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I was about to go to bed when I realized a great show on display from my balcony. Snapped on my 70-200mm and fired away while I enjoyed the show for two hours:)

In album Spain landscapes (1 bilde)

Great lightshow in the Mediterranean Sea II

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I was about to go to bed when I realized a great show on display from my balcony. Snapped on my 70-200mm and fired away while I enjoyed the show for two hours:)

In album Spain landscapes (1 bilde)

Great lightshow in the Mediterranean Sea.

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From a photoshoot I did at my parents newly renovated townhouse last weekend!

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Interior shots from a newly renovated townhouse
From a photoshoot in a newly renovated townhouse in the Los Olivos area of Calahonda, Mijas, Spain. The property has come out really nice and shows a fresh and modern style, with great location only a few minutes from the beach and all amenities like bars, cafes etc..

See the whole image set at http://foto-residencia.es/portfolio/calahonda-los-olivis-townhouse/

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I can see why this image won 3rd place in the genre of Story telling.
It´s truly magnificent capture of a horrible situation.
Pictureoftheyearstory-3rd 8

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From a photoshoot I did in Spain last week.

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Photoshoot in Estepona, Marbella, Spain
Images from an apartment in the private wing of the Kempinski Hotel in Estepona, Marbella. The beauty is that you get the privacy of an apartment, yet still, all the features and services of a hotel.

Also, check out our other shoots from other objects at http://foto-residencia.es/portfolio/

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Estepona – Apartment

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An HDR processed photo from a photoshoot I did at the Kempinsky Hotel in Marbella, Spain, yesterday. I´ve worked the file to look as natural as possible and am quite pleased with the result. What do you think of the result?

In album Real Estate / Interior samples (1 bilde)

Part of the lobby at Kempinsky Hotel, Marbella, Spain.

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From the Spanish streets…

In album Street Photography (1 bilde)

A young boy watching an older boy approaching (shadow) while eating his ice cream on the porch.

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Visually showing the benefits of using a professional real estate photographer when selling your home. A small cost and a huge benefit for your marketing.

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Why use us?

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Inviso Nybygg & Næring åpner portfolioen
Norges mest komplette leverandør av markedsmateriell og tjenester for eiendomsbransjen! Nå åpner vi portfolio´en – bli med inn…

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Inviso Nybygg & Næring
Norges mest komplette leverandør av markedsmateriell og tjenester for eiendomsbransjen! Nå åpner vi portfolio´en – bli med inn… Inviso Nybygg & Næring er stolte av å representere en stadig størr…

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Photos from a rather fun shoot I did this week!

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Great villa in La Quinta, Marbella
Photos from this weeks shoot in a villa in La Quinta, Marbella, Spain. This is a huge house featuring 5 bedrooms, 4 bathrooms, huge livingroom spae with 3 separate sitting areas, private pool, great views and a garage with space for several cars. We enjoyed every bit of documenting this fabilous home.

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La Quinta – Villa

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An apartment I shot for a client this week.

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Spaceous 3 bedroom apartment in Calahonda
A great looking apartment we shot for Innovative Property S.L. in the hills of Calahonda, Spain, this week.

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Calahonda – Apartment

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This image of a young boy at the playground got me thinking about how things used to be. More precise, how I used to be, or at least think I was…

Recently I´ve had more time to myself than I´ve had for the last 15 years in total. Time I´ve craved to get and I finally got it. But what do I do with all this time?

The last few years have been swamped with a lot of work, before that, studying, hanging out with friends, partying, doing sports etc… The intensity and tempo of it all has just kept increasing until I finally made a decision to take a step down, focus more on my family and get more time to myself for a while.

Yesterday I had a couple of hours to myself, grabbed a book, made a cup of tea, sat down at my balcony by the ocean (in Spain) and planned to relax and have a good read about Keith Richards´ drug escapades during the 60´s and 70´s. The ease lasted about 2 minutes until I found myself restless and "guilty" for not doing anything… Why is that?

My hypothesis is that the tempo of my life, leading up to todays events, has steadily increased all the way and formed a "new me" over the years. I can´t complain, I´m really satisfied with where life has taken me and the merits I´ve achieved, on the other hand I really admire people around that aren´t affected by everyday stress like I am. They seem to be more comfortable with their situation and enjoys the momentum of each and every day in a way I´m not able to… I think that´s it! I want to enjoy today for what it´s worth and not always look forward to what I want to do tomorrow.

I have perfect opportunity right now, with more time on my hand and my family around me in a foreign country, living in great apartment with prime location on the beach. Let´s enjoy every day, no matter what the events.

Wish you a great day folks!

