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How to take PROFESSIONAL Interior Photos YOURSELF | Real Estate Photography Tutorial DIY 

Jared Polin
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How to take PROFESSIONAL Interior Photos YOURSELF | Real Estate Photography Tutorial DIY. In this video I help you with tips on how to bracket your exposure, merge the raw files in lightroom and come out with AMAZING interior photos no matter what gear you have.
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Комментарии : 437   
@froknowsphoto
@froknowsphoto 4 года назад
My goal with this video is to show you how you can also do this even if you've never done it before. Like I said "good enough, was going to be good enough for me". I also spoke with Mike Kelley and i'm going to let him RIP APART MY PHOTOS in a critique.
@gabriellee2917
@gabriellee2917 4 года назад
Hey Jared, I was wondering how much you’d recommend charging for senior pictures. I know in a previous video you said to not have a set rate because it gives more flexibility with clients, but what’s a general amount you think is fair?
@killjoy2302
@killjoy2302 4 года назад
Yo fro when you gonna respond to vanessa joy clowning you so bad??? Bro she ripped you man. I know you're not gonna let that ride?????
@froknowsphoto
@froknowsphoto 4 года назад
not sure what you mean? We're friends.
@killjoy2302
@killjoy2302 4 года назад
@@froknowsphoto oh ok. So you seen the video? Looked like she was clowning you a bit. Anyway thanks for the video. Love what you do bro.
@joealfanophotography9568
@joealfanophotography9568 4 года назад
Nice try at real estate photography but your verticals, holy cow! Too high on some shots as well. Think halfway between ceiling and floor. I have been shooting 8 years here in Philly and real estate is all I do. I love it! Your pics are way good enough and fine for posting on the web and for a first go round pretty awesome. But man those verticals. Try auto upright in LR, it’s your friend.
@shaungibbs7400
@shaungibbs7400 4 года назад
Good effort for a first time. Nice pad. My observations: Camera too high resulting in "snapshot" territory images and non-vertical lines especially in the last few images. Shooting wider allows correction of these with a few % (percentages) of image waste, if not corrected at shooting time. Lens corrections in Lightroom looks like they are not enabled resulting in barrel distortion i.e. bowed verticals and horizont(ic)als? Reflections off the switched off tv. Avoid if possible. Same with mirrors. Shoot either square on or at a perfect diagonal. Anywhere inbetween causes bench tops etc. to look weird and also the beautiful wooden beams in the ceiling. Rooms are 3D and any one "off" angle can make it look unnatural. Take shots of each room from at least 3 different viewpoints. Some turn out better than others. Natural light and bracketing (then merging) is good to show off certain rooms e.g. lounge etc. But others where no outside view is important, then just use a strobe with huge Octabox pointed up at the ceiling and you can capture a beautifully exposed room in one shot. White balance in post and remove any saturation in strong colours affecting the overall look (colour cast) of the room. General: Tripod, remote trigger or self timer, f/8 minimum, live view or mirrorless to check angles before taking the shot. Just my 2 cents.
@achillesjohnson7941
@achillesjohnson7941 4 года назад
Thanks!
@DemetriosVaroumas
@DemetriosVaroumas 4 года назад
Everything you said is correct. I’ve been a real estate photographer for 15 years and those lines Jared, killed me. Ahh
@shaungibbs7400
@shaungibbs7400 4 года назад
@@DemetriosVaroumas 😊
@BirgettaJohnson_LetsTalkAJR
@BirgettaJohnson_LetsTalkAJR 3 года назад
Thank you!
@OscarObians
@OscarObians 3 года назад
Your 2cents is worth a course. Thanks for these tips.
@qsxdr7
@qsxdr7 4 года назад
I found the barrel distortion distracting in a couple of the compositions. It's easy enough to fix in photoshop. Also the sunlight was flaring rather harshly off the floor in some of the shots. This can be cured by using a sepia filter with a mask, so that you can brush in on the affected areas.
@rvboondocker2559
@rvboondocker2559 4 года назад
Great video Jared, Thanks! I really think you must include the downward view you have in your Squarespace Spiel. Also, many terrific comments here.
@IMDABROWN
@IMDABROWN 4 года назад
I wear that same brand of socks.
@jacobcastro2204
@jacobcastro2204 3 года назад
what camera do you use.
@oldmanhare
@oldmanhare 4 года назад
The only thing I would add from a Real Estate photograph perspective, is that yes, it is unnatural to have the outside in focus, BUT in some situations (where the view is a selling point) it is necessary to have it in focus as well as exposed properly. If there is a beautiful back yard with a pool, or a mountain or beach view, they need to be very obvious because these are selling tools for the realtor/seller, not a piece of art. But if the view is not desirable, let them blow out and/or be out of focus. Each seller or photographer will have to be the judge. Thanks for the quarantine content Fro!
