From recent Real Estate shots, including twilight images
Images for a recent Real Estate shoot shoot, including some twilight images.
Thanks to Lance and Joel.
Images for a recent Real Estate shoot shoot, including some twilight images.
Thanks to Lance and Joel.
Providing high quality, enticing photographs that are not misleading or disappointing is the primary responsibility of real estate photographers. My job is to accurately but flatteringly present the house and property to the potential buyer, to attract those who will be attracted to this property instead of turning them off. And stimulate them to call the agent.
Real estate photographers are challenged to motivate home buyers or renters to visit a property in person, but not to disappoint those visitors on site. When home buyers are disappointed because the photographs were largely misleading, it reflects poorly on the listing agent or owner.
Real estate photography requires digital adjustments, and those tweaks can be an area of ethical concern.
Real estate photographers should not modify images of properties such that the images no longer truthfully and fairly represent that property. In particular permanent physical features of the property should not be modified. On the other hand, real estate images are intended for marketing purposes and therefore present the property in the very best way possible. So image enhancements that do not materially change permanent physical characteristics of the house or surrounding environment are considered standard practice.
Some people say that any Photoshopping of an image was misrepresentation. WRONG: NOT using Photoshopping is a misrepresentation, with most photos taken with an iPhone or Point and Shoot camera misrepresenting the property. Essentially, no camera/film/sensor, not matter how good it is, has been created yet that comes close to camera known as the eyes and brain and it takes Photoshop to correct and bring close to eyes/brain. Cameras blow out windows with correct exposed rooms or show windows in dark dungeon like rooms that the eye/brain adjust the dynamic range automatically. Similarly, slanting walls, cabinets, doors, windows misrepresents a perfectly sound home as structurally unsound where the eye/brain automatically make the correction. Some may contend that “people know” the walls are not actually slanted, at which point I reply: “3 seconds in Photoshop/Lightroom will correct that (I’m not joking). Are you not willing to invest 3 seconds in your client?”
A photo is, right from the start, a misrepresentation of reality, being a two dimensional representation or you could say interpretation of anything, especially a house and grounds. Different lenses will represent the house and grounds in different levels of distortion making closer features larger in proportion to those further away; they can change the feeling of room proportions and size; colour can be changed by the camera itself depending on its ability to judge the colour balance of the light and render the colours inherent in the dyes of fabric and colours in the paint. For example, if the camera has rendered a pink rendered wall as orange in a pre-sunset light, is it wrong to manipulate the photograph to bring it back to pink, which is the correct colour but not the colour captured by the sensor? The colour balance of daylight is different at different times of day and different weather conditions, so is it wrong to bring that into line? Your eye and brain automatically corrects colour, but the camera records it accurately. Indoor light globes are generally warmer in tone than daylight. That produces an inviting warm tone, but it seldom match nicely with cooler outdoor natural lighting. Plus indoor light vary in colour temperature between different types of globes, and sometimes within the one room. Correcting the colour balance to make the house realistic is essential.
Removing permanent structures such as power lines or neighbouring houses is widely considered unethical. I can work around visual obstacles in order to best present the property. HOWEVER, you must understand that deliberately hiding an item that you know would probably be unappealing to a potential purchaser is unethical. As soon as they actually visit the property, all will be revealed. What do you think that person will do if they feel that they have been deceived?
The listing agent ultimately has the responsibility for all aspects of the presentation of the home for sale and in the worst case they probably risk more than just their reputation.
Enhancing the existing appeal of a property is my main goal for each photo shoot. Shooting rooms from pleasing perspectives, adjusting lighting, correcting white washed or blown out windows are examples of ways that the property photos can ethically be improved. If enhancing the existing appeal of a property means making adjustments on temporary or non-permanent aspects of the property, image editing is generally accepted.
Notes:
Samples from recent real estate property photo shoots.
Watch my walk-through video of a stunning pavilion home in Palm Cove.