In album Street Photography (1 bilde)

Young boy at the playground

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er”>+Hector Hurtado says here. I´m one of those sitting on to many external disks, mostly holding crap photos. On the other hand, going back a couple of years in my archives, has enabled me to find some great images I just didn´t see the potential in at the time being. I like to think that my view on photos has evolved and is now enabled to see things I didn´t when the image was shot, or that the image just needed time to grow on me. If it is a great image or not, I can´t tell for sure, but as long as it feels great to me, I´m happy.

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Be more strict with your selection process

Follows an article telling the tale of magazine editors who cannot afford to spend more than 1 sec per pic during selection process. It's either good, has potential, or bad. Then, all pics not used go to the trash — in my case, the trash is delete, for others it will be archives or heaps of hard disks, fair enough. I would still recommend to upload to your computer to visualize the pictures full screen — do not trust a tiny camera's LCD only.

Let's be honest. It's fairly easy to detect the great pictures from the mediocre ones. I know, I know, retouching might save them… Now consider what retouching will do to the already great ones ;)

When it comes to storage, photographic or other, I like to keep a Zen attitude: reduce clutter. If the item was so amazing, you would have used it already. If not, get rid of it. Think you might regret? So what. If you truly do, you will make it happen again. Make impermanence the permanent law.

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Eamon Hickey – "Sports Illustrated Workflow"
Sports Illustrated's Digital Workflow. Steve Fine is looking at two pictures every second. He's been keeping up that pace, with frequent short interruptions, for over four hours, and he'll…

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Shot for a client through my Spanish establishment, +Foto de la Residencia and happens to by just above the apartment we live in:)

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Very nice penthouse apartment on the beach
An exclusive penthouse we shot last week for a client real estate agent. Located in Carvajal, Fuengirola, Spain and practically on the beach.

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Carvajal – Penthouse

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Jumping the gun on the D800

Since my post last night here on G+, and on my blog today, I've seen a lot of comments flowing in pro and con about this camera, and I just want to say a quick few things about the comments I've been reading:

(1) The D800 was apparently created for a very specific type of photographer. There is no law that every camera introduced by a camera company has to be designed to fit your personal needs. If you read that it has 36.3 megapixels and you're like "36.3 megapixels is overkill!!!" then obviously this camera isn't for you, but that doesn't mean there aren't photographers out there who read that spec and cheered! (Me being on of them). It looks like this was designed for commercial photographers, and wedding and landscape shooters that want to be using a camera with Medium-Format type resolution without the medium-format price. If that's not you, that's OK. Nikon makes other camera models for you.

(2) The D800 doesn't appear to be designed for sports or action photographers (like the D700 was). In fact, it looks like the D800 is an entirely different camera intended for an entirely different market, which is why it only shoots 4/fps (which for a camera with that high a resolution is actually very fast. If you've ever shot a medium-format camera, this is blazing!!!).

(3) The D700 was kind of a stripped down version of the D3, but the D800 doesn't seem to be a stripped down D4 on any level (even though the name D800 alone would make us think otherwise). I wish Nikon had given it a different name just to make a more obvious break with the D700 line, and I really hope Nikon does introduce a stripped down version of the D4, because I always thought the D700 had an important place in their product line that a lot of people really benefitted from (I have a D700 myself).

(4) This is the most important one: the camera isn't shipping yet, and there are only literally a handful of people in the entire world that have even taken one single frame with this camera. Instead of rushing to judge this camera and exclaim why it's not for you, instead why don't we wait until we actually see one with our own eyes, hold one in our hands, and in person see a print from it and what it can do? I know, that sounds crazy but why don't we actually use one before we decide anything?

I know that from the specs alone, and from what I've read, and a personal account from one of the few people that did shoot one —- I want one, and I'm pre-ordering mine from B&H Photo this morning (they're taking pre-orders here: http://bhpho.to/zJsYDU). But just this once, why don't we actually see, hold, and experience the product for at least 60-seconds before we tell the world why it's not for us. You never know, this type of "try it before you trash it" thing might actually catch on. ;-)

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Townhouse shot by me for a real estate client last week.

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Cozy townhouse in Campo Mijas, Costa del Sol, Spain
These images are from a nice three bedroom townhouse in a quiet area just outside Fuengirola called Campo Mijas. All photos shot by photographer +Thomas Russ Arnestad of +Foto de la Residencia.

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Campo Mijas – Townhouse

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New page added to the website; showing the gains of quality by using a professional of real estate photographer…

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Why use us?
Foto de la Residencia. Makes selling easier · Home · About · Prices · Why use us? Order photoshoot · Portfolio · Contact · FAQ · Prepare for the photoshoot. Copyright © 2011 by Thomas Russ Arnestad.

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La Cala Hills Apartment
Photos from a photoshoot in La Cala Hills, Costa del Sol, Spain. A lovely two bedroom apartment featuring two large balconies and private pool area. Shot by photographer +Thomas Russ Arnestad of +Arnestad Photography.