@mrMacMilli2000
@mrMacMilli2000 4 года назад
Right.... Focus on what sells. Blow out the non essential, either foreground or back
@janoti6073
@janoti6073 4 года назад
Thanks to all the professionals that are commenting with additional tips! It Helps A LOT!! Thank you
@chrisi621
@chrisi621 4 года назад
Everyone needs to understand that you are shooting a loft which is going to be done much differently than a normal house. Most houses have 8ft ceilings and not side wide open spaces. So while shooting at 20mm or 24mm works for this space, it most likely won't in a regular single family home. 16-17mm is the norm for most houses. Also, most of the time, the camera will be under 5ft. Most likely 4-4.5ft off the ground. Otherwise you will show way too much ceiling (8ft). Hdr isn't what it used to be. Years ago, hdr was tone mapped. Which made photos look overly processed with muddy colors and shadows everywhere. Now it's done using exposure fusion which gives it a more natural look.
@chrisfox2211
@chrisfox2211 4 года назад
I can’t wait for Mike Kelley to critique....
@southboundtraveler
@southboundtraveler 4 года назад
Mike is a nice guy, he'll probably go easy on him...
@anthonyperic7634
@anthonyperic7634 4 года назад
@@southboundtraveler I've shot with Mike. He's nice but brutal too. This is basic HDR blending with LR. Nothing hard, decent results on some homes but the light from front to back are horrible. The colors look too saturated and not natural at all. There's no circular polarizer to get rid of the hot spots on the floor. This is pretty 101 real estate photography. yeah you may make some money doing this but you're not going to build a long-term business.
@southboundtraveler
@southboundtraveler 4 года назад
@@anthonyperic7634 Yeah... all valid points.
@TheJaimexxd
@TheJaimexxd 4 года назад
Yes holy shit sécially the one of the bathroom lmao
@AmbientWanderer
@AmbientWanderer 4 года назад
@@anthonyperic7634 Yep , the best way to to edit such photos is take the bracketed images into PS as layers, and exposure blend using luminosity masks. Like you said, he should have also used a circular polarizer. And i agree that this Auto HDR method makes the photos look extremely unnatural to me
@DavidHarrisGRI
@DavidHarrisGRI 4 года назад
You are a little high on your tripod setting, especially for the smaller rooms. That is one reason your verticals aren't straight, you are having to point the camera down to to get a good view of the room. Keep it kind of low, just high enough to see tabletops, etc, and level the camera for each shot. A 16-35mm is just the ticket.
@benbarson2810
@benbarson2810 3 года назад
Waist length sound about right
@flyingmonkeys9774
@flyingmonkeys9774 4 года назад
It feels weird giving constructive crit to a Pro like you but here goes anyway. Not too bad for a first try. However, your camera was about half a foot to high in the living spaces and way to high in the bedroom. That's why the lines are not straight. But you know that. Use the spirit level in the camera. It works a treat. With RE photography, feel free to lighten the photos a bit more in post after the merge. I shoot RE as my main job and I use a D750 with Tamrom 15-30mm. Best combo imo. I also use a Manfrotto 3 way head to easily and quickly align the camera. I hope the sale of your place goes quickly and smoothly.
@ObsidianSymphony
@ObsidianSymphony 4 года назад
You mentioned it is your main job, I'm looking to get started with RE photography. I have reached out to a few realtors and no response. Do you have any tips on finding clients and how much would you charge as a beginner?
@scottturner9335
@scottturner9335 4 года назад
Are you thinking about upgrading your D750?
@MartinCoronaPhoto
@MartinCoronaPhoto 4 года назад
OBSIDIAN what are you saying when you reach out?
@mandography
@mandography 4 года назад
Main job as in self employed or employed with a real estate firm solely as their photographer?
@MrFuryshotz
@MrFuryshotz 4 года назад
For someone who doesn’t do real estate stuff I think you did a great job, the fact that you actually followed tips and things especially the declutter tip, I get different clients that get a bit upset with me when I ask to get as many things off tables and countertops as they can. The space is what people want to see, plain and simple.
@martinpotgieter3301
@martinpotgieter3301 4 года назад
My only comment would be, for anyone looking into shooting real estate, what makes it look 100% more professional to the next guy is please, keep verticals straight for 2 point perspectives, and verticals and horizontals straight for one point perspectives. Especially noticed it in the bedroom images. Easy fix in lightroom if you did want to go fix it, but always better to get it as straight as possible in camera. Just my 2c. But great job, real estate and architecture is totally different to any other genre of photography.
@cjstudios5170
@cjstudios5170 4 года назад
Finally, I get to use my experience as a full time architectural & real estate photographer! Jared, your first photo is extremely distracting with the kitchen cabinet/sink in the bottom left corner. If you look at what Jeff, Mike or myself would do for this shot - we would move into the room just in front of the cabinet & sink with a wide angle (@ 15-17mm) maybe showing the third wall with the popcorn machine. Then my next shot would be to focus back on the kitchen from either where I just took the first shot or between the table and sofa. Please watch your third walls with distracting stuff on it like the traffic light - you could have cropped it out in the "behind the piano" shot. Also, for the love of all that is good, straighten your angles with the bedroom and bath shots. I shoot around 1000 properties a year, and the feedback I get from agents, architects and perspective homeowners is that when they see a shot like this, they think the listing agent or homeowner took the shot themselves...with an iPhone. There is no need for an uncorrected angle like that. If you want to focus just on the shower, shoot that vertical. By the way, your studio top-down shot you show from time to time works because of the space. Also, HDR was probably the best call for this given the hard woods. All in all, it was a good first attempt by a professional photographer, who thinks they can shoot real estate, and who could stand to listen to his own words. 😃
@GreenTekHaus
@GreenTekHaus 4 года назад
C&J Studios I concur. It’s not as easy as you think, Jared. Even if you are a talented Tog in other areas of photography, it’s a different animal.
