• HOME
  • Portfolio
  • Club CreatingYOU.®
  • About
  • Cookbooks
  • Blog
  • Search

Lori Rice

Photography | Styling

  • HOME
  • Portfolio
  • Club CreatingYOU.®
  • About
  • Cookbooks
  • Blog
  • Search

The Three Parts of Photography

Three Parts of Photography

There are three parts that influence a final photo. A quality final photo. One that you love and that reflects who you are as the photographer and stylist. 

The ratio of importance is: 

30/15/55

Confidence/Gear/You



30% is your confidence level

For many of us, this one takes the longest to develop. It’s easy to think that photography is all about gear or the eye of the photographer, but if you don’t have the confidence that you are creating valuable work you are never going to put that work out there. 

Something starts to happen when we stop looking to others for what they do and constantly comparing our own styles to theirs. When we stop watching the responses they get, the recognition they receive, and the placement of their work.

You free up a large chunk of space that allows you to focus on your own work, what you like to produce, and your individual style. The more you do this, the more confidence grows, the more work you produce that reflects your individual style, and the better skilled you become. It’s a repeating pattern that fuels your work and your confidence level. Focus, confidence, desire to create, increased skills, and repeat. 

Confidence changes things. 

Confidence in photography


15% is the gear you use

You know I use minimal gear, but I don’t want that to be confused with implying that it’s not important. It is important that your gear matches what you are trying to create.

Want to take pretty flatlays that you only post on Instagram? Your phone will be just fine. Want to photograph splashes and motion? You’ll need to understand shutter speeds and have the lens capable of producing what you envision. I have to have my 100-400mm lens to photograph wildlife from far away. My 50mm f/1.4 allows me to photograph at a shallow depth of field. I love creating food photos with my 24-105mm lens. 

Lenses help you great different photos.

Once you use the gear necessary for the type of photography you are creating, its role stops there. The gear doesn’t control how you style and compose a shot, the angle you saw that no one else does, the way to plate something that is super creative, the color scheme used, the moment you captured that facial expression or snapped at just the right time that animal came into view.


55% is YOU. 

That brings us to the largest component of the photo, you. The photographer who is possibly the stylist, too. 

Trust me, when I got my first professional lens and I saw what I could create with depth of field, I rolled my eyes when I’d hear - it’s not the camera, it’s the photographer behind it. Because at that point in my career, it was most definitely the camera working the magic. 

But as my work and skill level has grown, I now know that what makes my photos mine, are what I bring to them. The scene I see, how I position myself, how I see the colors working together, how I arrange the vegetables, how I choose to create negative space or fill the frame, how long I can wait out the elk to capture him eating grass, the sunrise on the specific day I took the photo, the surfaces and props I’ve searched for at vintage shops, the things I’ve found to use in photos during my travels. 

LoriRicePhotography

You get it right? Hopefully, I’m being clear. It’s you. Who you are, where you are from, what you have access to, what you’ve been through, and where you are going. 

There are other things involved, but this is the most important part of your photo.

 
Confused to Confident: Food and Product Photography for Makers, Growers, and Artisan Creators opens again this fall! Hop on the waitlist to learn more!
tags: photography tips, photography
categories: Photography Style, Photography Tips
Thursday 08.04.22
Posted by Lori Rice
 

Learning outside your photography niche

Food and drink photography ©Lori Rice

Rather listen than read?
Just click play above.

Sometimes we put blinders on. We focus on exactly what we want to do, learn exactly how to do it, and nothing is going to distract us. 

While there are so many situations in life where this is advantageous when it comes to photography and styling it can cause us to miss out on loads of helpful information. 

I’ve been an advocate for learning outside of your niche since I began styling and photographing food over 11 years ago.

I call it the Apply It Back method. It’s when you learn about something else and then you apply what you learned back to your own photography and photography niche. It’s a way to grow your skill and more importantly evolve your individual style. 

Food and drink photography ©Lori Rice

Here’s how it works for me:

  • Landscape photography helps me see my horizon on food sets and keep the scene aligned.

  • Learning about freezing motion in sports and nature photography helps me with food and drink action like pours and sprinkles. 

  • Reading interior design books gives me ideas for color coordination and scenes. 

  • Studying color psychology helps me with propping. 

  • Floral design helps with color coordination and styling table scenes.

  • People and portrait photography helps me with photographing my own hands in shots.

  • Learning about natural light patterns and how to control them helps to improve even my phone photos and videos.

  • Travel gives me ideas for how to reflect real life in my photos.

There are so many things to absorb outside of simply how to do food photography. All of our experiences and studies regardless of the focus and topic can be applied back to our art. 

Learning about other things isn’t time wasted. In fact, it can serve as an enjoyable creative break when you are feeling stuck or burned out. 





5 Steps to Better Food and Product Photography
tags: photography tips
categories: Photography Tips, Creative work, Photography Style
Monday 06.20.22
Posted by Lori Rice
 

Why Transition to CreatingYOU.® Quick Courses?

