How to Achieve Dark and Dramatic Food Portraits
Unless youâve been under a rock for the last few years, you canât have missed the growth of food portraits. They are everywhere, from the high-budget advertising of supermarkets and artisan food brands to amateur photographers on Instagram.
If youâre even slightly interested in food photography, wherever you look youâll be presented with sensuous images of beautifully-styled food portraits. From burgers with perfectly placed drippy cheese to vintage-styled cakes laden with fruit, it sometimes seems that the photography world has gone food-mad.
What is a food portrait?
One competition with a food portraiture category says that they want to see images of food that are âgood enough to eat.â But a look through their gallery of previous competitions suggests something more.
In food portraits, the food is the hero. Itâs not about the farmer, the shop, or the packaging; the photograph is unapologetically about the food. And it should make you want to reach right into the picture and take a bite.
There are many styles of food portraits. Sometimes itâs about the hero ingredient and other times itâs about the finished dish. But itâs never about the person who made it or the place the food is being served.
Some photographers love a bright and airy feel to their images. Their shots wouldnât look out of place in a designer loft apartment. Others prefer a darker-styled shot. And itâs this style that Iâm going to focus on in this article.
(If youâd like some inspiration, just search âdark food photographyâ on Pinterest or Instagram and start scrolling.)
Choosing a subject
Not every piece of food makes for a great subject. If youâre shooting an ingredient before itâs prepared, then donât be afraid to look for the most perfect or characterful examples you can find in the shop. Every flaw or imperfection will feel like it has been magnified by ten when you photograph it.
Of course, sometimes you might like to deviate from images of perfect ingredients! The potatoes I photographed in the pictures for this tutorial were delightfully gnarled. They come from a period in UK food production called âthe hungry gap;â during this time, the last of the winter vegetables are on the table while we wait for the fresh spring produce. Always look for a story in your images.
If youâre planning on shooting a finished dish, then it needs to be plated both beautifully and creatively. This takes practice, and many professional photographers hire food stylists to help them with the job. Donât be disheartened if it takes a while to get the hang of cooking and plating food that looks good in photographs (besides, you get to eat your attempts while you practice).
Take your time composing your scene. As you can see from the screenshot of my Lightroom catalog above, I knew roughly what I wanted from the start, but ended up making many minor adjustments to the potatoes I was photographing.
Donât forget to think about your props and background. They are as much a part of the shot as the food itself. You can make your images even more unique by painting your own backdrops.
Keep it simple
To shoot dark food portraits, you donât need an elaborate, complicated, or expensive setup. These potatoes were simply shot on a tabletop with a painted background and a fake wooden surface. There is natural morning light coming from the left-hand side of the image. On the right, I positioned a piece of cardboard with some tinfoil wrapped around it to act as a reflector.
Once Iâve shot a photograph that Iâm happy with, I like to apply a general Lightroom preset to add contrast and color grade the image. This kind of subtle color grading can really help to set your photo apart.
Changing the color tones in this way is something that people who arenât photographers often donât do with their images, and so it adds a more polished look in the eyes of many viewers.
Take it to Photoshop
Once Iâve set the basic color that I want in Adobe Lightroom, I open the image in Photoshop. Photoshop lets you use layers, which ultimately allows you to have greater control over the image you are creating.
Apply sharpening
The first thing I always do when Iâm opening an image in Photoshop is apply some gentle sharpening. It just crisps up all the details so that you can get to work.
My method for this initial sharpening is to first duplicate the background layer. Youâll need to get a copy of your image onto a new layer in order for this method to work. You can right-click on the existing layer in the layers panel and choose âDuplicate Layer.â
Apply a high pass filter with a radius of about 1.5 on the new layer that you just created. The high pass filter is found in the âFilterâ menu (look in âOtherâ at the bottom of the list). The radius you need will vary, but if you look closely at the image above, youâll see that the âghostâ of the image is barely visible when you preview the effect that the high pass filter is having.
Once youâve done this, set the layerâs blend mode to âOverlay,â and you should see the effect of the high pass filter that you just applied.
Dodge and burn
You can make dark food photographs really come alive by using dodge and burn creatively, and thatâs the technique at the heart of the example image above.
Rather than using the dodge and burn tools built into Photoshop, try this method instead. First, create two new layers. Name one âDodgeâ and one âBurn.â In the âNew Layerâ dialogue box, make sure that you check the option to fill the layer with an overlay-neutral colour and set the blending mode to âOverlay.â
Then, using a soft brush set to 100% opacity but with a low (2-3%) flow, you can start to bring the image to life. Use a black brush on the burn layer to deepen the shadows and a white brush on the dodge layer to brighten the highlights.
Go gently and try not to lose too much detail! The trick with dodging and burning is to build up the effect slowly. Use brushes and layers like a painter uses light and shadow to shape the food portraits that you have photographed.
You can always turn down the opacity of a layer if you go too far, or you can even delete it and start again altogether. If thereâs just a small bit that youâre not happy with, you can apply a layer mask and just mask out that small section.
Finishing the food portrait
To finish off the image, I added a digital texture to the background and faded it until it was almost invisible. It had the effect of softening the painted backdrop slightly, which is a look I preferred.
This basic approach of editing colors in Lightroom (perhaps using a preset), sharpening the image in Photoshop, and then dodging and burning the photograph is one that can be applied to many different kinds of photographs.
Iâve used the same approach in architectural photography as well as portraits, but I feel that it really shines as a technique when it comes to dark and dramatic food portraits.