@achillesjohnson7941
@achillesjohnson7941 4 года назад
Thanks!
@ackermanphotoackermanreale1982
@ackermanphotoackermanreale1982 3 года назад
Agreed! These photos are so bad. I know many "$200 photographers" in Philly that would have shot this a lot better. The comps are bad and the verticals are even worse.
@kidfreejones
@kidfreejones 3 года назад
@@ackermanphotoackermanreale1982 That’s a pro’s perspective but really nearly everyone considering to let or buy a place doesn’t care less about that. In fact most complain that pro photos might look amazing but lie about the place in real life so the agent has to deal with disappointment from the start. People want the truth so taking pics of a home or anything else in this day of age you’re better off showing the truth than being creative to the max. Very little people care about the big time efforts of the pics, you do the agent does but in reality folks are flicking fast on their phone or PC and don’t notice the finer details the photographer thought about. Good on this fellow for having a crack himself, if it worked, the job was useful. And he made you watch the vid which is views for him and comments for us to interact.
@chadleever492
@chadleever492 4 года назад
WOW. From neo-marxist revolutionary photographer to capitalist real estate photographer, and all within 15 seconds. Congratulations on all that.
@froknowsphoto
@froknowsphoto 4 года назад
Salty much
@grahamransom9663
@grahamransom9663 4 года назад
This is literally my second job. Real estate photos. I cant tell you how mamy times ive turned upto a job and sent them a lovely home prep sheet telling them basic staging instructions only to see a bunch of crap in the rooms. Doesnt matter what you do. If the roooms full of shit so are the photos. Edit: i dont like the cat being in the photo. When it comes to real estate its a bad connitation. But thats all
@alanhiggins737
@alanhiggins737 4 года назад
omg don't believe it just got phone call to work for real estate company then 2 mins later you post real estate tutorial thank you so much jared for helping us in these tough times awesome !
@anthonyperic7634
@anthonyperic7634 4 года назад
Watch Rich Baum and Nathan Cool. Way better.
@mrMacMilli2000
@mrMacMilli2000 4 года назад
That's called a Synchronicity. It means ur on the right track. Your life should be full of these moments, almost everyday, when it happens, you are happy and living to ur potential
@michaelroach3553
@michaelroach3553 4 года назад
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-VHNew19Joj4.html
@MuhammadKilany
@MuhammadKilany 4 года назад
There is a guy posted a link down there you will learn way more through him
@thedondeluxe6941
@thedondeluxe6941 4 года назад
Your vertical lines are kinda all over the place here. Would be better to lower the camera or adjust the perspective in Photoshop on some of these imo. At least that's how I learned to do interior photography! Post processing looks good, though.
@froknowsphoto
@froknowsphoto 4 года назад
Good enough is good enough
@thedondeluxe6941
@thedondeluxe6941 4 года назад
@@froknowsphoto ... is good enough.
@bryanauer
@bryanauer 4 года назад
16mm is the sweet spot for interior buster!!!
@anthonyperic7634
@anthonyperic7634 4 года назад
16mm and 24-105 for detail shots. I do this daily.
@kennethjonesphotography
@kennethjonesphotography 4 года назад
The size of the lens really depends on the size of the space being photographed. Thus, while a 16mm (assumed to be on a full-frame body) may be good for what you shoot, it may not be suitable for what someone else may be shooting.
@666Tomato666
@666Tomato666 4 года назад
@@kennethjonesphotography 16mm of FF gives you just over 96° field of view, given that most rooms have corners that are 90°, 16mm is what's necessary to put both walls in the photo when photographing from the corner. you probably shouldn't make all photos at 16mm, but you definitely should have few
@bryanauer
@bryanauer 4 года назад
@@666Tomato666 Most are at 16mm on my FF but I do get detailed shots using 50mm and 85mm primes to balance out the presentation. Also most of my detail work is shot with very shallow depth of field while im usually at f7 for the wide "capture everything" shots.
@shaungibbs7400
@shaungibbs7400 4 года назад
Agreed.
@misionriqueza
@misionriqueza 4 года назад
It's great to learn from Jared and also from the comments. This mean Jared brings great people to share their knowledge.
@donschroeder5194
@donschroeder5194 4 года назад
Verticals need straightened (easy LR fix), distortion in some photos (easy LR fix), hdr haze showing up around the windows and table legs etc, and a bit on the dark side for my taste... composition is key. Yes, de clutter, lights always on, fans off, I prefer to have window shades/curtains open especially if there is a good view (skyline, water view etc). Better then the iPhone shots that cheap realtors use but, they could have been better though honestly.
