#real estate #photography #photo tips
Hey everyone!
I made a video about real estate photography in the same vein as my light painting video.
A five minute video to help with technique on shooting top quality real estate photos.
Hope you enjoy and learn something about the process!
Special thanks to Nick Reeves for teaching me these skills over the years.
Intro song by the talented Scott Stedman.
website: Troynikolic.com
instagram: @troynikolic
Original source
22 responses to “Photography Advice | Real Estate”
Thanks for the tips. Troy where can I get an avenger stand?
Shoot hand-held, f6.3, ISO320, 1/80th sec. with Speed light on camera set to TTL+1.3. Aim flash above and behind camera. Shoot single exposure and edit in Lightroom to brush in exposure where flash falls off. That’s it, no tripod, and no blending of multiple exposures needed to get really great results quick and easy. Here are examples: sterlingimagesphotography.com
F11? Well the best real estate photographers on youtube who shoot hundreds of high class houses a year say f8 ..
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BewQOiTdYZk&t=43s
G'day Troy! Great video mate. I'll have to give this a crack next time I take a couple snaps.
This how to do it is too slow for MLS. Instead, get magnificent photos for MLS from hand-held single exposures: f 6.3, 1/80th second, ISO 320, and on-camera TTL flash bounced on ceiling. A decent DSLR like a Nikon D750 with great dynamic range shooting RAW for processing via Lr can produce a preset which gets a great image and can yield a finished project in seconds when auto sync is applied. sterlingimagesphotography.com
can you please make a video on how to put the photos today
https://youtu.be/jiyEMEJhmPw
i would always ask the client to move their cars for front shots, do you agree ?
Do you speak serbian mr nikolić
Published 2 years ago today and still relevant. Good stuff.
BRUH! This video is very well done and explains everything well! This helped me a lot!
You're making rules which limit possibilities, and needlessly handicap results. I shoot virtually every interior for MSL: hand held, TTL flash on camera, 320 ISO, f7.1, 1/100th, and wide angle lens at 18mm. I do not need window pulls processing with Lightroom to reduce highlights. Generally, hand held gives me an exacting perspective, which is paramount, the tripod undermines this. Each shot, including processing with preset, takes about a minute; and, these sell at a rate of about $2 to $4 per shot for a 40 to 70 plus image project, enough shots to cover up to a 6000 sq. ft. home. If a Realtor or Real Estate Photographer in my market did it according to your instructions, they'd go broke while attaining unnoticeable perfection. sterlingimagesphotography.com
Really informative video, thanks for sharing. I was curious on your thoughts regarding usage of an LED lightstand to help illuminate darker rooms instead of flash?
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Avenger is just the brand right? It's just a heavy duty C Stand, right?
Simple as i liked! Great work keep it up.. https://goo.gl/twSEGf
Thank you Troy. Where could I get the tripod adapter for the Avenger Stand from?
Great video! Thank you for sharing! I do have a question, what program do you use to edit your photos?
Amazing video
Dude, this video has been the single most helpful thing I've seen. Do you have a tutorial on your exposure blending technique? Also, do you have any tips on best practices for positioning your flash?
WOW!