One of the most loved aspects of real estate photography is shooting stunning dusk photos. These photos have a charming feel to them and can also make a real estate listing more attractive. Dusk photos also add great value to any portfolio but they are different from regular architecture photography.

In this article, Kolorheaven presents the following tips to help you to master the enchanting technique of dusk real estate photography.

What is Dusk Photography?

Dusk photos are external of buildings taken at dusk which is very common in architecture and real estate photography. It’s shoot at a particular moment when the sky’s light is perfectly balanced with the property’s lights.

Dusk photos
Dusk photos edited by Kolorheaven

Shooting extraordinary dusk real estate photography requires a camera, tripod, and perfect timing. After the sunset, turns on all the property’s lights and shoot when the dusk light is perfectly balanced with it.

10 Tips for Taking a Dusk Photo

1. Plan and Prepare for Dusk Photos

The first step is accurate planning. Since interior photos are usually taken during the day, you can set a different date for the twilight shot. Most such photoshoots are done during summer when the days are longer.

Good weather is also essential. While a few clouds can add a colorful touch, it is not easy to predict a magic sunset. Consider arriving at least one hour before sunset so you have the time to set the framing in every detail. You will only have a few minutes to shoot dusk photos. If you arrive late, you will lose the photo.

2. Turn on the Lights

What makes sunset photography so fascinating is the richness and vividity of the colors. The blue of the sky and yellow of the lighting are the opposites of the color wheel. For this reason, the combination adds a distinctive character to the photo.

The bright azure of the swimming pool can give a sense of peace, like the calmness of its still waters. Plants and hedges appear from the darkness, enlighten by outdoor fixtures.

Turn on the Lights
Turn on the Lights

Except for the sunset that is not always under your control, the final results will depend on artificial lighting. The first step is to turn on every light. Both interior and external lights have to be on before sunset. The interiors light up doors and windows. You can also close the curtains if they make the light pass through to avoid an excess of details. The exteriors light up the walls, the plants, the pool, and the passages. As the sunset goes on, the lights appear more and more present until they reach a perfect balance.

3. Use a Tripod

As a real estate photographer, you can use inexpensive and sophisticated equipment. But there is one accessory that you cannot miss. It is the tripod. In real estate and architecture, you should take every photo slowly. Everything in the framing is still, and the tripod allows you to look at every detail.

And if interior daylight photography is slow, shooting twilight is even slower. You can choose the best point of view and prepare an accurate composition before the moment of the shot. When shooting in low light, you need to use high ISO or slow shutter speed. Moreover, you avoid micro shakes and can capture a crisp, sharp image.

Finally, you can shoot multi exposures that are perfectly overlapping and merge them in post-production.

4. Wait Patiently for the Perfect Moment

Dusk real estate photography is never about quantity. Shooting at twilight is entirely different from standard daylight shooting. During the day, you move through spaces to describe the property in every corner. Most of the time you have to do it quickly, to fulfill the client’s needs. In the evening, you can only shoot a few images in two or three hours.

If you want to get the best result, patience will be your best ally. It’s easy to be carried away shooting a lot of pictures but you risk only getting mediocre images.

Wait Patiently for the Perfect Moment
Wait Patiently for the Perfect Moment

The timing is decisive in the success of a great photo. The best way is to recognize the best point of view and wait until the light is perfectly balanced. Once you decide on the best framing, you do not have to move your camera until you get the perfect shot.

5. Capture One Hero Shot and a Couple of Secondary Shots

You waited with patience to get an amazing hero shot, and you already did most of the work. Now there are only a few minutes left before the sky becomes too dark, and, at this time, you can still capture a few more useful images.

Unlike your hero shot, you need to move quickly, and you could not have time for accuracy. Depending on the season and the latitude, dusk can long less than half-hour, and you already spent most of the time on the hero shot. A few minutes are enough to shoot some more great images. You can take an alternative exterior shot, an exciting view from an interior, or a breathtaking drone shot.

The best thing is to plan these secondary shots, so you can go straight to the selected point and shoot without hesitation.