@GreenTekHaus
@GreenTekHaus 4 года назад
Sorry, Jared... You’re a great Tog, but keep your day job, (aka your normal focus of work). Jeff didn’t give you ALL the tips. There’s a bunch more about Real Estate photography that you’re missing. I too thought it was “easy peasy” when I first started out, but there’s actually a bit more to it than meets the eye. There’s all kinds of blunders you did, about half photography-wise, half property prep. I think the only thing worked was you saved some money, and the pics are okay, but a realtor and higher end clientele will know it wasn’t done by a real estate /architectural Tog. There’s some really good videos on YT about how to do RE imagery. Just start searching it up. However, I have to admit that once I had training from some of the broker-types of media firms that cater to realtors, my imagery wasn’t as good as it is now. The small things do make a HUGE difference in realty imagery. I think it would have better served you to have spent the $200, and follow him around to see what his full arsenal of tricks would have been, and how he works in the property. Then the editing is also crucial, not just the HDR merge in LR. While that’s an important first step, there’s more to that end of it too, as I think you very well might already know now. Pretty good for a first try, and I like that you are trying new stuff, but was disappointed with your lack of a more thorough methodology, and the results you produced. I think that with no Steve around, that has you not as sharp, maybe? LOL! Steve would have called you to the mat on this, right Steve? LOL!
@hairlesschimp479
@hairlesschimp479 4 года назад
Wow! This place is amazing, there's so much space, exposed brick, i can walk to work, TONS of natural light...wait...ARE THOSE BANANAS BROWNING??? WHAT A HORRIBLE IMPRESSION!
@SubieDude614
@SubieDude614 4 года назад
I shoot Real Estate Photography for a living, and using a flash can greatly improve your photos. More crisp, clean images with less color casts. Also using a flash helps with window pulls, because sometimes what's on the other side of the glass, is important to buyers...
@michaelroach3553
@michaelroach3553 4 года назад
Flambients 4 Life lol: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-VHNew19Joj4.html
@MayankBadhan
@MayankBadhan 3 года назад
One of the most helpful and honest videos. No bullshit. No secrets. Just straightforward facts.
@LAORTIZ20
@LAORTIZ20 3 года назад
im having tomorrow my very first real state photography session and im using this video as the main reference, wish me some luck!
@iamlorenb
@iamlorenb 3 года назад
How did it go?
@steffsteffson
@steffsteffson 3 года назад
I think this HDR style is a very old school way to shoot interior. Many of the pictures on your mentors homepage (jeffreytotaro) are looking so artificial that they obviously have nothing to do with the original architecture, the original light, the original colors,... .
@SWATOP3
@SWATOP3 4 года назад
Remove all things that point to an animal such as dog or cat living inside. Yes some people will think, “this is a great place for my cat fufu to live” but there are many more people out there who will say “I’m not even looking at that place because I’m allergic to cats”
@Justas49
@Justas49 4 года назад
Tilt shift is about controlling the feel of surface area size. Get low shift up. The surfaces will look smaller. Get up shift low the surfaces will look bigger. But it will always have seemingly more distortion of lens (not perspective).
@theshuz
@theshuz 4 года назад
Lights must be ON and replace any burnt out bulbs...
@megapixelphotos338
@megapixelphotos338 4 года назад
Professional 😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅😅
@ncrh5186
@ncrh5186 4 года назад
Quick note, there's a difference between architectural photographers and real estate photographers. Mike and Jeff are both architectural photographers, I'd suggest next time using real estate photographers as examples, Rich Baum and Nathan Cool are quite good.
@Dmbishop70
@Dmbishop70 4 года назад
Not sure if anyone else picked up on it - you needed to point out, make sure when bracketing shots, only change the shutter speed, never the aperture or ISO, otherwise HDR will not work as well.
@adrianoribeiro5399
@adrianoribeiro5399 4 года назад
Can the Nikon D850 do more than 3 shots? Seems to be limited to 3...
@opiec8871
@opiec8871 4 года назад
The height with the fro part reminded me of “Fletch” dreaming of being an L.A. Laker lol. Good content here, though I would imagine your new place will be nice as well, because your apt. is a cool looking place.
@2204vc
@2204vc 4 года назад
Another thing that really help real estate photos is to take straight shot, angles as little as possible
@kingling1825
@kingling1825 4 года назад
you should really straighten your lines in lighroom or cameraRAW. Easy to do and looks much better. and you can treat your windows in addition with radial filter to pull down the bright spots, if you don't like to go into photoshop to do it with masks.
@slowridephotographyadventu6850
@slowridephotographyadventu6850 4 года назад
Great video! I've been shooting architecture for about 6 years. I almost always shoot from waist height. It's much easier to keep the vertical lines perpendicular and it gives a slightly different perspective. When I first started, I had the habit of shooting rooms from corners, which adds to distortion if you'r wide. I now try to shoot as much as I can straight on. Cheers !!
@cromwellfluffington1627
@cromwellfluffington1627 3 года назад
"Neon Pegasus" By far the best band name I've heard in a while.
@hugoosorio3246
@hugoosorio3246 4 года назад
Better then 99% of the people bring to the world? Sorry but you are a fenomenal entertainer, but you stand on a middle range photographer in quality work
@froknowsphoto
@froknowsphoto 4 года назад
Thanks man. Means a lot. How’s your work?