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La Cala Hills – Apartment

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Beachwalking the dog + iPhone = Cliché images :)

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Photoshoot in Calahonda, Spain
Photos done for real estate agent selling this detached townhouse in Calahonda, Spain.

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Calahonda – Townhouse

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Landscapes from Spain…

In album Spain landscapes (26 bilder)

Fuengirola by night….

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Jan 262012
 

In album Real Estate / Interior samples (30 bilder)

Staircase in Marbella, Spain

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Pictures from yesterdays photoshoot in Marbella.

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Photoshoot in Marbella, Spain
Yesterday I went on a cool photoshoot with some nice clients to shoot a penthouse apartment in Marbella. It was great to be out shooting again and here you can see the results from the shoot at my website.

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Marbella – Penthouse

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Many good tips for photographers on how to create success through social media!

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Social Media for Photographers | PhotoShelter
Learn how to improve your business by leveraging social media tools like Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Blogs and more. Free downloadable PDF.

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Some samples of more to come from the streets of Fuengirola in Spain. For the first time since I came down here, I got some hours just walking the streets of my new hometown and it´s exciting exploring it through the lens.

Can´t wait to get out there again!

In album Street Photography (15 bilder)

Building wall with and old furnished feel to it. Captured in Fuengirola, Spain.

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A few landscapes from the last week in Spain.

In album Spain landscapes (23 bilder)

Seascapes from Fuengirola, Spain.

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The album features shots captured in Gibraltar. A small British overseas territory along the south coast of Spain. It´s weird being in Spain, suddenly driving over the border and seeing policemen dressed like in England, having to trade your Euros for Pounds etc, funny because you´re not near "normal" British territory, by any means.

We went there to take our kids to the top of the Rock of Gibraltar, seeing the monkeys. That was certainly the highlight of the trip, the rest of the city didn´t charm me at all. It did on the other hand seem to have lots of photographic potential so I will be going there again when I´m in that area.

About Gibraltar
Gibraltar is a British overseas territory located on the southern end of the Iberian Peninsula at the entrance of the Mediterranean. A peninsula with an area of 6.843 square kilometres (2.642 sq mi), it has a northern border with Andalusia, Spain. The Rock of Gibraltar is the major landmark of the region. At its foot is the densely populated city area, home to almost 30,000 Gibraltarians and other nationalities.
An Anglo-Dutch force captured Gibraltar from Spain in 1704 during the War of the Spanish Succession. The territory was subsequently ceded to Britain "in perpetuity" under the Treaty of Utrecht in 1713. It was an important base for the Royal Navy; today its economy is based largely on tourism, financial services, and shipping.
The sovereignty of Gibraltar is a major point of contention in Anglo-Spanish relations as Spain asserts a claim to the territory. Gibraltarians rejected proposals for Spanish sovereignty in a 1967 referendum and again in 2002. Under Gibraltar constitution of 2006, Gibraltar governs its own affairs, though some powers, such as defence and foreign relations, remain the responsibility of the UK Government.

In album Gibraltar (14 bilder)

The classic Rock of Gibraltar image…

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New photo theme – #FoggyFriday is on the rise
I see that some people have already posted with this tag, however no one seems to have claimed it yet (at least from what I´ve seen). Please correct me if I´m wrong. Hence, I hereby take upon the responsebility of curating it from here on.

Feel free to post your images with the tag #FoggyFriday :)

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This new book function looks pretty neat as well! At least for all of us not into InDesign… I´m definitely going to make some of those collections/books now that I´ve always said I will from a lot of trips. Save them for iPad and stuff, just makes it easier to turn your photos into something you view from time to time and not just hiding them away in the archive along with the other 100´s of 1000´s :)

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The new sliders and added function to the local adjustment tools are going to give you so much better control of your LR editing!

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If people want my opinion on a photo I´m straight forward with offering the thoughts that come to my mind.

I´m usually very clear about that these are my thoughts only, take it in or not, but here they are. Many other people will, most probably, see the same photo in many different ways, but that´s just the beauty of photography. People look at a photo through their own eyes, with their own knowledge and past experiences, and thereby form their own meaning.

I also think it´s interesting showing my images to all different kinds of people, without any photographic knowledge. I get a sincere feedback not affected by all the "geeky" stuff we photographers, some times, tend to care too much:)

Reshared post from +Lisa Bettany

Learning to critique your own photos & ignoring the trolls.

I get a lot of emails from people asking me to critique their photos. While I'm always happy to help guide new photographers in the right direction, it’s up to you to learn how to critique your own photos.

Photography is art and the judgement of art is relative. I prefer photographs that are “pretty” with bright colours, beautiful models, sunsets, magic hour light, and bokeh. If you presented me with a photo of a gorgeous model on a beach with warm glowing light and a pile of stunning bokeh, I’d totally fave it. But that is just me and what I like. Some people think my style of photography is trite and unrealistic, preferring raw, gritty black and white images of street scenes.

