While reorganizing my image archives, I came across this photo from the days when I first started seriously learning architectural/interior photography. It is the atrium of the Eichler home of Catherine Munson (now deceased), who was a long-time real-estate agent based in Marin County, California, specializing in selling Eichler Homes. She started her career working as a hostess for Eichler Homes, at the open houses, and graduated to working as a sales agent for the company. I think the furnishings in Catherine's home illustrate how adaptable the homes are to a wide range of decor, even though the style of the homes themselves is quite modern. In fact, one thing Catherine became very good at, and which she developed while working for Eichler Homes, was helping prospective buyers to visualize what the homes could look like when furnished to suit the buyers' tastes.
This blog is primarily devoted to the techniques, business, art and aesthetics of photography, especially the genres of architectural, interiors and luxury real estate photography. If you arrived here looking for my photography portfolio website, you will find that at www.eichlerphoto.com. All images and writings on this blog are copyrighted material. No usage of this material may be made without my express, written permission.
Saturday, December 26, 2015
Wednesday, November 25, 2015
Lighting Interiors
Photographers who have little or no experience with interiors photography often ask about formulas for placement of supplementary lighting. For some genres of photography, such as portraiture, there are formulas that one can rely upon when using supplementary lighting. However, there are really no lighting formulas for interior photography, as far as placement of the lights and lighting ratios. It depends upon so many things: the kind and amount of equipment you have, the look you are after for the photo, the configuration of the room, the colors of all the major surfaces, the time of day, and so on. What one needs to understand mostly is how light works and what one's resources are as far as lights and light shaping equipment and materials. Most just dive in and gain that understanding intuitively with a lot of practice, but a book such as Light, Science and Magic might be of some help as a reference. It is really a matter of constant problem solving if one wants to do it well.
Monday, November 2, 2015
Love at First Sight
I just learned of a very interesting recent article related to real estate marketing in the Wall Street Journal: 20 Seconds to Love at First Sight.
The article is based on research done by Michael J. Sellar, Poornima Madhavan and Molly Liechty as presented in a paper entitled Toward an Understanding of Real Estate Homebuyer Internet Search Behavior: An Application of Ocular Tracking Technology (published in the Journal of Real Estate Research).
The gist of the article is that the first thing prospective home buyers look at when researching homes online is the lead photo, and that, on average, viewers will spend approximately 60% of their time looking at the photos. I think this information goes a long way toward explaining the importance of photos for marketing homes.
The article notes that the front exterior photo is often the lead photo in the series, and that seems justified in many cases, since the outward appearance of the home is often of great concern to homeowners and can say a lot about the general style and design of the home, and sometimes its location. However, the front exterior of the home does not always provide the most compelling subject matter for a photo, from the standpoint of really grabbing the viewer's attention. Sometimes the rear exterior will provide a more compelling view. Other times, the main interior space, usually the living room, will provide the most appealing and attention-grabbing photo, especially if the room is very well designed and furnished or has an impressive view.
I disagree somewhat with one point made in the article, that the photos should be sequenced to reflect how one moves through the house after entering the front door. While this kind of sequencing may be useful in some kinds of presentations, I think that, for media where prospective homebuyers will be viewing the photos for the first time, it is best to show the most visually impressive features of the home first, in order to hold the viewer's attention and inspire them to want to learn more about the home. Usually, the most visually impressive features will be the main exterior views and the main interior spaces such as the living room, family room, kitchen and master suite, and I think that it is these views that should receive the most attention in terms of staging and the quality of the photos, especially since they will be the most likely candidates for usage in print marketing materials.
Monday, October 19, 2015
Sunday, August 23, 2015
Sunday, August 2, 2015
Wednesday, July 29, 2015
Friday, July 17, 2015
Monday, June 29, 2015
Lens Variations
The performance of lenses of the same make and model can vary from one copy to another, sometimes considerably, due to manufacturing variations or use. Roger Cicala
at Lensrentals has written a nice, albeit, rather technical, article on the subject: Measuring Lens Variance
Friday, June 12, 2015
Recent Work
Recent real estate marketing photography for Kirk Mahncke/Alain Pinel Real Estate.
Recent residential construction by Urban West, LLC.
I always enjoy photographing Urban West projects. While these are nominally midrange "spec" homes, the quality of the design and the materials and fixtures they typically use puts these houses well above the norm for this general type of home. Also, they typically stage the homes very well.
Photographing new construction can be a challenge sometimes because completion schedules can be a moving target and I sometimes have to start photographing as the construction is just being finished, or even while construction is still going on.
In one case, I actually had to photograph a home (not an
Urban West project) while it was still undergoing construction, with a
full construction crew on site, before appliances had even been
installed and with blue electrical tape everywhere. The home had even
been partially staged despite all of this. This kind of
situation is not conducive to creating the best photos, but tight real
estate marketing schedules sometimes require such compromises.
Front Exterior |
Living Room |
Kitchen |
Stairs |
Master Bedroom |
Rear Deck |
Sunday, May 3, 2015
Thursday, April 30, 2015
Saturday, April 25, 2015
Monday, March 16, 2015
Eichler Homes on NPR
A nice, short piece on Eichler Homes on National Public Radio's (NPR) Morning Edition.
with-sunny-modern-homes-joseph-eichler-built-the-suburbs-in-style
with-sunny-modern-homes-joseph-eichler-built-the-suburbs-in-style
Saturday, March 7, 2015
Friday, January 30, 2015
Thursday, January 15, 2015
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