Tips for preparing your home for a photo shoot and/or virtual tour
Preparing your home for a photo shoot is very similar to preparing your home for an open house, but you only have to do it once. The photo shoot is an opportunity to show your house at its best, so put on your sales and marketing hat. Remember, you could have thousands of people viewing your home.
Take some time to consider the following tips when preparing your home:
- Think like a buyer! Flip through magazines and imagine how your home would look in them.
- Clean well and clear up clutter! If you wouldn't see it in a model home, hide it! Put personal belongings out of sight-- in closets, under the bed, in drawers, in boxes in the garage or attic, etc.
- Lighten up dark spaces! If you have dark furniture, you can brighten it up with light colored throw blankets and pillows. If you have a dark rug, a light and neutral area rug can do wonders to brighten up a room!
- Bright idea! Use daylight bulbs in 65 watts - these are recommended to show your rooms in the best type of light. If you don't have enough lamps in a room, consider buying a floor lamp or two.
- View as buyer! Need to hide an unflattering view? Semi-sheer curtains are perfect for letting light in and hiding any unflattering views. Remember CURB APPEAL! Be sure that garbage cans are out of site and basic yard maintenance has been done. Pay close attention to the front of the house. Trim any dead branches hanging in front of your house. Liven up the front entrance with some flowering plants. Open blinds, drapes, and shades. Be sure that blinds are the same length so that you don't see one up, one down, one crooked.
- Lights, Camera, Action! Think about your home as if you were a producer. What are the highlights? What made you buy the home originally? Which are the best rooms to show off? While Fabled Photography's photographers use our exclusive method for photographing homes, no one knows your home and its highlights better than you!
Time For The Photo Shoot?
- Inform. When the photographer calls to make the appointment, let them know if any of the rooms may be a little dark so they can bring extra lighting. The photographer will usually take exterior photos during the day and interior photos at dusk or at night.
- Be Prepared. Make a list of the rooms they will be photographing. The most commonly photographed rooms are the kitchen, dining room, living room, and family room. Bedrooms and bathrooms are generally photographed only if they are large or unique.
- Simplify the process. When the photographer arrives, clear out as many people as possible and keep pets in a separate room. The process will go smoothly and quickly if the photographer doesn't have to work around people and pets.
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