@ekevanderzee9538
@ekevanderzee9538 4 года назад
You had to tilt your tripod? Just crop it straight. ;-)
@southboundtraveler
@southboundtraveler 4 года назад
One word: strobes...
@southboundtraveler
@southboundtraveler 4 года назад
@@davidgfisher I take it you dont shoot interiors then...
@southboundtraveler
@southboundtraveler 4 года назад
@@davidgfisher and you see no room for improvement? I guess the quality standards are different in the States.
@southboundtraveler
@southboundtraveler 4 года назад
@@davidgfisher You're right, what could I possibly know...?
@venom5809
@venom5809 4 года назад
@@southboundtraveler He provided you with a top notch portfolio, where is yours since you are critiquing him? Just saying 🤷‍♂️
@southboundtraveler
@southboundtraveler 4 года назад
@@venom5809 I havent published more than a handful of pics publicly for the past 5 years or so as I am no longer taking on new clients and thus have no need for an online portfolio. Im sure if you look hard enough, you'll find links to my old work.
@TaskForceMediaGroup
@TaskForceMediaGroup 4 года назад
Kinda insulting opener "$200 photographer". Then you go on to say I can show you how to do it. Seemed very condescending in my opinion. I clicked away.
@jpindahaus
@jpindahaus 4 года назад
"... some bullsh*t like that..." I literally laughed out loud and my wife gave me the weirdest look. Question: did you use lens correction in Lightroom?
@craigmeyer5291
@craigmeyer5291 4 года назад
Jared, your "good enough" is far better than all but the specialized high end real estate photography I've seen. When I was a Broker at Lake Tahoe, I did 90% of my own work using film, then. I used a Canon EOS A2 and mostly a 20-35mm lens. Because merging negatives was a big and very specialized process, I used flash and a flash meter to balance the exposure outside the windows with the interior. These results are excellent. Good tip on leaving the outside, outside. The only exception is when you're selling a major City , Lake or Ocean or Mountain view. I also think you need an outdoor view of the entrance. The reason is a buyer sees the location, and will wonder if they can safely park their vehicles--not junkers to be sure, and have an entrance inviting enough to allow females to feel safe and comfortable entering.The goal is to get people into the property. The purpose of these photos is NOT to sell the property (or lease) on-line or sight unseen. You are correct that the photography must be a realistic representation of what the place looks like. It must convey the mood you want they buyer to "get into" when they are visiting the site. Gimmicks, crazy angles are NOT what this is about. You're preparing the buyer (renter) to choose to visit THIS property over the several they will see in their selection process. They also serve as a memory aid, after seeing several places. After 3, they all run together. Underselling, a little is better than even slightly over selling. Nobody wants to be sold, helped to visualize how they would feel living there and or how heir visitors would feel on their first visit is what you're looking for them to feel. And I mean FEEL, this is an emotional selection--even for the hard boiled. You exceeded that in a very good way. No surprise to me. I've seen your work and you're technically 1000% and are as over equipped as they come. Your practiced eye for composition and detail, excellent coaching from the pros--and yes you should link to their courses--made this work for you. Everybody won't be able to "just do this." Most advanced amateurs don't have the skill set or the equipment, and the chance to climb the learning curve like I did. These photos can be combined into a nice dissolving slide show which can serve as a "Virtual Tour" instead of doing a video. With the availability of your top notch video capability, though, I think you should do a video walk through of this unique property. It would, with a female narrator, really set the mood for a positive decision on the part of your potential renter. This isn't a bargain property, the competition will be stiff and diverse. Your buyer is in a small niche that is occupied by that subset of people searching for this unique kind of home. The female narrator is for the woman renter, or the female half of the couple who will be looking for the homier parts of this home. "Can I make dinner here? Can I entertain? Is there enough room for ALL of my clothes--and SHOES!?!?!? Will I be able to invite my female friends here and will they be comfortable?" By the way, I didn't see enough of those "soft" things to prove that this is really beyond a bachelor pad. I'd like to see some bedroom shots with attention to closet space. Also, same for the nice bathroom--linen closet??/ (what's that??), China and Cooking storage, Pantry space? Laundry, Jared?? These are the things that make or break a home buying/renting decision for a woman. This photo set shows nothing like that--not even a (borrowed like the bedspread) dresser in the bedroom, and could leave a woman to conclude that this is a show kitchen, and a pad that has only enough space for the "Fro Know's" wardrobe--which despite the vast number of colors of RAW T-shirts--doesn't even begin to meet even an average Professional woman's needs. Tip to other first timers, which you passed, put the toilet seat lid DOWN! And don't confuse this photo assignment with a PHOTO CONTEST! In this case your good enough is plenty good, but isn't so slick that it arouses suspicion of "WHY do these photos outclass the property???" It's urban/ (light) industrial Philly. It is NOT Malibu or Sea Island, or the fancy part of Bucks County. Your Agent will be pleased. You HAVE an agent, don't you, Jared?????? Attempting to rent this property with out a pro is like Uncle Craig (ME!!!) shooting your wedding. You'll get pictures, but when, and will they have Aunt Sadie--who gave the bride that heirloom Diamond Brooch to wear, looking her very best (or are her eyes closed and is that a drool on her chin??) etc. Great work, as usual. My son and I are regular followers. I use your set up tips for my cameras and your photo tips every time I strap my EOS on. And I started when Ike was President. I suggest you make a photo book so that in years to come you'll have some good images to go with the great memories of this really cool place. C
@ad19yoyo45
@ad19yoyo45 4 года назад
I was asked in 2007 and 2008 to do some interior and exterior shots of some very small duplexes. I used a Nikon D70 and a single lens, the Sigma 10-20mm f4-5.6 lens. I found that (to my surprise!) the property owner loved the images. May I send you a few images for critique of my first try at this?
