Great Food Photos

Great Food Photos: Melissa Camero Ainslie

Melissa Camero

I have known Mel since 2003, we met in graduate school. I've been lucky enough to try some of her cooking, Thanksgiving 2004 bacon wrapped turkey with apricot jam and homemade apple pie YUM. Yes I still remember and yes she gave me the recipe. But now that she's far far away in Florida all I can do is look at her food photos. *Sigh Recently she was nominated for Best Food Photography by Saveur.

Here's what she said about her food photos and her process. Thanks Mel!!

I'm trying to make people's mouths water. If I'm photographing a brownie, I want to capture the crumbs, the chocolate and the fudginess. If it's soup, it should look warm and inviting and homey, preferably with a little steam rising up.

Usually, I cook in the morning. It's when I get the best natural light from the balcony. I have an older Canon Rebel with a cheapo 50mm lens on it - I just use that and whatever pretty plate I have around. Take lots of pictures from lots of different angles. After that, I pick the best 1 or 2, edit them a little in Lightroom (usually just some color correcting and cropping) and post. I try not to think too hard about the setting since I prefer when the pictures don't look so "posed".

Melissa Camero
Melissa Camero
Melissa Camero
Melissa Camero

Great Food Photos: Bonnie Tsang

Yes, I am featuring my sister, Bonnie Tsang, today. She really is the one that kind of pushed me to take better photos. When she got her first DSLR I was jealous hahaaa so I ended up getting one myself! Sometimes we would go to restaurants together and both take photos. But damn, somehow her photos are always better. I asked her, when she is at a restaurant, what is she trying to capture? "When I shoot photos at a restaurant I think about how to improve my skill, I'd play around with different settings. What am I trying to capture? Just my time with the loved ones that share a meal with me."

Bonnie Tsang