Food stylist The role of the food stylist is to make the food look attractive in the finished photograph. The time and effort a stylist takes to carefully and artfully arrange the food is due to differences between the way the stylist presents it and the way a home cook or chef may. Visual know-how is also a requirement, as is the knowledge of how to translate the perception of taste, aroma and appeal that one gets from an actual dish to a two-dimensional photograph. Food stylists have culinary training; some are professional
chefs or have a background in
home economics. In addition to knowledge of
nutrition and cooking techniques, food stylists must also be resourceful shoppers. The best-looking of the purchased items is selected and marked as the "hero", i.e., the item that will be featured in the photograph. During the setup and for test shoots, it is represented by a cardboard or lower-quality food item stand-in. The actual photography can take place in a
studio under controlled lighting conditions, or under
natural light. The light, background and setting is carefully prepared so as to present the food in as attractive a way as possible without distracting from it. The color and texture of the background is selected so as to effectively complement that of the food and to assist with its lighting. Styled food is usually marked as inedible and discarded after the shoot, because it may have been handled or treated in ways that make it unsafe for consumption. File:Kiwi (Actinidia chinensis) 1 Luc Viatour.jpg|A still life photograph of
Kiwifruit against a white background file:Tomatoes and other salad ingredients on wooden cutting board.jpg|A close-up of tomatoes with selective focus and a shallow angle File:Still Life Photography.jpg|A
shallow depth of field creates a
defocused effect to highlight a food product File:Pizza sequence.webm|thumbtime=8|alt=A sequence of silent closeups of food, separated by fade transitions. The room is apparently dark but the food is well illuminated at all times. A cook wipes their hand across a pile of flour on the table. They are squishing the dough. Tomato sauce is added to a pizza base. Nine bell peppers bounce along a tabletop, getting water all over it. A hand leaves a track of shredded cheese as it swipes over the pizza base. The top of an onion is cut off with a chef's knife. A slice of pepperoni is added to the base in line with some already present. A fully baked supreme pizza slides into view. Two extreme closeups of a pizza wheel cutting the pizza are shown. Strands of cheese form and break as a slice is removed from the steaming pizza.|A video montage for use in a pizza commercial
Cold beverages To create the effect of a thin layer of
condensation forming on the outside of glasses containing cold liquid,
dulling spray may be applied, with paper or
masking tape protecting the non-"frosted" areas. More pronounced condensation and
dew drops are imitated by spraying the glass with
corn syrup or
glycerin.
Ice cubes used in shoots are made of
acrylic, so they do not move or melt during the shoot, which may take place under hot studio lighting. Prior to the widespread availability of acrylic cubes starting in the 1970s and 1980s, glass ice cubes served the same purpose. Fresh-looking bubbles on the surface of drinks are created by applying a mixture of the drink and
detergent to the surface with an eyedropper. White
glue may be used in lieu of
milk,
Salads Salads in food photography are composed with a view to creating appealing textures, shapes and colors. To improve support and aid in composition, salad in a bowl is built around a smaller bowl placed inverted in the larger bowl. Salad greens are kept fresh and crisp by misting them with cold water prior to composition.
Salad dressing is not normally used, as it makes the salad slippery and difficult to style, but the appearance of dressing may be created by sprinkling herbs and spices over the wet salad, or mixing them in oil and applying it with a brush.
Fruit salads are particularly challenging to shoot because of the short time the fruit pieces, which are cut immediately prior to final photography, retain their appearance. As only the outer layer of the salad is of interest, the concealed interior of the salad bowl may be filled by
mashed potatoes or another mixture. Thick or heavy dressings do not photograph well; they are usually thinned and applied by brush.
Hamburgers and sandwiches Hamburger photography is challenging because the
buns dent easily and an assembled burger is quick to lose its visual appeal. When assembling the burger, the ingredients are held in place with toothpicks and the meaty interior of tomato slices is removed to avoid juice discoloring the ingredients. The meat
patties are superficially cooked, the edges browned with a torch and the meat made to look more appetizing with a colorant. The edges of melted cheese slices may be brushed with household cleaner to make them look freshly melted longer. Condiments such as mayonnaise are applied to the edges with an applicator bottle. Steam is normally used to suggest the burger is hot.
Sandwiches are assembled using similar techniques. Wet paper towels are used to prevent the bread from drying out. If a half sandwich is to be depicted, the bread and the components are individually sliced with scissors and assembled in place. Photographic portrayal of fast food has been subject to legal challenges for
false advertising.
Class-action lawsuit have been brought against fast-food chains
McDonald's,
Wendy's and
Taco Bell on grounds of
unfair and deceptive trade practices, alleging that photographs in marketing material depict food products larger than the items served to customers in real life. A similar lawsuit has also been proposed in 2023 against
Burger King, alleging that the company's photography depicts their
Whopper burger as 35% larger than in real life, with ingredients that "overflow over the bun". ==As a social media phenomenon==