@anywherelife585
@anywherelife585 4 года назад
Jareds Quote: „...cause every inch counts“ 😂😂
@ronaldojoe3011
@ronaldojoe3011 4 года назад
"Good enough" makes me want to buy your place!
@CostaMesaPhotography
@CostaMesaPhotography 4 года назад
I applaud your goal and approach and completely agree that you accomplished it! These images are better than many I've seen, but most importantly, these images give a very good representation of what your property looks like, and what its main features and attractions are. If I would score your images, I'd give them a 9+, which is excellent. As you went through the pictures I saw things that I would clean up in Photoshop (like the thing tucked against the wall up by the bananas, the cat, some of the cords...), but I recognize that wasn't your objective, nor would it be necessary--your photos are ready to go as-is! Your shot from behind the piano as a nice shot, and had both pros and cons...mostly pros (which you stated), including the fact that you can see the fireplace. To make the shot even nicer I'd put fire in the fireplace and a nice image in the big screen tv (again in Photoshop). The only con I saw with that photo was a compositional challenge...and that was a sense of being trapped by the piano. I would have wanted to move to the right, including the piano on the left, being able to see the couch behind that, but then also seeing the comfortable chair...and most importantly, seeing the walking space between the piano and the chair so the viewer feels invited to walk into the photo rather than blocked by the piano. Like so many of your videos showing your photography and the thought processes while doing it, this video was excellent. Thank you for producing it, and good luck on the relocation to your new home, and the rental of this property!
@VanessaBenavidesMiness1
@VanessaBenavidesMiness1 4 года назад
Froooooo! Do you have a video of Macro Photography? Cuz if so, I haven’t seen it. And if not, why not? Enjoyed seeing you get out of your comfort zone. Thanks for all the effort you put in, it really shows and is much appreciated! P. S. I’m new to your “Froness” and to photography. Your informative videos coupled with your spunk is both refreshing as well as an enjoyable way to digest new to me information. Thanks again!
@onlyonecannoli3952
@onlyonecannoli3952 4 года назад
Mediocre at best. Good job!
@Qiubenjamin
@Qiubenjamin 3 года назад
As a real estate photographer, this is refreshing to watch even after doing it for so many years!
@chrisvar10
@chrisvar10 4 года назад
How would you compare bracketing to simply exposing for the outside and bringing up the shadows in Lightroom? I understand bracketing is probably the better move but could you get by with another method?
@V00ify
@V00ify 4 года назад
we all know indoor bricks DONT look like that in real life.
@murphymartin602
@murphymartin602 4 года назад
In our studio, we shoot for magazines and catalogs and for like Wayfair etc.. we mainly shoot 35mm or 50mm for most everything in our scenes. Really enjoyed this video!
@Designer_Opine
@Designer_Opine 4 года назад
$4-8k/month depending on the neighborhood here in Brooklyn. This video literally made me want to kill myself. Let’s not even talk about storing my Ducati INSIDE thanks to the frig’n Bruce Wayne mode freight elevator.
@gillardpetry2068
@gillardpetry2068 4 года назад
My Ducati would find it's way indoors one way or another!! If........I had a Ducati..😪
@shankhanilsarkar2161
@shankhanilsarkar2161 4 года назад
1st
@Sirbradford13
@Sirbradford13 3 года назад
Learned as much from the comments as from the video. Both super informative. Thanks, all :)
@DemisG.
@DemisG. 4 года назад
I do interior photography and usually I set the tripod at about 120mm height. I do bracketed exposure and use 15-35mm f2.8 but I never shoot less than 18mm wide unless the bathroom is really tiny. Then I use 35mm for close up s and 50mm for details. I usually shoot with lights off.
@samarianosans
@samarianosans 4 года назад
nop. but nice try man
@RotlochStudio
@RotlochStudio 3 года назад
Is it me or all of the photos are not straight? I expected better quality. The tips are good but perhaps he should improve his interior photography first. Or perhaps it is just me that I am seeing it. Edit: the bedroom image is just horrific. Was right about the bad angles.
@haidukul
@haidukul 4 года назад
The photos are rubbish. I am here just to see his appartment.
@HomeandYacht
@HomeandYacht 4 года назад
16mm Lens, 5 Brackets +- 2 Stops, F8, ISO 100-400 then merge in Photomatix or Aurora HDR.