Almost anyone can tell you whether a photograph is composed and exposed well, but does it capture a meaningful moment, does it say something about the world, does it present a new concept or change the way I feel someone feels about a subject? It’s up to you to decide what your answers and and present them in your own personal photographic style.

Once you’ve decided on a style, don’t let anyone shake your vision. People will inevitably disagree with your style, say mean things about your photos, and tell you how your photos would be much better if you did things their way. I get feedback like this almost daily. Almost every photographer I know, even the amazing, +Trey Ratcliff does. Unless someone I really respect gives me meaningful criticism, I ignore the noise.

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My own contribution to the #FoggyFriday theme curated by myself:)

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In album #FoggyFriday (1 bilde)

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Please read this very useful guide and follow it to get the photos into the +FoggyFriday page albums.

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How to Tag you Photographs for G+ Pages

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apper”>+Julia Anna Gospodarou. Thanks to +Pierre Rodriguez for sharing a great list of themes at https://plus.google.com/u/0/103787580098002291418/posts/SRTVjeL5F8i

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The Foto de la Residencia website in finally done
The website www.foto-residencia.es is finally up and running, clients are in progress and more meetings are booked in the weeks to come.

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Photo packages available at Foto-Residencia.es
These are the available photo packages from Foto de la Residencia.

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Portfolio images by Foto de la Residencia. Captured by photographer +Thomas Russ Arnestad

In album Portfolio (21 bilder)

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Contribution to the #TransportTuesday curated by +Gene Bowker and also the #TonemapHDRTuesday curated by +Drew Pion & +Stephanie Suratos.

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If you´re an active "theme poster" like me you would like your images to be found easily in the intended group/theme. Read this guide to get better organized when posting to a theme that has already set up its own page at G+.

I will be re-posting this when +FoggyFriday is around later this week!

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How to Tag you Photographs for G+ Pages

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Make sure to add the official #FoggyFriday theme page to your circles to get all the great images posted every week.

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FoggyFriday
The official theme page for #FoggyFriday

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A reminder to you all that it´s once again Friday! You´re very welcome to post your foggy photos under the #FoggyFriday theme, please refer to +Thomas Russ Arnestad as the curator:)

Looking forward to see what you bring to the table today!

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Re-sharing my most read post from 2011 to all new readers!

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The 10 essentials of real estate photography
Many people here at G+ have approached me, asking for help on how to successfully start doing real estate photography. After giving it some thought I´ve written up a short guide, which most certainly is not complete, but will take one step further. These are only my thoughts on the topic; others can disagree and be teaching other approaches and I´m not in any position to say which approach is the best, I can only offer the knowledge I´ve inherited through experience.

Mastering real estate photography comes with a lot of training. Through training you will develop routines; routines will make you efficient and through efficiency you are able to make a decent income. Tthis will of course vary across the globe as the markets within this niche differs greatly.

1. What gear do you need?
Like all other kinds of photography gear is always a great object of conversation. In my mind, gear is only tools enabling a connection of the photographers mind, knowledge and ideas, to the output product. Better gear can certainly help you a fair bit, but you won´t capture great photography without the knowledge about how to use your gear.

- SLR camera; you will need the options available to a SLR.
- Lenses; Wide angle lens is a necessity, I use a 16-35mm on a full frame camera being able to capture all kinds of rooms. I also prefer to have a standard zoom lens with low aperture value to get some nice details shots when needed. I use a 70-200mm f/2.8 with stabilizer.
- Tripod; not a necessity but I would highly recommend it to get your compositions sorted well and managing slower shutters without pushing you ISO too far. I prefer to have one with a level tool on the tripod head as well.
- Flashes; I only use speedlights. You will need at least one, preferably 3 or 4.

2. Meeting the client & planning the shoot
When you arrive at the sales object, use the opportunity to look around as much as possible before ringing the door bell and meeting the client. Within a limited timeframe, you should be able to identify wether the exterior is ready to shoot or not.
After greeting the owner, suggest that you have a look around the inside of the object before you head out to start by shooting the exteriors. This will give an idea of the whole place, identify things you want the owner to move/clean etc. You then give the owner instructions on what to do meanwhile you start on the outside. This way you will get the most out of your time.

3. Clean up your scenes
Even though you just gave the owner your cleaning-up-instructions you will definitely find yourself in situations where you identify stuff they didn´t move, or simply objects you didn´t see before you´re composing your shot.
The small details are of huge importance to make your images to improve from good to great. You should be able to identity all disturbing details. Examples can be; toothbrushes, toilet brushes, trash bins, ashtrays, shampoos and conditioners, wrinkled bed linen, mismatching towels, fridge magnets etc. I could go on for ages, room by room, but this is something you gotta see for yourself eventually.

