ImageMerger.io
Warum ImageMergerBlogPreiseKontakt
Industry Guide

Electronics Product Photography Guide 2025: Tips, Techniques & AI Tools

A comprehensive guide to photographing consumer electronics, from smartphones and laptops to small gadgets and accessories. Learn professional techniques that showcase your products and drive conversions.

Black-framed eyeglasses on a clean white table surface
Clean, minimal setups let electronic products speak for themselves — no distracting backgrounds needed

Electronics photography presents unique challenges that set it apart from other product categories. The combination of reflective surfaces, screens that need to look perfect, intricate details, and the expectation of premium quality means that subpar photography can sink even excellent products.

Research from Salsify shows that 73% of consumers cite product images as the primary factor influencing their purchase decisions for electronics—more than specifications, reviews, or price.

The electronics market is intensely competitive. Whether you're selling on Amazon, running a Shopify store, or supplying to retailers, your product images compete against established brands with substantial photography budgets.

The good news is that with the right techniques and modern AI tools, creating professional electronics photography is more accessible than ever. You don't need a commercial studio or years of experience—you need to understand the fundamentals and apply them consistently.

This guide covers everything from controlling reflections and capturing screens to macro techniques for small components and scaling your photography workflow. We'll explore both traditional studio methods and AI-powered approaches, helping you choose the right strategy for your specific products and volume requirements.

Understanding the Challenges of Electronics Photography

Electronics products share several characteristics that make them particularly challenging to photograph well. Understanding these challenges is the first step toward overcoming them.

Most electronics feature a combination of materials—glossy plastics, brushed metals, glass screens, matte rubber—each requiring different lighting approaches within the same shot.

Screens present the most significant technical challenge. A powered-off screen acts as a mirror, reflecting your entire studio setup. A powered-on screen can show refresh lines, colour banding, and brightness variations that the human eye doesn't notice but cameras capture mercilessly.

The screen's refresh rate can conflict with your camera's shutter speed, creating visible rolling bands across the display.

Size variation adds another layer of complexity. A photography setup optimised for laptops won't work for earbuds, and vice versa. Sellers with diverse electronics catalogues need adaptable approaches or multiple setups to maintain consistency across their product range.

Key Challenges in Electronics Photography

Reflective surfaces, screen capture issues, showing scale, capturing fine details, and maintaining colour accuracy across mixed materials all require specific techniques covered in this guide.

Reflective Surfaces

Glossy plastics and glass screens reflect light sources, the camera, and even the photographer. Managing these reflections requires careful light positioning and sometimes compositing techniques.

Screen Photography

Capturing screens without banding, colour shifts, or reflections often requires separate techniques—either photographing screens powered off or using digital mockups.

Mixed Materials

A single product might combine matte rubber grips, brushed aluminium, and glossy screens. Each surface responds differently to lighting, complicating the setup.

Fine Details

Ports, buttons, textures, and branding need to be clearly visible. This requires sufficient resolution and lighting that reveals surface detail without harsh shadows.

Scale Communication

Electronics range from massive monitors to tiny USB receivers. Customers need to understand actual size, which isn't always apparent from isolated product shots.

Premium Expectations

Consumers associate electronics with precision and quality. Amateur photography undermines perceived product value more than in many other categories.

Grey Bluetooth earbuds photographed on a neutral surface
Small electronics like earbuds need macro-level attention to show build quality and finish

Essential Lighting Techniques for Electronics

Lighting is the foundation of electronics photography. The goal is to illuminate products evenly while controlling reflections on shiny surfaces.

Unlike soft goods like clothing, electronics demand precision—a misplaced light creates a distracting hot spot that draws attention away from the product itself.

The most reliable approach for electronics is diffused lighting from large sources. Large softboxes, strip lights, or light tents spread illumination over a wide area, creating softer reflections that appear as gradual gradients rather than harsh spots.

The larger your light source relative to the product, the softer and more controllable your reflections become.

For highly reflective products, many professionals use a light tent—essentially a translucent enclosure that surrounds the product. Light shines through the tent walls, creating even illumination from all directions simultaneously.

The tent itself becomes a massive, wrap-around light source. This technique works exceptionally well for products with multiple reflective surfaces at different angles.

1

Two-Light Softbox Setup

The most versatile setup for electronics uses two large softboxes. Position your key light at 45 degrees to one side and slightly above the product. Place your fill light on the opposite side at lower power (typically 1-2 stops less). This creates dimension while keeping shadows soft and reflections controlled. Adjust the fill ratio based on how dramatic you want the lighting—less fill creates more depth, more fill produces flatter, catalogue-style images.