@anthonyperic7634
@anthonyperic7634 4 года назад
Enfuse and LR. Photomatix is junk.
@mastrorj68
@mastrorj68 4 года назад
I was told best height is always countertop height. But I mean I've even seen people use no tripod and produce amazing work so to each is own I guess?
@MKNYC_
@MKNYC_ 4 года назад
I thought musicians were picky.........nope that award goes to real estate photographers hahahaha. Side note, that apartment/loft is AWESOME.
@duyannguyen7760
@duyannguyen7760 4 года назад
Hey Jared, with all the photos you took of your old place, at what focal length lens did you use for the shots? I was thinking about getting into real estate photography for some side cash. Currently I have a canon 5D mark iii with a 24-105 f4 lens. I know at 24mm I can't capture enough in small spaces. I can only afford 1 lens at the moment and I was wondering if I should invest into a sigma 14-24mm f2.8 or should I invest in the sigma 18-35mm f1.8?
@revolutionfilms9345
@revolutionfilms9345 2 года назад
Hi Jared! Thanks for the tutorials. Which lens will you recommend for real estate photography and videography: the sony Zeiss 16-35mm f.4 or The sigma 14-24mm f2.8 or the Tamron 17-28mm f2.8? Lens to be used with the Sony A7iii. Thanks for your advice!
@realographystudios7035
@realographystudios7035 4 года назад
Hey Jared! I watch lots of your videos and enjoy the lens comparisons most of all. I'm a professional Real Estate Photographer in Florida. I give you a C++, which is far better than most. A lot of people poo poo real estate photography, but I've done (and still do) portraits and just about everything else (no weddings. I don't have the temperance to deal with brides and bridesmaids. They invariably complain that you made them look fat. News flash: you were fat before the shoot, darlin') and I am guilty of looking down my nose on those guys too. Until I jumped in. It's a challenge from every angle. tons of different colors cast by wildly varying light bulbs, stupid colored rooms that are a pure headache to set good white balance, and on and on. Im glad you took a shot at it. In the industry these days we are doing the "flambient" blending technique, using flash coupled with ambient shots in PS. No more HDR for me. Get it right in camera in ambient light (bracketing of course) and then strategically use some flash on selected other shots, and then put them together in PS. Its a lot of work, and not much money for each shoot. But if you do 10-15/week, it pays the bills and buys a nice Mercedes CLS550. Thanks for sharing the video and congrats for jumping in. By the way, if you want to see some cool work, look up Nathan Cool. Lol.
@frontporchmedia
@frontporchmedia 4 года назад
Good Video. Definitely shouldn't need a tilt-shift lens inside. A good tip; lower the camera so you can point up more and keep the right/left walls straight instead of having to point the camera slightly down. Good luck on your move!! Gorgeous place!
@cruzdreamer
@cruzdreamer 4 года назад
Fro what about your settings Fstop, Iso, etc. I know all lighting will be different, but a good starting point. I am trying to get into that field which will accompany my home staging. BTW...tip...declutter your bookcases too...the eye goes there and it is distracting. Cool loft by the way!! Thank you for your videos.
@holderproduction6968
@holderproduction6968 4 года назад
Yeah as a Real Estate Photographer myself, these aren’t worth the 200$ you hinted, in terms of good enough mehhh.... tbh I thought someone with your quality of information on photography and cinematography you’d completely kill it but good video because it really shows the disparity and difference.
@ison5622
@ison5622 2 года назад
camera height : shoot just above waist height, unless bench tops are focal, so kitchen bathroom shoot around chest height, take 5 bracketed 1 stop increments, a window pull and 2 or 3 flash pops pointed at the ceiling at 1/4, 1/2 or full depending on room size, do this for each room, in photo shop blend the flash shots, blend the brackets then paint in the flash where you need it, pull the window shot in using darken blend mode, then back in lightroom tweak a bit
@Axonteer
@Axonteer 4 года назад
Im glad i am not the only one that hates this unrealitic looking HDR pictures... do they look cool? YES... do they look real? Fuckno... and i prefer real pictures over something that could also be generated with cgi
@johnpaint6204
@johnpaint6204 Год назад
Great tips. I love these videos, but lets be honest, most spaces you are going to shoot as a real estate photographer are houses that are made in the 50's with tiny little rooms. Big beautifl open spaces like this are a dream and really make things look fantastical no matter how good or bad your lighting is. I would love to see a video like this done in some cape cod style house where the enitre living space of the house fits in that one room of the loft. Most bedrooms I shoot in those houses are smaller than his "Kitchen" area and you cant fit a tripod in that room. Overall, great video and I love the discussion of how you did things and why, but I would have loved another example or two with a "normal" living space, rather than an ultra modern loft that is diesgned to be vast and open.
@RomanandJulia
@RomanandJulia 4 года назад
12:14 "will you just look at it?" hahah also from philly :)
@TheRealMotherFucker
@TheRealMotherFucker 3 года назад
bordaldo
@rifke
@rifke 4 года назад
I love the Eames Lounge.
