautiful space into a nightmare-ish vision.
Every wonder why, in a photo, the light over the kitchen sink turns a vile green? Or a closet radiates a hellish red glow? It didn't look that way when you took the picture. That's because our eyes automatically adjust and balance light from different sources. But the camera sees light differently. It doesn't have our brain to interpret what it's seeing. So it just records the data.
A) Daylight B) Fluorescent C) Low Wattage Tungsten D) Tungsten + daylight E) Tungsten
It is important to find the right balance, as different types of lights can come through as different colors when photographed indoors.
Daylight appears blue, while tungsten generally presents a yellow or reddish hue. Fluorescent bulbs cast a green light. Finding the balance that works for different sources can be tricky, but cameras come equipped with a setting that corresponds to the light sources you are shooting. And most of the time, simply setting the white balance to "automatic" on your digital camera can solve your problems.
Color of light poses one of the challenges of photographing indoors and one of things you have to get just right, but it isn't the only lighting consideration...
Don't be intimidated. This may sound very difficult, but it's not. When you learn to recognize these factors and recognize how they affect your photos, you can improve your photography greatly and put people in the mood... to buy.
Learn more about the online photography course for Real Estate professionals at: photosthatmovehouses.com
To view the original article, visit the BrokerageU blog.