How to photograph black products
Reveal detail in the darkest products


Transform your product photos with AI-powered minimalist photography.
What you'll need
- Large softboxes or diffusion panels
- Reflectors and fill cards
- Graduated or gray backgrounds
- Polarizing filter (optional)
- Spot metering capability
Step-by-step guide
Avoid pure white backgrounds initially
Black on white creates extreme contrast that often clips highlights or loses shadow detail. Start with gray backgrounds that compress the tonal range.
Use large, soft light sources
Position large softboxes to create broad, gentle gradients across the surface. These gradients reveal form and texture in dark products.
Light for texture and detail
Angle lights to rake across surfaces, revealing texture. Side lighting creates shadows in texture details that make surfaces visible.
Expose for the product
Use spot metering on the product itself, not the background. You may need to overexpose by 1-2 stops from what the meter suggests to show detail.
Add definition with highlights
Create subtle highlights along edges and contours. These bright areas define shape against dark backgrounds.
Pro tips
Matte black products are easier than glossy - fewer reflections to manage
Use a gray card for accurate exposure reference
Process RAW files to recover shadow detail without noise
Consider high-key lighting that makes the product appear charcoal rather than pure black
Common mistakes to avoid
Underexposing and losing all detail in shadows
Using backgrounds that are too similar in tone to the product
Creating harsh specular highlights on glossy black surfaces
Recommended photo styles
The easier way: AI product photography
While these manual techniques work great, AI can achieve professional results in seconds. Upload your product photo and let AI handle the lighting, backgrounds, and styling automatically.
Try AI product photographyFrequently asked questions
Why do my black products look gray in photos?
Camera meters try to make everything middle gray. For black products, use exposure compensation (-1 to -2 stops) or manual exposure based on highlights.
What background color works best for black products?
Gray backgrounds reduce contrast challenges. Black backgrounds can work for edge-lit looks. White requires careful exposure control.
How do I show texture in black products?
Use side lighting that rakes across the surface. This creates shadows in the texture that reveal surface detail.
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