Design Product Photography
Plan and execute product photography that meets commercial image specifications, showcases product accurately, and converts browsers into buyers.
Why This Is Best Practice
Adopted by: Amazon Seller Image Requirements (enforced quality standards), ASMP commercial photography standards, all major e-commerce platforms
Impact: High-quality product imagery increases conversion rates by 30% on average (Shopify research 2022); 360-degree and multi-angle product photos reduce return rates by 25% vs. single-image listings
Why best: ASMP commercial photography standards establish the quality floor for commercial licensing; Amazon's technical requirements represent the largest e-commerce image standard globally — compliance with both ensures images are usable across all major platforms.
Sources: ASMP "Commercial Photography Standards" (2022); Amazon "Product Image Requirements" (2023); Kelby "The Digital Photography Book: Product Photography" (2020)
Steps
- Review client/platform specifications — collect image requirements: minimum pixel dimensions (Amazon: 1000px longest side minimum, 2500px recommended), color space (sRGB), file format (JPEG), background (Amazon hero: pure white RGB 255,255,255).
- Set up white sweep background — use seamless paper or white acrylic; position product at least 30cm from background to allow separation; light background separately with 2 background lights to achieve pure white without blowing out the product.
- Select and clean the product — inspect every surface; use lint roller, isopropyl alcohol (electronics-safe), and microfiber cloth; fingerprints and dust visible at high magnification are retouching costs.
- Design the lighting setup — key light: large softbox 45° to camera (main illumination); fill light: reflector or second softbox at lower power on opposite side (ratio 2:1 for soft commercial look); rim/edge light: behind product for separation from background.
- Configure camera settings — aperture f/8–f/16 (maximum depth of field for small products); ISO 100 (cleanest file); manual exposure; tether to laptop for real-time review; use cable release or 2s timer to eliminate camera shake.
- Shoot the required angle set — hero (front, 3/4 angle on white background), lifestyle (product in context), detail shots (texture, labels, unique features), scale reference (product with hand or common object), 360-degree rotation if specified.
- Apply consistent styling — all products in a catalog must have identical lighting angle, framing, and background treatment; document the exact setup with measurements for multi-session consistency.
- Capture required metadata — record: camera settings, lighting diagram, color checker frame (for calibrated color correction), product code and SKU per image set.
- Retouch to commercial standard — remove dust and lint (heal/clone), correct white balance to neutral, ensure background is true white (select by color, levels to 255), remove distracting reflections, maintain realistic product color.
- Export to specification — export at required pixel dimensions, sRGB, 72dpi (screen) or 300dpi (print), maximum file size if specified; organize by product SKU and shot type.
Rules
- White background images must achieve RGB 255,255,255 (pure white) on all background areas — gray backgrounds fail Amazon's main image standard.
- Product must not be cropped in any direction — subject must fit within 80–85% of the frame with breathing room on all sides.
- Color accuracy is a commercial and legal requirement — product color in imagery must match actual product; color variance creates returns and legal risk.
- All images in a catalog series must match color temperature and lighting angle — inconsistency signals low quality and damages brand perception.
- Lifestyle images must not mislead about product size, functionality, or included accessories.
Common Mistakes
- Shooting on white without background lights — grey shadows are invisible to the eye on set but visible to the camera; light the background separately.
- Not cleaning the product — sensor-level detail magnification reveals every fingerprint; clean obsessively before every setup change.
- Mismatched color temperature — mixing daylight and tungsten or LED sources without gelling creates color casts that cannot be cleanly corrected in post.
- Insufficient depth of field — f/4 on a jewelry piece leaves the near edge in focus and the far edge blurred; product photography typically requires f/8–f/16.
- Single angle only — online shoppers cannot touch the product; multi-angle coverage directly reduces returns and increases purchase confidence.
When NOT to Use
- Editorial product-in-context stories where strict white background is inappropriate
- Food photography (separate discipline with different styling requirements)
- Industrial product documentation where technical accuracy overrides aesthetic standards