25 Food Photography Lessons You May Have Missed

interviewsIn last several months, we have interviewed many many food photography and food styling experts. Each of these 60 min interviews are full with lot of great lessons from these experts. With about 25 interviews of about 60 min each, we have 25 hours worth of food photography tutorials for free… right here on this blog. Here are some details…

You can go to the interview page to listen to these 25 interviews. I hope you learn a lot about food photography from these interviews.

We interview some absolutely amazing artists. From the legend and Yoda of photography David duChemin to Chief Food Stylist from Cooking Magazine, some great photographers and stylists have shared their expertise with LFP readers here. And if you haven’t heard these interviews, below are some food photography interviews that you may have missed.

Food Photography Interviews That You May Have Missed

 

Apart from the ones mentioned above, have you listened to the most popular food photography interviews? From Penny De Los Santos to Matt Armendariz. Food Bloggers like Souvlaki for the Soul to New York Food Photographer Andrew Scrivani. We had great opportunities to interview food photographers and stylists that are at the top of their game.

Don’t miss these food photography interviews.

Most Popular Food Photography Interviews

 

Who Should We Interview Next?

As we start our next round of interviews, who should we interview? Share who would you like to learn from in the comment section below. Don’t miss this opportunity. Give your feedback below.

Photo by derekGavey

Comments

  1. Thank you Neel. This post is great. I listen to the interviews while I am at work.

  2. Excellent Neil! You’ve packed a lot of great resources into this post. This will probably be very helpful to me. Thanks

  3. i am very excited about that interview but i can’t attend this . But i read this article with concentrate and i really appreciate with it .Thanks u very much

  4. I think a food stylist works like a freelance make up artist. It is like putting on make up on the foods, making look better on camera than they actually do. Since they sometimes resort to visual tricks like this, I often compare them to putting make up on women to make them look different.

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