Read more here: Top 7 Real Estate Photo Editing Techniques For Photographers

6. Use Flash

Sometimes exterior lighting does not light up an important feature as you would like it to. In this case, you can use a flash to compensate. This technique is particularly effective in dusk real estate photography.

Since you are using your tripod, you can illuminate a whole manor with a single flash. You need to take several pictures and move the flash at every shot. You can light up a dark wall, a beautiful plant, or even strengthen existing lights. All these images should be perfectly overlapping in composition.

The only limit to this technique is the power of your flash. Especially for outdoors, a Speedlite could not be enough to light up a large wall. For this purpose, battery-powered studio flashes are the best solution.

7. Use HDR or Layers to Recover Details

To reveal details from highlights and shadows, you can use different techniques.

You need to start from a bracketed series of at least three photos: one correctly exposed, one exposed for the highlights (underexposed), and one for the shadows (overexposed). You can use AEB (Automatic Exposure Bracketing) for a quick shoot.

You can merge the shots in a single HDR photo. In this case, I recommend a moderate use of the highlights and shadows sliders in Lightroom because they affect the whole image. You can continue with a local adjustment brush or radial gradient to reveal more detail. With this method, you avoid the exaggerated look of HDR and get a more pleasing result.

For a more realistic look, you should instead process the images in Photoshop. Once you stack the images as layers, you can use a mask to reveal or recover details. Tweaking with the blur and transparency of the layer mask will allow you a seamless transition.

Do not exaggerate by filling the shadows because they add three-dimensionality to the image. In some cases, you may want to emphasize silhouettes. Then you should do the opposite, making the shadows even darker.

See more: Top 4 Advantages of High-quality Real Estate HDR Photography

8. Replace the Sky for a More Dramatic Look

One thing that any photographer wants to avoid is postponing the shooting in bad weather. If it’s not raining, you can still deliver great-looking pictures by replacing the sky. Unlike daylight exterior shootings, you do not have to worry about sun exposure and shadows.

First, you need a good experience with Photoshop and sky replacements. A dusk photo will likely be used as a hero shot, and it would be useless if the sky is roughly stitched and looks unnatural.

Turn day into dusk service
Turn day into dusk service in Kolorheaven

Second, you need a good collection of skies to make every shooting unique. At the same time, all the twilight images from a shoot should be coherent. You should replace the same sky in all images, trying to change the angle of view to create a variation.

Third, you can use the new sky to add a stunning sunset. In this way, you can create impressive pictures even if you start from a clean blue sky. The only thing to pay attention to is the direction of the sun. Replace the sky with a new sunset coming from the side, from behind, or in front of the viewer, in the same way as the real sunset.

9. Colour Correct Lights

The idea comes from the contrast of the blue of the sky and the yellow of the fixtures. In real circumstances, you will find lights with different temperatures. Some will look yellow, and some others will look white, but you can make them uniform with quick editing. You can do most of the work using the Local Adjustment Brush in Lightroom. For the most accurate selection, you can use a Luminance or Colour Range Mask.

For a sequence of windows that differs in color, you can use the Clone Stamp or select and replace the window’s interior in Photoshop. For the garden and exteriors, you can also remove the color cast in some cases. Especially for plants, a neutral light can look better.

10. Do Not Overprocess

With dusk photos, it can be easy to be carried away with processing to give a more artistic look. But the aesthetic approach is not always useful, and you should look from the market’s point of view. There are positive and negative to this.

The good is that the images can be more eye-catching, and the listing of the properties will attract more clients.

The bad is that the image does not correspond to reality, and clients will not find what they expect. The risk is that a bad first impression can minimize or cancel any effort made to attract clients.

Conclusion

Dusk photos can be an art that makes your clients happier and helps you to attract new ones. By following these tens steps Kolorheaven mentioned, you will do it in the right way will allow you to reach a higher level in your profession.

Contact Kolorheaven immediately via the Hotline at +84.899.779.111 or email: kolorheaven@cskolorheaven.com if you want to use our services.

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