@erikherinek
@erikherinek 4 года назад
If I had the money and ability to rent that place, i totally would. Everything about it looks so damn perfect and I would be so happy to be there, i just know it ♥ Anyways really love the photos, the way you walked us through your process of capturing these ♥ such an amazing dude Jared ♥ i got addicted to your content ages ago and i cannot stop XD (not really ages ago but it feels like it's been a while hehe)
@dustindrake1257
@dustindrake1257 2 года назад
These are really helpful, will probably help me reduce the need for me to outsource. But anyway, outsourcing helps me avoid boring repetitive editing. edithere if someone needs it, not that I want to advertise but their service is really great.
@AD.H.
@AD.H. 2 года назад
Now may I ask why you didn't think that you can do a great job with this kind of photography? You're talented and photograph anything. If you say that about yourself, what am I supposed to do in a situation like this? lol
@linhbling97
@linhbling97 3 года назад
Do you need real estate photo editors? Flambient photography is our specialty, it give you the most natural (ambient) yet detailed (flash) shots, best of both worlds...
@lemmonmediaproductions
@lemmonmediaproductions 3 года назад
Just walked passed you @allenscamera! Was in deep conversation with Carson but I was purchasing my 16-35 at that moment!
@meechcreativellc
@meechcreativellc 4 года назад
I'm conflicted in this...as a photographer myself who (besides headshots and events) has an aerial wing shooting drone and interior sizzle video reels for real estate I would think sure, I could shoot my own interior shots for renting / selling my property. But on the other hand, why would I deny a friend or local colleague who actually shoots interior real estate a job? Yes, you mentioned extenuating circumstances because of the Covid restrictions which makes sense but, now it's that slippery slope of "what else can we teach or explain to others as professionals who make money doing this what they can do on their own and deny us more income?!?!". Drastic? Sure. But who needs a headshot photog anymore when iPhones have portrait mode? Who needs an interior real estate photographer when you can just shoot them yourself with these simple tips. That being said, I will say THANK YOU for knocking window pulls and overly blowing out the size of a room with an 18mm prime wide...I hate seeing that. Thanks Fro.
@MartinCoronaPhoto
@MartinCoronaPhoto 4 года назад
On the other hand, Fro is a photographer. I can perfectly understand wanting to do it himself as a learning experience, especially given that it also provided him with content for his RU-vid channel which I assume is his primary source of income. My primary source of income is real estate photo/video btw.
@chrisogrady28
@chrisogrady28 4 года назад
I use my Nikon 20mm 1.8 for most wide angle work, always looks amazing and can make a quick pano to get wider if needed
@tampaflorida33610
@tampaflorida33610 2 года назад
Thanks , there has been much talk that could be shortened. I need more practical advice than theoretically. But overall, I really appreciate the efforts and it was helpful
@johnpoulson1702
@johnpoulson1702 4 года назад
Verticals
@thunderpop20
@thunderpop20 2 года назад
we just done phto selling the parnats house and sons daughthers house babby house and takeing top photo with wihite bakcgorunthing didnt ask just got back form work
@gimbalair
@gimbalair 2 года назад
Really helpful for a novice internal photographer, stick a drone in my hand and I know what to do, but internally, clueless. Big help. Thanks
@jacklove4783
@jacklove4783 4 года назад
Jared, I loved this video. I have a few requests, first could you do a series on when to use what lenses like the trinity and primes what ranges are great for which primes. Next I loved you solo series and you haven't done one in awhile. Thanks.
@swaggnificant100
@swaggnificant100 4 года назад
Ok Fro I have a Nikon D7000, What are some good lenses to get, or use, for Real Estate photography? Seeing that I have a crop sensor.
@ElliotFranco
@ElliotFranco 4 года назад
Love the lessons you're teaching us during this time keep them coming and thank you Jared
@kai__larsen
@kai__larsen 4 года назад
First comment in the first 10 seconds of the video!! GO JARED!! Lovin the vids man!
@hotelphotography
@hotelphotography 4 года назад
At least Jared is better (even though he used automated software, something no interiors or architectural photographer would do) than the guy from Adorama that posted some interior shot a while back. Jared's are way better.
@anastasiiawhite9648
@anastasiiawhite9648 2 года назад
Oh gosh, that chair next to fortepiano is 🔥 Video is great, thanks for tips. But damn, If you see it, where did you get that chair?
@automotiveexpert7917
@automotiveexpert7917 3 года назад
Good photos and as Shaun Gibbs said are a good hints and tips! One question Jared, did you use the flash or not? Thanks, Andrea
@offgridphotos
@offgridphotos 4 года назад
Thank you for the tutorial. Your loft is amazing, I love the way they kept the original feel. Then the freight elevator... That's awsome.
@TomaszBrodecki
@TomaszBrodecki 4 года назад
Maybe you should consider learning Lightroom's perspective correction tools and removing the silly adjective from the title?
@hum2020
@hum2020 2 года назад
This is not a professional set if pictures. You did it for yourself. Getting paid to shoot makes it professional.
@cpcommunications5474
@cpcommunications5474 4 года назад
Do most people use 12mm, 15mm, or 24mm for realty? Just curious. Thanks!
@jamesshields9079
@jamesshields9079 4 года назад
All I need to ask. Did they upload in .jpg?
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