Best for: Medium to large electronics like laptops, tablets, and monitors where you want to show form and texture.

2

Light Tent Technique

For highly reflective products or items with complex shapes, a light tent provides 360-degree diffused illumination. Place the product inside the tent and position lights outside, shining through the translucent walls. The tent eliminates harsh reflections entirely, creating smooth gradients across reflective surfaces. Cut a small opening for your camera lens to prevent it from appearing in reflections.

Best for: Small electronics, highly polished surfaces, products with multiple angles like wireless earbuds in charging cases.

3

Strip Light Edge Definition

Strip lights (narrow rectangular softboxes) excel at defining edges on electronics. Positioned behind and to the side of the product, strip lights create thin, elegant highlights along product edges that separate them from backgrounds. This technique is essential for dark-coloured electronics photographed on white backgrounds, where edge definition prevents products from appearing to float.

Best for: Black electronics, products where you need clear edge separation, hero shots requiring a premium look.

Colour Temperature Considerations

Electronics photography demands consistent colour temperature. Mixed lighting sources—combining daylight from a window with tungsten desk lamps, for example—create colour casts that are difficult to correct in post-production. Use lights rated at 5000-5500K (daylight balanced) for accurate colour reproduction, and ensure all your light sources match.

LED panels have become the standard for electronics photography due to their consistent output, adjustable colour temperature, and lack of heat (important when photographing heat-sensitive products over extended sessions). Look for lights with a CRI (Colour Rendering Index) of 95 or higher for accurate colour reproduction, particularly important when photographing products with subtle colour variations.

Photographing Screens and Displays

Screens deserve special attention because they're often the focal point of electronics products. Customers want to see display quality, but capturing screens photographically is technically demanding. There are two main approaches: photographing screens with displayed content, or photographing blank screens and adding content digitally.

For actual screen photography, synchronise your camera's shutter speed with the screen's refresh rate to avoid banding. A 60Hz screen requires a shutter speed of 1/60s or slower; a 120Hz screen needs 1/120s or slower. Use a tripod since these relatively slow shutter speeds can introduce motion blur from camera shake. Reduce ambient lighting and let the screen be the primary light source for that area of the image.

The digital composite approach is often more practical for professional results. Photograph the product with a blank or uniformly coloured screen, then add the interface image in post-production. This gives you pixel-perfect screen content without refresh issues, colour banding, or reflection problems.

It also allows you to update screen content without reshooting the product—useful when software interfaces change or when localising for different markets.

Screen Photography Tips

  • Clean screens meticulously—use microfibre cloths and screen cleaner. Fingerprints and dust are magnified in photography.
  • Set screen brightness to match your lighting—overexposed screens lose detail; underexposed screens look dull.
  • Use a polarising filter to reduce reflections when photographing active screens at an angle.
  • Consider using mockup templates for hero shots where screen content matters more than photographic authenticity.
Wireless earphones with silver case placed beside a MacBook Pro
Lifestyle context shots showing products alongside familiar devices help buyers picture daily use

Step-by-Step: Creating Professional Electronics Photos

Follow this workflow to capture professional electronics images efficiently. This process works for everything from smartphones to computer peripherals, with adjustments for specific product types noted where relevant.

1

Prepare the Product

Clean all surfaces thoroughly using appropriate cleaners—microfibre for screens, compressed air for ports and crevices. Remove protective films unless they're part of the product. Check for fingerprints, dust, and smudges from every angle.

2

Set Up Your Lighting

Position your main light source at 45 degrees. For reflective products, use diffusion (softbox or tent). Add fill light opposite the key. Use strip lights for edge definition on dark products. Test with your camera to check for unwanted reflections before shooting.

3

Position the Product

Use a stable surface—acrylic risers work well for elevating products slightly. Angle the product to show its most flattering perspective while revealing key features. For marketplace main images, shoot slightly above centre for a natural viewing angle.

4

Configure Camera Settings

Use a low ISO (100-400) for minimal noise. Set aperture to f/8-f/11 for sharp focus across the product. Shoot in RAW format for maximum editing flexibility. Use a remote trigger or timer to prevent camera shake.

5

Capture Multiple Angles

Shoot front, back, sides, three-quarter views, and detail shots. Capture ports, buttons, textures, and branding elements. For marketplaces allowing multiple images, plan shots that tell a complete story—overview, details, scale, and lifestyle.

