The importance of a good booth picture
How important is the booth photo? Besides the artwork images, the booth image can easily make or break an artist’s career doing art shows by keeping you out of even the shows that are considered easy to get into. Some artists spend a great deal of money having their artwork photographed but don’t even think of improving their booth picture until they start an application, if they even think about it at all. Like the art images, the booth image needs to be read easily without causing the jurors to spend even an extra second understanding exactly what they’re seeing. They should glance at it, consider it professional looking, and then spend their time evaluating your artwork images. For the shows that project the images, the jurors are seeing all the images simultaneously for not more than 20 seconds and sometimes closer to 10 seconds. If you don’t think that the booth image is that important, attend an open jury and view your competitor’s images, or attend a mock (image evaluation) jury and listen to the critiques of the jurors.

Tips on how to take a good booth image
The best place to photograph your booth is not at an art show where you don’t have control over the environment or the weather. It’s better to set it up for the picture at home on an overcast or cloudy day so there is even lighting and no sun streaks which might draw the juror’s eyes. Make sure not to have any signs, identification, ribbons and especially no people in the booth picture. I’ve seen booth pictures with so many people in the booth that you couldn’t tell what they were selling. When asked why, the artist told me that they thought to have a better chance of getting in if their artwork was popular. I’ve also seen pictures of an empty canopy because the artist didn’t understand that they actually had to show their artwork in the booth picture.

Setting the booth up
The canopy must be white and all three walls need to be seen in the picture. The sides of the canopy need to be in place so there is nothing distracting showing through the booth to draw the juror’s eyes. You can shoot two walls from a corner but still need to see along the third wall to satisfy the three walled booth picture requirement. The last thing you want is to be forced to create different booth pictures for each application. The floor must be clean of debris and leaves or put down a carpet.

Arranging the artwork
If you’re photographing 2D work it’s best to take the glass out of the frames to eliminate reflections before shooting. If you have multiple pieces on each wall, line up the tops of pieces on the top row so they are all at the same top height around the booth. It makes the booth look more professional and enables the juror’s eyes to flow. And a symmetrical looking booth reads easier and looks more professional. If you use bins to display unframed art, make sure to include bin(s) in the booth picture. The booth picture needs to be representative of how your booth will look at a show. If you’re photographing 3D work and are using tables, consider hanging large photographs of your pieces to take up wall space and make the booth look fuller. Think of it as a way to show the jurors additional jury images. If you use tables with covers, make sure the covers are wrinkle free. Consider using pedestals or desks from Pro Panels or Armstrong Display. Or at least raise your table height to approximately 40 inches. If possible, don’t have objects overlapping from the camera position and make sure everything in the booth faces the camera. Consider the camera position as the juror’s perspective, not how you normally set up the booth. If your booth contains mirrors, make sure that they aren’t a source of distraction when the booth is viewed by the jurors. If your mirrors are for people to see themselves when trying on accessories or clothing, remove the mirrors from the booth prior to taking the picture. If you’re selling mirrors as part of your artwork, either position them to control what they reflect or (what I do in the booth pictures I edit) use Photoshop to drop a gradual gradient onto the glass.

Setting the camera
Use a tripod. It eliminates camera movement and it’s the only way to check object placement from the camera angle before you shoot. Follow these basic suggestions on how to set your camera for maximum image quality. Lowest ISO and stop down the lens for maximum depth of field using either Aperture Priority or Manual exposure settings. The tripod will compensate for the longer shutter speed. If possible set your camera to Auto Bracket at one stop intervals. That will give you three exposures for each picture, one lighter, one darker and one what the built in meter thinks as accurate. When using Auto Bracketing, some cameras require taking three pictures and some automatically take three each time you release the shutter. Slightly darker images edit better than lighter images. It’s easier to bring out detail in the darker areas than to put detail back into areas that are too bright.

Taking the picture
Do not use a cell phone camera. They loose detail in the highlights which can’t be recovered. Understand that no matter what camera you use, your image will still need editing for it to be accurate. Shoot wider than the canopy so the walls can be squared up before the image is cropped. Shoot the back and right wall seeing along the left wall to satisfy the three wall booth rule. The back and right wall booth picture acts as a right hand book end in your image set when the images are projected. That makes it a natural movement for the jurors eyes to flow back into your image set. Leaving the tripod in position, take the memory card out and pull the images up on the computer. Take note of everything that can be changed to improve the picture. Go out and make the changes, shoot again and check again on the computer. If you’re working remotely with a friend or consultant, ask for feedback by sending the pictures while you’re shooting, not after you break the booth down.

