Oftentimes the food we photograph loses its steam pretty quickly, even if it’s still hot. That little puff of steam adds so much to the photo … it plays with our senses and makes hot food look appetizing. There are some weird methods to add steam (microwaving cotton balls and other cotton products that should go nowhere near food) but I discovered another way that is actually pretty simple (thanks to a food stylist from a Kelby Training course I saw a while back). So, heres’s an easy way to add realistic steam to food photographs:
Gear used:
- Canon 430EX speedlight as the main light shooting through a diffusion panel (the inside of a five-in-one reflector).
- Black foam core in front of the light to serve as the background
- Fork taped to a set of wooden chopsticks that are taped to a Manfrotto Magic Arm
- White foam core to the left for front fill-light
- Reflector/white foam core underneath shrimp on fork to add white color bounce
- Camera set on a tripod with cable-release to trip the shutter
- To add steam to the shrimp, I used a hand steamer (the one I used was only $15 at Bed Bath & Beyond).
- Then photograph the shrimp with steam using the hand steamer (it took a lot of trial-and-error to get the “perfect” steamy look).
- Also photograph the shrimp with no steam.
- The last step is to put both images in the same document in Photoshop and mask them so you have steamy shrimp in one half of the image and the nicer looking fork (plus no hand-steamer) in the other half of the image. (Here’s a tutorial on masking if you need help.) For some other photos I’ve done similar to this I’ll also photograph the “no steam” image with a little more reflector fill in the front to brighten up the metal on the fork (my “reflector” was a white paper towel most of the time). Some of the frames I got were okay and didn’t have the steamer in the photo, but there may have been residual steam below the shrimp, or my hand in front of it “muddied up” the color of the metal in the fork, so masking the two images together makes for a much cleaner photograph.
Oftentimes the food we photograph loses its steam pretty quickly, even if it’s still hot. That little puff of steam adds so much to the photo … it plays with our senses and makes hot food look appetizing. There are some weird methods to add steam (microwaving cotton balls and other cotton products that should go nowhere near food) but I discovered another way that is actually pretty simple (thanks to a food stylist from a Kelby Training course I saw a while back). So, heres’s an easy way to add realistic steam to food photographs:
Gear used:
- Canon 430EX speedlight as the main light shooting through a diffusion panel (the inside of a five-in-one reflector).
- Black foam core in front of the light to serve as the background
- Fork taped to a set of wooden chopsticks that are taped to a Manfrotto Magic Arm
- White foam core to the left for front fill-light
- Reflector/white foam core underneath shrimp on fork to add white color bounce
- Camera set on a tripod with cable-release to trip the shutter
- To add steam to the shrimp, I used a hand steamer (the one I used was only $15 at Bed Bath & Beyond).
- Then photograph the shrimp with steam using the hand steamer (it took a lot of trial-and-error to get the “perfect” steamy look).
- Also photograph the shrimp with no steam.
- The last step is to put both images in the same document in Photoshop and mask them so you have steamy shrimp in one half of the image and the nicer looking fork (plus no hand-steamer) in the other half of the image. (Here’s a tutorial on masking if you need help.) For some other photos I’ve done similar to this I’ll also photograph the “no steam” image with a little more reflector fill in the front to brighten up the metal on the fork (my “reflector” was a white paper towel most of the time). Some of the frames I got were okay and didn’t have the steamer in the photo, but there may have been residual steam below the shrimp, or my hand in front of it “muddied up” the color of the metal in the fork, so masking the two images together makes for a much cleaner photograph.
Nicole is a photographer, published author, and educator specializing in Lightroom, Photoshop, and photography. She is best known for her books on food photography but is widely versed in various photographic genres, including landscape, nature, stock, travel, and experimental imagery.
I really love this tip on using the hand steamer to give food that fresh off the stove/grill look. I have been trying to do learn food photography recently and am finding that it is every bit as tough as I heard it was. Thanks for sharing this.
Wonderful tip Nicole. Thank You.
Wow! Last year my boyfriend and I spent a couple of hours trying to photograph a steaming cup of “coffee” and couldn’t do it. I never thought of using a steamer – and I have one.
Great tip! I love your blog.
I love your blog, your tips are always so brilliant…
I can’t wait to read your book…
That is a great idea. Thank you for sharing it!
Also, congratulations on the 50Kth download from iStock!
That is such a great idea. Thanks for sharing it!
I’m so glad I found your blog so many great tips!
Wow!Excellent food image with smoke………….
Great info thanks for sharing Nicole!
Haha. Nice idea with the steamer =) Good job. Thank you for this tip )
Hola:
Is the “steamer” a portable steam iron? Or is ir something else?
Saludos
Steve Lynch
Yes, it’s just a regular handheld steam iron (a small one). Here’s a link to it over on Amazon: http://nicolesy.me/12p85Nu
Great Job, Thank you so much for the useful information
cheerz
Hi – I would love to know what that device is that is holding the fork… I tried to find something like this and the one I bought is junk!!
That’s a Manfrotto Magic Arm. You can also get a Manfrotto Flex Arm, which works well, too: http://amzn.to/2DlVNA4
Nice Jobe