4. Height of camera
The general image should be captured a little bit lower than mid-height of the room, balancing well with the portion of floor and ceiling visible. I shoot at this level to get a little bit more of the floor rather than ceiling, simply because the floors generally are of more interest to a potential buyer than the ceiling is. The doorknobs around the house are generally good pointers to a good height. On the other hand, some rooms demand a different height and I will explain why; in kitchens you would generally want to take a slightly higher stand due to the height of the kitchen bench. You want to show the top of it to create an experienced feeling of space, this also assures you that the bottom of the cupboards (often greasy with blown lightbulbs or nasty lights) don´t get unintentional attention. Much of the same goes with bathrooms, slightly higher to "get above" the sink, this makes sure you show the whole room and not just looking straight into the cupboard beneath the sink.
The bedroom is another room where you often find yourself adjusting the height of your camera. With a low bed you might want to go lower too, with a massive bed you might want to go higher, sometimes you have too much visibility underneath the bed etc.

The point is, there´s a general rule (doorknob) but there´s also several rooms that demands a different approach. What you have to think about is that you want to show the whole room, and not lead the viewers eye directly into an "obstruction" in the middle of the room.

5. Straighten up the lines and horizon
In most houses the walls and corners are straight and the images should project this as well.
There are different takes at this, some don´t care to much about it while shooting and straighten up the lines post processing. I´m convinced that it´s less time consuming to take leveled shots while you´re at the task anyway and spend less time in Photoshop. This is where the level tool can come handy; I have one built-in on my tripod head however after some experience you don´t need it Only the exceptions shall be tilted; in example detail shots, photos looking down from 2nd to 1st floor, but it should be a reason for tilting the camera and it should still work with regards to composition.

6. Composition
There´s one thing distinguishing real estate photography from the general interior shot in a lifestyle magazine; information. Information about the rooms and how they´re connected. If a real estate photographer is successful with his/her shots, the viewer should be able to understand how the rooms are connected to each other without seeing any floor plans. Of course, how much you show in each shoot will also depend on your clients preferences. Some wants to show it all, some like to spare something to keep the interest level for viewings up.

You should strive to get the most clean and well-balanced shots while still showing the room in a good way, and get the desired level of information in it. Avoid cropped artwork on the walls, the unintended plant in the corners etc.

To get the most out of the actual space you should try to get 3 walls into the frame rather than showing just a corner. When you bring in a little bit of that 3rd wall, you will open up the room and also tell the viewers more about the actual size, again it comes down to information. If you have an ensuite bedroom you might want to show it together with the bathroom; open the connecting door, place your lights and take the desired position to show exactly what you want.

A rule of thumb with regards to the interior shots of real estate photography is to not shooting straight into the room. While this balances the image well, it´s also kind of dull. You will get better and more informational shots if you take positions to either sides of the room and angle yourself slightly into the room and capture that 3rd wall too. I´m not saying that straight forward shots are always wrong, there are always exceptions, and they tend to work better if there are some kind of graphical elements in the architecture of the room that would be emphasized through your composition.

7. Exposure
When it comes to exposing your shots there are a few things to think about; how light/dark is the final result going to be, how much visibility through the windows are you aiming at, what´s your desired mix between outside vs flash?
Different real estate agents and photographers want different products and your raw image should reflect the final result you´re aiming at. While you´re shooting you´re also lining up the work you need to do post processing. You should try to come as close as possible to the final result while shooting, or at least create a good base file for further editing. As long as you have a well exposed image, most things can be done afterwards.
If you´re shooting an apartment with a "not to desirable neighborhood" you might not want the view to show as much and overexpose the windows so that they turn all white. Just make sure you don´t overexpose too much so that the windows bleeds in and ruin details such as the window frame, curtains etc.
In most circumstances you would actually like to show off the outside view through the windows but this can be real hard with the changing light. This is where your flashes comes handy!
By applying the flashes properly you can expose for the outside light and fill in the interior with flash to get a desirable result. Alternatively you can also shoot bracketed shots to develop an HDR image in post processing.

8. Aperture
I generally use f/8 all the way for my "standard shots" as this gives me a good depth of field and sharpness all way through if your focus is good. There´s nothing wrong about experimenting with lower aperture values but again, it should have a purpose and can work out really good for the detail shots. The problem arises when you forget to check your adjustments and don´t pay attention to your focus point. This will give you an unpleasant surprise as you realize they´re not sharp while post processing. At the moment there´s no way back, but Adobe tells you to not throw away unsharp images as they might have a solution in the future. On the other hand, that doesn´t help you much when the client is expecting his/her files within the next few hours.

Bottom line; pay attention to what you do and you´ll be good!

