Do You Make These Mistakes When Photographing a Home?


I read a post on Copyblogger today entitled What Not to Wear which prompted this repost from the archives.

If you can’t use a professional to take your listing photographs, avoid these visual mistakes. The photographs below were chosen to emphasize errors.

car-in-driveway.jpg

1. Exterior photo with distracting elements. These include cars, bicycles, trash cans, pets, children, etc. This example also has several other mistakes—it doesn’t capture the entire house exterior; the angle does not flatter the house; and trees obstruct the view.

too far.JPG

2. Subject too far away. Get as close as to can to your subject. This common mistake can easily be corrected by cropping. The objective is to have the image fill the frame. Use Photoshop if you have it. Many computers come with a basic photo editor. Mine has Micrsoft PictureIt! and it works great.

clutter.jpg

3. Cluttered rooms. This is where most interior photos fail–there’s too much stuff in the picture. Even though this room has beautiful furnishings, there is too much of it. Remove furniture, chairs, pillows, waste baskets, telephone, figurines and chatchies, items on table tops, even the leaf from the table. Like home staging, less is more in a room photograph. As a noted interior photographer has said, taking a great room photo involves 10% creativity and 90% furniture moving.

uninteresting room.jpg

4. Photographing uninteresting rooms in their entirety. Agents are told to use a wide angle lens to get the entire room in the photograph. The problem is it only works for well decorated rooms. And let’s be real—most rooms are not expertly decorated. The solution is to select & photograph the best portion of the room, focusing on the nicest feature. Or you can just skip the room, especially a bedroom.

flourescent.jpg

5. Shooting toward bright windows. Fluorescent lighting. Two to avoid. Light from the windows will attract the viewer’s eye and probably overexpose your photograph. Some can be saved by photo editing using the brightness controls but it generally makes for a bad image. Also avoid fluorescent lighting if possible as it the worst lighting. It tends to create an unflattering greenish tint. Instead use natural light, lamps or even candlelight.

Some ways to deal with these lighting issues: (a) turn off the flash and increase the exposure time (you may need to use a tripod or lean the camera against the wall (b) use a faster film (ISO 800) (c) increase the room’s overall brightness with stronger watt bulbs. Just replace the bulbs for the shoot.

not verticals.jpg

6. Verticals and horizontals. Unless you are really good at holding your camera straight (and not tilted up or down), the perception of the room will be thrown off. Just avoid these situations.

features.jpg nimphius_staircase.jpg extras.JPG

7. Missing the extras that make a home special (and more valuable). This includes architectural features, crown molding, hardscaped patios, pools and privacy. All the things which give a home character and make it stand out from the crowd.

Source: New York Institute for Photography

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  • Joe:

    Thanks for this post. I'll send it along to a new listing client who wanted me to explain why I skipped one bedroom in their photo gallery and videos. I just couldn't make it look good with any of my lenses.

    Jim
  • Also avoid photographing sections of the home that have wallpaper, especially if it's of an outdated style. Old or tacky-looking wallpaper can easily kill a sale, and it's a good idea to remove it before staging a home for an open house.
  • Bob Kusnirik
    Good comments but I wish you had also used good views of the same properties to help explain the differences.
  • I found the images in various places to illustrate the problems-- they were
    taken by others and there were no comparable "good ones" of the same
    property to compare. You make a good point, however, and I might update the
    post (or write a new one) with examples of good photographs, as I did on the
    last photos in the post.
  • Very useful tips you have there. Thanks for sharing them. I'll keep those in mind and tell it to friends if ever they'll be needing them.

    -M from Mexico
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