How I shoot a booth picture
I prefer to set up my tripod so that the camera sits approximately 56 inches from the ground. I use a camera with a 28mm wide angle lens. If leveled properly, there is no distortion. And using 28mm, I can shoot from a short distance in front of the booth, especially useful if it’s at a show with narrow isles. I also carry something that can be held over the lens (which acts like a lens hood) to prevent stray light from hitting it and causing flare in the picture.

Summary
A good display picture is not easy and it takes time to get it right. If the jurors are distracted and waste even a second or two noticing something out of place, you might be losing 10% of the time they are looking at your work. Be careful of an overly bright white canopy because it’s human nature that our eyes are drawn to the brightest part of an image or brightest image in a presentation. Crop most of the white canopy top off and crop in tight on the sides. They only need to know that it’s an outdoor picture under a white canopy and need not see the entire top to understand.

I edit at least two or three booth pictures each week and photograph booth pictures at my house all year around. I also attend shows in the Pittsburgh area and photograph booths. Call me (412-401-8100) to make arrangements if you want your booth photographed at Three Rivers, Fair in the Park or the Howard Alan Shadyside shows. And please call me if you have any questions.

To see example booth images, check out the article on my web site:
http://bermangraphics.com/blog/photograph-your-booth/

Larry Berman
http://BermanGraphics.com
412-401-8100

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  • Thank you!  My photographer does an excellent job but lives 50? miles away plus my work changes.  It would help if I could update my booth shot more often.

    • Why can't you do your own booth picture and send it to your photographer to edit. Or send it to me to edit. I do that with hundreds of artists. I have them send me the first picture while the booth is still set up and I go over what needs to be changed, from placement to camera angle. Then we go back and forth until the booth picture is as good as it can be.

      Larry Berman
      http://BermanGraphics.com
      412-401-8100

      • I would love to do that.  Probably later in the year, though, since I'm just starting a string of shows.  I do have Elements and do a limited amount of photo editing, just for product photos for my website, not jury images.  I sent some images to my photographer a few years ago to edit, but they still weren't up to the amazing quality of when he takes the shots.

  • Thanks again Larry. 

  • Yes, very fine article indeed.

    A note about lens selection and focal length: Larry mentions using a 28mm lens which is considered wide angle. A normal focal length lens is 50-60mm. But digital cameras are not the same as older 35mm film type cameras. So the digital cameras employ sensors in them instead of film to record images. More expensive cameras like the one Larry uses employ bigger sensors that are considered full-frame. Lesser expensive cameras employ smaller sensors. Using the full-frame sensor camera, the 28mm lens remains just that, a wide angle lens that will record an image with that angle of view. The smaller sensor cameras will not record that wide an angle of view, but rather a cropped angle of view. So the lens factor becomes 1.5 times the mm of the lens on the smaller sensor cameras, thus making a 28mm be 28 x 1.5, or 42mm. To achieve the wide angle of view with the smaller sensor camera, you'll need to use 18mm focal length since 18 x 1.5 is 27.

  • Larry,

    Great words here as always.  I've heard you address the issue I face previsouly, but can't remember the suggested solution.  I frame all of my photography in antique windows with original glass.  Removing the glass for a booth shot is not possible so the reflections are killer.  What do you recommend in this situation?  Is it acceptable to photoshop the images back into the frames in post processing or do judges frown on that?  Thanks,

    Donald

    • Absolutely Photoshop the images back in over the same images showing reflections. If you can't get professional results, I can do it for you. It's something I've been doing for artists and photographers for years. When shows say "no Photoshopped booths", they mean no booths created in Photoshop because they don't look real.

      Larry Berman

  • excellent article. Thanks for posting! I admit my booth image is the weakest link for me.

  • Larry

    Nice article, thanks. My work is constantly changing, new designs, new product, etc. Is it important that all your image photos are also in your booth image. Also, how often do you need to do new booth shots?

    • Artists with one of a kind work shouldn't be concerned if their current jury images are in the booth picture. Booth pictures are taken 6 months to a year in advance and work is expected to sell. The art work in the booth picture should be representative of the art work you bring to the show and even the individual art images, which are taken much more frequently than a booth photo is taken.

      Larry Berman
      http://BermanGraphics.com
      412-401-8100

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