Restaurant Menu Photography: A Practical Guide
Good food photos sell. But professional photography is expensive. This guide shows restaurant owners how to take better menu photos without a big budget.
Restaurant Menu Photography: A Practical Guide
A picture is worth a thousand words - and in restaurants, it's worth thousands of RON in additional orders. Studies consistently show that menu items with photos sell 25-30% more than those without.
But here's the challenge: professional food photography costs 500-2000 RON per dish. For a 50-item menu, that's a serious investment. This guide is for restaurant owners who want better photos without breaking the bank.
The Basic Setup
You don't need expensive equipment. You need good light and a clean background.
Lighting
Natural light is your friend. Find a window that gets indirect sunlight - direct sun creates harsh shadows.
Best conditions:
- Overcast days (nature's softbox)
- Early morning light (soft and warm)
- Late afternoon (golden hour)
Avoid:
- Direct midday sun
- Mixed lighting (daylight + fluorescent)
- Nighttime with only artificial light
If you must shoot at night or in a dark kitchen, invest in a basic LED panel (around 200 RON). Place it at 45 degrees to your dish, slightly above.
Background
Keep it simple. A clean wooden table, a solid-color surface, or a white plate on a neutral background works better than elaborate styling.
Good backgrounds you already have:
- Your actual tables (clear everything else)
- A clean cutting board
- Simple plates from your service
- Plain tablecloths
Bad backgrounds:
- Busy patterns
- Multiple props competing for attention
- Surfaces that reflect light weirdly
Camera Settings
Your smartphone is probably good enough. Modern phones have excellent cameras - the trick is using them properly.
Basic Phone Tips
- Clean your lens - seriously, it's probably smudged
- Use the main camera, not the ultra-wide
- Tap to focus on the food, not the background
- Lock exposure by holding your tap point
- Turn off flash - always
Portrait Mode
Portrait mode blurs the background, making your food the star. It works well for:
- Single dishes
- Plated presentations
- Hero shots for homepage/social
Skip portrait mode for:
- Group shots of multiple dishes
- Overhead flat lays
- Shots showing your restaurant interior
Editing
Every photo needs some editing. Your phone's built-in editor is fine.
Adjust:
- Brightness (+10-20%)
- Contrast (+5-15%)
- Saturation (+5-10%)
- Warmth (slightly warmer for cooked food)
Don't:
- Over-saturate (food shouldn't glow)
- Add filters that change colors dramatically
- Over-sharpen (creates weird halos)
Angles That Work
Different foods look best from different angles.
45-Degree Angle (Most Common)
Best for:
- Burgers and sandwiches
- Plated mains with height
- Drinks with garnishes
- Desserts with layers
This angle shows both the top and the side, giving dimension.
Overhead (Flat Lay)
Best for:
- Pizza
- Charcuterie boards
- Sushi platters
- Salads in bowls
- Breakfast spreads
Requires even lighting to avoid shadows. Works well near large windows.
Straight On (Eye Level)
Best for:
- Drinks (especially cocktails)
- Tall desserts
- Layered items (parfaits, trifles)
- Stacked items (pancakes, burgers)
Shows height and layers clearly.
Styling Tips
The goal is to make food look fresh and appetizing, not perfect.
Just-Cooked Look
Shoot immediately after plating. Food starts wilting, sauces start settling, steam disappears. You have maybe 5 minutes for the best shot.
If you're shooting multiple angles, have backup portions ready.
Garnish with Purpose
Garnishes should suggest ingredients or flavor:
- Fresh herbs for freshness
- Citrus for acidity
- Sauce drizzles for richness
Don't garnish with things that aren't in the dish or that you wouldn't eat.
Props (Use Sparingly)
A fork, a napkin, or a drink in the background can add context. But the food should be the focus.
Never:
- Include hands (unless you have a model)
- Show too much of the background
- Add props that dwarf the food
Specific Food Types
Pasta
- Twirl it on a fork for height
- Show sauce pooling slightly
- Fresh basil or parsley on top
- Shoot at 45 degrees
Burgers
- Insert toothpicks to hold everything together
- Show some filling peeking out
- Shoot at eye level or 45 degrees
- Include fries in frame but out of focus
Drinks
- Use fresh ice (it's clearer)
- Include condensation (looks refreshing)
- Garnish prominently
- Shoot straight on with background blur
Pizza
- Cut one slice and pull it slightly apart
- Show the cheese stretch if possible
- Overhead angle works best
- Include fresh toppings like basil after cutting
Salads
- Toss and shoot immediately (wilting is fast)
- Show color variety
- Overhead or 45 degrees
- Dressing on the side in shot, not drowning
Batch Shooting Day
Set aside 2-3 hours when the kitchen isn't busy. Plan your shots:
Before shooting:
- List priority items (bestsellers first)
- Prep all ingredients
- Set up your background and lighting
- Clean your phone lens
During shooting:
- Shoot each dish from multiple angles
- Take 10-15 shots per dish (you'll delete most)
- Review on a computer, not just your phone
- Make notes on what worked
After shooting:
- Edit your best 2-3 shots per dish
- Resize for web (1200px wide is usually enough)
- Compress files (TinyPNG or similar)
- Back everything up
Common Mistakes
- Not enough light - 90% of bad food photos are too dark
- Cluttered backgrounds - Keep focus on the food
- Wrong white balance - Food shouldn't look blue or orange
- Waiting too long - Shoot fast, food dies quickly
- Over-editing - If it looks "Instagram filtered," you've gone too far
- Inconsistent style - Your menu photos should look like a collection
When to Hire a Pro
Some situations warrant professional photography:
- Opening or major rebrand
- Signature dishes for advertising
- Seasonal campaign shoots
- If you truly can't get decent shots yourself
For a 50-item menu, consider:
- Hiring a pro for your top 10-15 items
- Shooting simpler items yourself
- Updating professional shots annually
The 80/20 Rule
Not every menu item needs a photo. Focus on:
- High-margin items you want to sell more
- Signature dishes that define your brand
- Items that benefit most from visualization
- New additions you're promoting
Items that often don't need photos:
- Sides and add-ons
- Simple desserts (ice cream, etc.)
- Basic drinks
- Items with low margin
Put your effort where it has the most impact.
Need a digital menu that showcases your food photography? Menute is built for visual menus.