Your Work Deserves Good Photos
Pottery photographs beautifully, but only with the right light and setup. A pot shot in harsh overhead lighting with a cluttered background can look mediocre. The same pot photographed in soft, directional natural light against a clean surface can look stunning. Learning basic photography is one of the highest-return skills you can develop as a studio potter.
The Most Important Variable: Light
Soft, diffused light is almost always more flattering than direct, harsh light. The best free light source is a north-facing window on a bright but overcast day. Direct sunlight creates harsh shadows and blows out highlights.
- Place your pot near a window with the light coming from one side. This creates gentle shadow that reveals the three-dimensional form.
- Avoid flash: it flattens the surface and kills texture.
- If shooting at night or indoors, use a softbox or a lamp with a large diffuser.
Background and Surface
Keep backgrounds simple. A sheet of white paper, a linen cloth, or a natural wood surface are all excellent choices. Avoid distracting patterns or colours that compete with the pot.
Camera Angle
- Eye-level or slightly above eye-level works for most functional ware: it shows both the profile and the interior.
- Top-down (flat lay) works well for shallow bowls and platters where the interior decoration is the main feature.
- Detail shots (close-ups of texture, glaze, or the foot ring) add depth to a product listing or portfolio.
Phone Cameras
Modern smartphone cameras are excellent for pottery photography. Use portrait mode to create subtle background blur. Shoot in the highest quality setting available and edit in natural light or use a simple editing app to adjust brightness and contrast.
Did You Know?
Good photography is essential for any potter selling work online or building a portfolio, and it has become a core skill in the studio pottery world. The way light interacts with a glaze surface (whether the glossy depth of a celadon or the matte texture of an unglazed stoneware) determines how you should position your light source and camera angle.
Fast Photo Checklist Before You Shoot
- Clean fingerprints and dust from the piece.
- Level the horizon and simplify the frame.
- Take one full-form shot, one side profile, one detail.
- Review highlights on glossy glazes and reposition light if needed.
Pro Tip
Create one repeatable shooting corner in your studio. Consistent setup saves time and makes your online portfolio look cohesive.