Honestly, I’ve always been a teacher. It’s something that I’ve been reminded of again in recent months. 

It began with teaching group exercise in college and then evolved into more one-on-one encounters with personal training. I moved on to a career in academia developing curriculum to help people move more and eat well. That was followed by using the train-the-trainer model across the state of Kentucky to teach others how to teach others the curricula I’d developed. 

I think in explaining that you’ll see that there is no surprise things have come full circle for me. To a point where what I enjoy most is finding creative ways to teach others how to build skills and confidence in creating their own photos. 

When it came to teaching food and product styling and photography, the way I got into it was all wrong, though.

I jumped into the online teaching world powered by the ideas that I needed a big course that covered everything I could offer with a higher price tag to match. 

And I created that course - Confused to Confident (CtoC). And many of you have taken it. And many of you have let me know how much it helped you - with creating your photography style, understanding natural light, using your camera in manual mode, developing a step-by-step process from stove to set... 

Each time I re-watch it, I’m not going to lie, I’m a little impressed with myself that I put in all the work to create it. I’m extremely proud of it. It is a really great course. 

But having one big course misses the mark in many ways. 

  • We all have different goals and one big course may not be focused enough to move you forward in the very specific area that you have your sights set on. 

  • So much content at once can be way too much to take in. Yes, you get lifetime access, but life offers many distractions and there are many people who have not fully completed the course. This honestly makes me sad. I want you to finish the course and move forward.

  • It is out of budget for some. CtoC really is moderately priced when it comes to courses of its size (it’s only $297), but I realize that this can be a lot to pay when you aren’t quite sure if each piece of it is what you need to learn. 

  • Having that course is in some ways holding me back from diving deeper into some subjects and types of photography that I’d really like to teach about. 

So while CtoC will still exist, my focus over the coming months will go to CreatingYOU.® Quick Courses which has really been an idea on the back burner since the day I launched my single course.

I’ve just felt like I wasn’t allowed to create a suite of courses because of the distracting noise of others telling me - that’s not how you do it.

But my goal is to be approachable, accessible, and to teach things or a way of doing and looking at them that you likely haven’t experienced yet. CreatingYOU.® Quick Courses will allow me to do this. 

These workshop-style will be designed to finish in a day or less. Some may be a 60-minute workshops, while others may have a few modules and projects for you to complete as you work your way through. They will range from $29 to $79 each based on the topic and content within. 

Have some thoughts or needs? Reach out to me and let me know. I have an ongoing list of topics to teach about and I’d love to know what you would like to learn. 

The first to launch this summer will be Surface School. You’ll learn to break out of boredom with your photography surfaces in a way that will allow you to create photos that are specific to your style and brand.
More soon!


And free content certainly won’t be going away. Be sure to check out my 15-minute video training:

Original Food Photography Surfaces for Small Spaces.

I also send loads of helpful tips through words, slides, and videos about 3 times a month to my subscribers. Sign up here:

CreatingYOU.® Weekly Emails
tags: photography tips, Courses, Updates
categories: Photography Style, Creative work, Photography Tips
Monday 05.02.22
Posted by Lori Rice
 

Better Understand Your Food Photography Style in 6 Minutes

Better Understand Your Food Photography Style in 6 Minutes.png

“I can help you get anything you want, but first you have to tell me what that is.”

That statement is from Marie Forleo in her book, Everything is Figureoutable. I started reading the book last year and got about halfway through before work and the holidays took command of my free reading time.

I picked it back up last night and within the first few pages, my eyes came across that statement. It’s what she tells people she is coaching and she relates it back to us knowing what we want. Choosing a goal, one goal to start with.

(Before I go on, I feel like I should say that given her reaction among her fans and followers in response to the very important Black Lives Matter movement, I almost rewrote this post. But after some reflection, I still think that quote leads to some food for thought. So I’ve left this post unedited.)

It resonated with me because often what people tell me is that they don’t know what they like about a photo that catches their attention. A driving force in creating images that reflect your brand in a way that saves you time and frustration is knowing your style.

But people tell me they don’t know how to figure out their photography style. They don’t know what it is that they want. They don’t know where to start.

Have 6 minutes to spare? I’ll show you exactly how to start in this video. We’ll break down a couple photos to help you get a better handle on your likes and dislikes so you can move forward.

Confused to Confident: Food & Product Photography Training. Join us for this 8-week, 12-module online training with personalized support every step of the way!

Are you signed up for LoriRice.com updates? I don’t want you to miss it and all the content I have planned this year with the sole purpose of helping you take better photos to support your brand and business!

categories: Styling Tips, Photography Style
Wednesday 01.08.20
Posted by Lori Rice
 
Newer / Older

Our Privacy Policy and Terms of Sale. ©2025 Fake Food Free Productions, LLC.