9. Lighting
As stated under the Gear section I prefer to bring along 3-4 speedlights to leave my options open and being able handle all kinds of light conditions. To use as much as 4 speedlights and not create any cast shadows is quite hard but after doing it for a while you know where and what to look out for. I cannot learn you how to handle up to 4 speedlights in this brief guide, however, if you´re interested in learning more about it I would suggest you look to Scott Hargis who´s a master on the topic and also host workshops around the globe. His situated in the San Francisco Bay area and is a wonderful tutor who I hired to perform two workshops for some of the photographers I manage last year.

10. Post processing
For me, the post processing is the most boring part about photography but is crucial to serve your clients well. The ways of doing post processing for real estate photography is probably just as many as there are real estate photographers. There are some general things to look out for such as; tuning the exposure, fill light in shadow, recover blown out highlights, setting white balance, level of contrast, color saturation, take care of lens corrections and many more. You have several tools available for doing most these things, Photoshop, Aperture and Lightroom or you can pay other people to do it for you.

What´s important is that you meet your clients expectations. Either those expectations are based on how the client wants the final result to look or that the client initially contacted you to get "your look" on the images. Either way, you have to live up the expectations.

Finishing words
These are only meant as guidelines to get started. Once you´ve gotten into real estate photography you will develop your own preferences and also know that all sales objects differ hugely and demands for different approaches.

Hope you get something out of this and wish you the best of luck!

In album Real Estate / Interior samples (27 bilder)

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Great deal of themes / hashtags to follow for the photo enthusiasts either as a photographer or a plain viewer!

Reshared post from +Jalaj Jha

-66- 175 hashtags for photographers and artists to tag photos with, and photowatchers to find great photos in

#2011top11 by +Younes Bounhar
#365project by +Simon Kitcher
#BackyardBirdingMonday by +Celeste Odono and +Ricky L Jones
#BuggyFriday by +Ray Bilcliff
#ActionMonday by +Adrian Buturca
#ArchiTexture by +Ranjan Saraswati
#AviationMonday by +Mike Criss
#BenchSaturday by +Rainer M. Ritz
#BirdPoker Portraits by +Phil Armishaw
#BokehTuesday by +Bob Baxley
#BellyButtonWednesday by +April Joy Peterson-Gutel and +Fred Kfoury
#BWLandscapeWednesday by +Francesco Gallarotti
#CandidMoodTuesday by +Alexius Jørgensen
#Caturday by +Lee Daniels & +Christophe Friedli
#ChildrenSaturday by +Susan Southard
#CoffeeThursday by +Jason Kowing
#CreativeSnowSunday by +Roy Ross
#DawnOnSunday by +Ray Bilcliff
#DigitalPaintographyThursday by +Christianna Pierce
#ElementHuntTuesday by +Roy Ross
#EquineTuesday by +Jillian Chilson
#FallFriday by +Stephonie Ogden and +Karin Nelson
#FashionFriday by +Faith Gauthier
#FeelingsFriday by +LeLinda Bourgeois
#FeetFriday by +Carrie McGann
#FidoFriday by +mel peifer +Lisa Lisa and +Wes Lum
#FilmFriday by +Richard Call
#FireFriday curated by +Grayson Hartman
#FireworksFriday by +Jörg Seidel
#FisheyeFriday by +Ivan Yudhi
#FloralFriday by +Tamara Pruessner
#FlowerFriday by +Tamara Pruessner
#FlowingWaterFriday by +Rolf Hicker and +Kate Church
#FlyByFriday by +Meg Rousher
#FlycatcherFriday by +Jeff Wendorff
#foggyfriday by +Thomas Russ Arnestad
#FoodFriday by +Charles Lupica +Lucretia Yeh and +Bobbi Lance
#ForestFriday by +Rudolf Vl?ek
#FortressesFriday by +Benjamin Dahlhoff
#FourSeasonFriday by +Stephonie Ogden and +Karin Nelson
#FourWheeledFriday by +Matthew Costabile
#FrenchFryday by +Peak Ness
#FrighteningFriday by +Alexis Coram
#FrogFriday by +Christina Rollo and +Candace Hansen
#FrostFriday by +Laura Loralieh Nixon
#FungusFriday by +Chris Sullivan
#funnysignfriday by +Karen Tate
#GoatWednesday by +Paul Songy
#GrassTuesday by +Ray Bilcliff
#historythursday by +Matt Shalvatis
#HourOrLess by +Janet Post
#IconicFamilyPhoto by +Ed Dombrowski
#InfraredFriday theme by +Paula Cobleigh and +Ingo Schobert
#InMotionThursday by +Scott Thomas
#LeafOnThursday by +Ray Bilcliff and +Marilou Aballe
#LensbabyThursday by +Gloria Roldan
#LongExposureThursday by +Francesco Gola and +Le Quoc
#LoveWednesday by +Pierluigi Failla
#MacroMonday by +Kerry Murphy +Jennifer Eden and +Kelli Seeger Kim
#ManlyMondays by +Alan Shapiro +Barry Blanchard +Dave Daniels +Mark Rodriguez & +Kjetil Greger Pedersen #MediumFormatMonday by +Antoine Bonfort
#midairmonday by +Jeff Moreau
#MilitaryMonday by +Joe Kaiser
#MinimalMonday by +Olivier Du Tré
#MinistractMonday by +Tom McLaughlan
#MirrorMonday by +Gemma Costa
#MistyMonday by +Martin Rak
#MobileMonday by +Sinead Sam McKeown
#modelingmonday by +Scott Detweiler
#MoFoMo Mobile Phone Monday by +Michael N Sutton and +Alexander Kesselaar
#MonochromeMonday by +Siddharth Pandit
#MoodyMonday by +Philip Daly
#moonlitmonday by +Mark Upfield
#MountainMonday by +Michael Russell
#moviemashuptuesday by +Mark Rodriguez +shane holsclaw & +Chrysta Rae
#MugMonday by +Shantha Marie Fountain
#MultipleExposureMonday by +Karen Tate
#MuscleCarMonday by +David Breazeale
#MysteryMonday by +Jenna Lynn Monroe
#MyTownTuesday theme by +Melanie Kintz and +Eric Leslie
#NatureMonday by +Rolf Hicker and +Kate Church
#ObscureCameraSunday by +Richard Call +Carole Buckwalter & +David Buckwalter
#OnePrimeWednesday by +Alfie Goodrich
#PaintItSaturday by +Alexius Jørgensen
#PhotoBomberFriday by +David Kaiser and +Trisha Standard
#PhotoFave by +Scott Jarvie
#PhotoManipulationSaturday by +Josh Adamski
#PhotoStorySaturday by +Dave Beckerman
#PlusPhotoExtract by +Jarek Klimek
#PortraitTuesday by +Laura Balc
#RuralSaturday by +Mario Cerroni
#SacredSunday by +Charles Lupica and +Manfred Berndtgen
#SaturdayNightLight by +Dirk Heindoerfer
#SeaTuesday by +Julia Anna Gospodarou
#SelfySunday shot by +Jeff Smith and +Levi Moore
#SepiaSaturday by +Renee Stewart Jackson
#ShadeSaturday by +Roy Ross
#ShoesDay by +Peter Wheeler
#ShorebirdSunday by +Phil Armishaw
#SignSunday by +Gene Bowker & +walt sprinkle
#SilhouettesOnThursday by +Siddharth Pandit
#SkiSunday by +Michael Garza
#SkySunday by +Simone Linke
#SleepySaturday by +Gemma Costa & +Andrea Martinez
#Smilography by +Eloisa V.
#SnowySaturday by +John Fujimagari
#SoftFocusSaturday by +Nathan Beaulne

