Bad photos kill sales. You could have the perfect item at the perfect price, but if your photos look like they were taken in a dark closet with a flip phone, no one's buying. Here's how to take product photos with your phone that actually make people click "buy."
Lighting Is Everything
Forget fancy cameras. Your phone is fine. But lighting? That's non-negotiable.
Natural Light > Everything Else
Take photos near a window during the day. Natural light makes colors accurate, shows details, and looks professional without any equipment.
Best setup: Stand near a window (not directly in front of it). Position your item so the light hits it from the side. This creates dimension without harsh shadows.
Avoid: Direct sunlight (too harsh, creates weird shadows). Overhead ceiling lights (makes everything look yellow/orange). Flash (washes out colors and looks terrible).
Cloudy Days Are Actually Better
Overcast days create soft, even light. No harsh shadows, no glare. If you're shooting by a window on a cloudy day, you're getting professional lighting for free.
Background Matters
Your item should be the focus. Not your messy bedroom, not your dog, not random clutter.
Best Backgrounds
- White wall: Clean, professional, makes colors pop. This is the standard for a reason.
- Plain floor or table: Hardwood, tile, or a clean table work. Just make sure there's no clutter.
- Neutral surface: Beige, gray, or light wood. Anything that doesn't distract from the item.
Backgrounds to Avoid
- Busy patterns (floral bedspreads, patterned rugs)
- Messy rooms (unmade bed in the background screams lazy)
- Grass or outdoor surfaces (unless selling outdoor gear, then it makes sense)
- Your bathroom mirror (please, no)
If you're selling clothing, hang it on a hanger against a white wall. Or lay it flat on a clean surface. Simple works.
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Show Multiple Angles
Take at least 4-5 photos per item:
- Photo 1: Main shot (front, full item)
- Photo 2: Back view
- Photo 3: Side or detail (brand tag, material close-up)
- Photo 4: Any flaws (stains, wear, scratches)
- Photo 5: Item in use or size reference (optional but helpful)
More photos = more trust. Buyers want to see what they're getting from every angle.
Fill the Frame
Don't take a photo where the item is a tiny dot in the corner. Get close. Make the item fill at least 70% of the frame.
Zoom in by moving closer, not by using digital zoom (which makes photos blurry).
Straight, Level Shots
Don't take photos at weird angles. Keep your phone level. If you're photographing flat items (like a t-shirt), shoot straight down. If it's a shoe, shoot from a slight angle to show dimension.
Use your phone's grid feature (turn it on in camera settings) to keep shots straight.
Show Flaws Honestly
This feels counterintuitive but it's critical: photograph any damage or flaws clearly.
Why? Because hiding flaws leads to returns, bad reviews, and wasted time. Buyers appreciate honesty. "Small stain on sleeve, shown in photo 4" builds trust.
How to photograph flaws:
- Take a close-up of the flaw in good lighting
- Use your finger or a coin for size reference if the flaw is small
- Mention the flaw in your listing description
You'll still sell it. You might price it $5 less, but you won't deal with angry buyers or return requests.
Phone Camera Tips
Clean Your Lens
Seriously. Wipe your phone's camera lens before taking photos. That smudge you don't notice makes all your photos look blurry and unprofessional.
Use Portrait Mode for Small Items
Portrait mode (or "bokeh" mode) blurs the background and focuses on your item. Great for small objects like shoes, bags, or electronics.
Don't Use Filters
Instagram filters lie about color and condition. Buyers want to see the real item. Natural photos build trust. Filtered photos look like you're hiding something.
Edit for Brightness, Not Beauty
It's okay to slightly adjust brightness or contrast if the photo is a bit dark. But don't change colors or smooth out textures. Show the item as it actually looks.
Category-Specific Tips
Clothing
- Hang it or lay flat: No crumpled piles. Iron or steam wrinkles first.
- Show the tag: Brand, size, material. Buyers want proof it's legit.
- Model it if possible: Items sell better when buyers can see fit. If you're the right size, wear it. Otherwise, flat lay works.
Shoes
- Side angle + bottom: Show the sole condition (this is where buyers check for wear)
- Inside tag: Proof of brand and size
- Both shoes: Don't just photograph one. Show the pair.
Electronics
- Power it on: Show it works. Take a photo of the screen on.
- Include all accessories: Cables, chargers, cases. Show what's included.
- Close-up of ports/buttons: Show condition, no damage.
Collectibles and Toys
- Show packaging: Box condition matters for collectibles. Photograph all sides.
- Item + box together: Prove it's complete.
- Close-ups of details: Paint chips, missing pieces, anything that affects value.
Common Photo Mistakes
Blurry photos: Hold your phone steady or prop it up. Tap the screen to focus before taking the shot.
Too dark: Shoot near a window during the day. Don't rely on lamps or overhead lights.
Messy background: Clean up before shooting. Takes 30 seconds, makes a huge difference.
Only one photo: Buyers won't trust a listing with one photo. Take at least 4-5.
Weird angles: Keep it simple. Straight-on shots, level camera, fill the frame.
Batch Your Photo Sessions
Don't photograph items one at a time. It's inefficient.
Set up once, shoot everything:
- Pick a spot near a window with a clean background
- Line up 10-15 items you need to list
- Photograph them all in one session (takes 30-45 minutes)
- Edit and upload later
This is way faster than setting up lighting every time you list a single item.
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