Luxury Hoteliers Magazine 2nd Quarter 2018 | Page 92

While chefs are becoming valuable branding options for hotels and resorts, their food photo styling skills and time are limited.  Coordinating all the team members to prepare for a food shoot can be a big task for an in-house marketing department and equally challenging for outside agencies that don’t understand chefs and kitchen culture.  A food shoot is unique because the main focus is a product that degrades quickly and may look flat or tired on print or film if not handled properly. And, those uber-talented chefs are tricky to lure out of the kitchen. The camera shows significate detail and therefore requires specific preparation that will go beyond the typical skills of most chefs. Great flavor doesn’t always translate to a great photo. Shooting food falls outside the standard lifestyle shoot as well; which aims to capture environmental details that set a scene or mood and not a close up of a particular menu item. Stunning food photos, boost social media accounts, highlight new offerings in print and digital media, and attract the attention of millennials, health-conscious travelers and meeting and incentive professionals. Whether the engagement is thru digital media or print, organizations will want to have compelling images to showcase new offerings. The key to getting beautiful food content is in the details. And, it starts with the creative team. Whether your organization is working with an outside ad agency or handling the details in-house, a stylist, especially when shooting food, is an essential part of the creative team. Due to tighter budgets, many stylists may take on more of a producer role as well - filling in the gap between in-house creative marketing teams, culinary departments, agencies and photographers. This type of 92 ILHA coordinated communication effort keeps all key players on the same page. and photographer to shoot in different locations on property. Top skills a stylist can bring to the photo shoot Meet branding objectives and make sure the shoot runs on schedule. Central point of communication between in-house marketing, ad agency, photographer and culinary team, understanding the different needs of all key players. They make sure the shoot runs smoothly and have extensive culinary knowledge. Many have trained in restaurants and have culinary degrees and have significant production experience. From cooking to baking, they can take the culinary brand to the next level for all your print and digital media. A stylist is often the photographer, and marketing departments greatest asset, ultimately making your shoot productive and cost-efficient. Make food look delicious on camera. A great photographer or videographer can only shoot what is put in front of them. They can retouch some imperfections in post, but they can’t make a dry steak surface look juicy and they typically don’t style food under the camera unless they are also a food stylist. Make sure that each shot looks appetizing, delicious and is consistent with the properties branding. Think make-up artist and wardrobe stylist for food. Fine tune and test recipes for print and help chefs craft new menu offerings. Take the lead on coordinating a shoot. Established stylists have years of experience working on sets, so they know how to organize a shoot, work with creative talent and set the scene to get the shots you want. Assist chefs and the creative team with preparing for a shoot. Create a communication document to define roles. Provide creative direction and work with art director and marketing team to ensure images reflect the properties branding. Create a more polished and refined look. Work with prop stylists or provide props and surfaces to support the mood and style of each look. Create a curated look for each shot eliminating or minimizing the need for the stylist Key to a successful food shoot Determine the overall objective of the shoot and confirm the marketing budget before hiring the creative team? Hire a photographer skilled at shooting and professionally lighting food. Hire a creative team that has a wide range of skill in achieving different looks. Keep communication streamlined. Great food shots are meticulously planned. The textures, surfaces, accent props and lighting will set the mood for each dish. Determine the shot list well in advance of the scheduled shoot. Ask what needs to be photographed and how the photos will be used. Are the marketing objectives realistic for the budget and time frame? The food will need to be prepared specifically for the camera. Extra product and garnishes will be needed to get the shot. Most chefs feel their work is going to look great on camera. In some cases that would be true, specifically if it is highly stylized, however, often their lack of food styling skills, knowledge of propping, lighting will create significant limits to what the photographer will be able to capture.