#songbirdsaturday by +John Briggs
#SOOCSunday by +John Kosmopoulos
#SpiderSunday by +Kjetil Greger Pedersen +Chris Mallory +Kimberly Hosey
#SportsSunday by +Jörg Seidel & +Mike Criss
#SquareSunday by +Matt Soave
#SSSnakeSunday by +Frank Yuwono
#StarTrailSunday by +Robert Walters
#StillLifeSaturday by +Ken Hoyle & +Sherri Meyer
#StoneSaturday by +Antoine Berger
#StormyFriday by +Reinhard Latzke
#StreetSaturday by +Siddharth Pandit
#SunriseSaturday by +TJ Kelly
#SunsetSaturday by +TJ Kelly +Mario Cerroni
#TeaCoffeeChocolateFoodClub by +Andrea Martinez +Gemma Costa & +Elizabeth Edwards
#TextureBlendPhotography by +Gemma Costa
#TextureBlendTuesday by +Gemma Costa
#TextureBlendThursday by +Matt Suess & +Christine Hauber
#TextureLibraryTuesday by +Joerg Jung
#ThankfulThursday by +Bonnie Pickartz
#TheoreticalThursday by +Jason Dell
#ThirstyThursday by +Giuseppe Basile
#ThirstyThursdayPics by +Giuseppe Basile & +Mark Esguerra
#TodayTuesday by +Brian White
#TonemapHDRTuesday by +Drew Pion and +Stephanie Suratos
#ToolsOfATradeTuesday by +Raghav Sood
#ToyAdventures by +David Kaiser
#ToyTuesday by +Lars Pixel Clausen
#TransportTuesday by +Gene Bowker
#TravelPanoWednesday by +Rolf Hicker
#TravelThursday by +Laura Mitchum
#TreeTuesday by +Christina Lawrie
#TshirtTuesday by +Harald Walker
#Tuesdecay by +Ian Ference
#TurtleTuesday by +Candace Hansen & +Meg Rousher
#Two4Tuesday by +Mary C Legg
#TwoTimesTuesday by +Robert McMillan
#UnsharpeSaturday / #UnsharpSaturday by +Nathan Beaulne
#VibrantWednesday by +Ajay Hatti
#VividWednesday by +Ajay Hatti
#WadingBirdWednesday by +Ray Bilcliff
#WakeWednesday by +Nathan Lucking
#WallpaperWednesdayContest / #wallpaperwednesday by +Jamie Furlong
#WatercraftWednesday by +David Breazeale
#WaterfallWednesday by +Eric Leslie
#WaterscapeWednesday by +Terrill Welch
#WeAreParents by +Juan Gonzalez
#WebbyWednesday by +Celeste Odono
#WeLoveMusicWednesday by +Folletto Folletto +Harmony Goodson +Andy Q. +LaDonna Pride & +Trillian Petrova
#WetWednesday by +Susanne Schweiger
#WhateverWednesday by +Cicely Robin Laing
#WhatTheDuckMonday by +Phil Armishaw
#WideOpenWednesday by +Jules Hunter & +Shawn Clover
#WideWednesdayPanorama by +Charles Lupica and +Jason Dell
#WindowWednesday by +Jules Hunter +Simon Kitcher +Jason Kowing
#WildlifeWednesday by +Mike Spinak
#WindyWednesday by +Trevor Farrell
#WinterWednesday by +Antoine Berger , +Logan Miller
#WomenWednesday by +Nikki Aguirre +Athena Carey +Lee Daniels & +Christina Lawrie
#WowWednesday by +Jan Paul Anthony Zabala
#ZenSunday by +Charlotte Therese Björnström +Simon Kitcher and +Nathan Wirth

