The Art of Food Photography
Monday, January 22nd, 2007Recipes from the episode: Ed’s Tangy Eggless Caesar Salad; Pear Bread; Canning Pears, raw pack
Director’s Journal
We’re surrounded by images through billboards, television, magazines, the internet…the list is long. And since food is a part of everyone’s life, in some form or another, many of those images are about food. Some are blah, some are tantalizing, and some go unnoticed. But the ones that do grab my eye make me wonder and I begin to dissect. Why did they choose that background, who designed the arrangement, how did get that cheese get to look so yummy, and the lighting, how was it lit? These questions lead me wondering exactly what is happening outside of that frame.
I visited a food photographer’s studio to find out for myself. And boy, was it an education.
The day I spent at Ed Gowans’s Studio, he was doing a shoot for the Pear Bureau Northwest. In my naiveté I thought everything was done by the photographer. Wrong. It is a team effort. Besides the photographer there is a food stylist, or two, and the client pulled up her sleeves and was involved also. Each food item was prepared from scratch on site. Everyone put their 2 cents in. They took as much time as was needed for each shot, and then moved on to the next. It was a full day.
I feel a kindred spirit with people like Ed and his team. They’re not just technicians, they’re artists. While there are so many images we are bombarded with daily, when it comes to images of beauty, art, there can never be enough.
—Rebecca









February 4th, 2007 at 2:10 pm
Rebecca,
You are a PHENOMENAL storyteller! Really, you stuff is SO watchable. Very, very smart TV.
This particulare episode combines two of my passions!
February 5th, 2007 at 8:40 am
Thanks, Jim.
As much as I love to do these stories, they really only matter when they connect with an audience. I’m glad that you like them.
Rebecca
February 8th, 2008 at 12:34 am
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