The are the tags that relate more to Art and fine arts:

#AbstractArtEveryday by +Esther Hardman
#AbstractArtMonday by +Dawn Ellen Miller
#BWFineArtLE by +Joel Tjintjelaar
#FineArtPls by +Marina Chen
#illustrationArtTuesday by +Robriel Wolf
#StreetArtSunday by +Luís Pedro +Peter Tsai & +Mark Seymour
#SurrealArtSaturday by +Mikko Tyllinen
#WaterscapeArtWednesday by +Terrill Welch

I am sure I have missed another 666! Oh and just a by-note.. please read "curated by" for all occurances of "by"… shortened it to keep post minimal…

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As my camera is undergoing repairment (has been for 3 weeks now) I´ve become an eager iPhone photographer and am actually amazed at what you can achieve with a simple camera like that. The essence of my photography seems clearer than ever; that it´s (mostly) not about the gear but my vision, curiosity and abilities to capture and project what I see along my way.

#TrueArchitectureThursday – new theme +Rolf Hicker :)

In album Architecture (8 bilder)

Element of architecture on a hotel in Marbella, Spain.

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proflinkWrapper”>+Rolf Hicker.
The photo shows the traditional Andalucian mountains in Spain and shot was on the new highway connecting Fuengirola and Coín in the Costa del Sol region.

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proflinkWrapper”>+Rolf Hicker.
This shot was captured on top of a hill on the beautiful island of Santorini, Greece. It´s huge in filesize, stiched from 10 or 11 vertical shots and shows around 240 degrees angle.

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Wrapper”>+Rolf Hicker´s list. Make sure to take a look and contribute where ever you can:)

Reshared post from +Rolf Hicker

I just updated my google photo theme list with new themes.

If you start a new theme or want changes to a existing theme – PLEASE use the form on my website on the bottom of the list page – I'm receiving roughly 500 mails a day – if you tell me via mail I probably forget to add you!

New photo themes on my list are:

#SnailSaturday by +Ajay Hatti
#WindyWednesday by +Trevor Farrell
#Doorsday (Thursday) by +André Roßbach
#FoggyFriday by +Thomas Russ Arnestad
#FuglyFridays by +Jennifer Tackman
#WakeWednesday by +Nathan Lucking
#CandidMoodTuesday by +Alexius Jørgensen

Good luck with your new themes, have fun curating it and I hope you get plenty of contribution.

Here you can find my list of photo themes:
http://www.rolfhickerphotography.com/blogs/all-google-plus-photo-themes.htm

I appreciate if you share the post!

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My youngest son riding his new bike proudly at an empty playground on Christmas day.

In album BW (39 bilder)

My youngest son riding his new bike proudly at an empty playground on Christmas day.

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My contribution for the #SacredSunday theme curated by +Charles Lupica and +Manfred Berndtgen. While I´m not often in places to capture sacrilicious shots, yesterday was the exception as I always take my family to church for the christmas.

This year we went to Sjømannskirken (the Norwegian foreign church) in Calahonda, Andalucia, Spain. We experienced a great ceremony with lots of songs, dancing around the christmas tree and a visit from a candy-throwing Santa Claus. The kids loved it we were all happy afterwards. This shot was captured just after the ceremony was done.

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