6

Process and Edit

Adjust white balance for accurate colour. Remove any remaining dust or imperfections. Ensure backgrounds are pure white (RGB 255,255,255) for marketplace compliance. Apply consistent editing across your product range for catalogue coherence.

Macro Photography for Small Electronics

Small electronics—earbuds, USB drives, smart watches, fitness trackers—require macro photography techniques to capture adequate detail. These products often contain intricate features that customers want to examine closely: speaker grilles, button textures, port configurations, and material finishes.

A dedicated macro lens provides the best results, allowing 1:1 reproduction ratios where the subject appears life-size on the camera sensor. However, extension tubes or close-up filters offer budget-friendly alternatives that attach to existing lenses.

The trade-off with any macro approach is extremely shallow depth of field—at close focusing distances, only a thin slice of the product will be in sharp focus.

Focus stacking solves the depth of field problem by combining multiple shots taken at different focus points. You photograph the product several times, each time focusing on a different area, then merge the sharpest portions of each frame in post-production.

Software like Helicon Focus or Photoshop's focus stacking feature automates this process. The result is an image where the entire product—front to back—appears tack-sharp, which isn't possible with a single exposure at macro distances.

Focus Stacking Workflow

1. Mount Securely

Use a sturdy tripod and cable release. Any movement between frames ruins the stack.

2. Manual Focus

Start focused on the nearest point, then incrementally shift focus toward the back.

3. Merge in Software

Import all frames and let stacking software align and blend the sharpest areas.

Using AI Tools for Electronics Photography

AI-powered photography tools have transformed electronics product photography, particularly for sellers managing large catalogues or those without access to professional studio equipment. Modern AI can handle the most tedious and technically demanding aspects of electronics photography: removing backgrounds from complex shapes, correcting reflections, generating consistent lighting, and producing marketplace-compliant images at scale.

ImageMerger excels at electronics photography because AI handles the specific challenges of the category. Complex outlines—cables, ports, irregular shapes—that would take a skilled editor significant time to mask manually are processed in seconds.

The AI understands how to treat different surface materials within the same product, adjusting its approach for the glossy screen versus the matte body versus the metallic ports.

The practical benefit for sellers is significant. A seller receiving samples of a new product line can photograph items quickly with a smartphone, upload to ImageMerger, and have marketplace-ready images within minutes.

No scheduling professional photographers, no waiting for edited files, no expensive studio time. For product refreshes or seasonal variations, updating images becomes trivial rather than a major production.

AI Advantages for Electronics Photography

Handles complex outlines (cables, ports) automatically
Corrects reflections and hot spots intelligently
Maintains consistency across large product catalogues
Generates pure white backgrounds meeting marketplace standards
Processes batches quickly for high-volume sellers
Works from smartphone photos—no professional camera required

Electronics Photography by the Numbers

73%

of electronics buyers cite product images as the primary factor in purchase decisions (Salsify Consumer Research 2024)

40%

higher return rates for electronics with inadequate imagery showing size, ports, or interface (Narvar Returns Report)

67%

of consumers zoom in on electronics images to examine ports and details (Google/Ipsos Ecommerce Study)

Common Electronics Photography Mistakes

Even experienced photographers make these errors when working with electronics. Understanding these pitfalls helps you avoid costly reshoots and produce professional results consistently.

Visible Fingerprints

Fix: Clean products immediately before shooting. Wear cotton gloves when positioning. Check images at 100% zoom before moving on.

Uncontrolled Reflections

Fix: Use diffused lighting and light tents. Position yourself and equipment out of reflective paths. A polarising filter helps on angled surfaces.

Screen Banding

Fix: Match shutter speed to screen refresh rate (1/60s for 60Hz screens). Or photograph screens off and composite content digitally.

Shallow Focus

Fix: Use f/8-f/11 for adequate depth of field. For macro work, employ focus stacking to ensure front-to-back sharpness.

Poor Scale Reference

Fix: Include lifestyle shots with recognisable objects for context. Create infographic images with dimensions for technical accuracy.

Inconsistent Lighting

Fix: Document your setup for each product type. Use the same light positions and power settings across your catalogue for coherent listings.

Marketplace Requirements for Electronics

Different marketplaces have specific requirements for electronics listings. Meeting these requirements ensures your listings go live without delays and appear professional in search results.

Amazon

Pure white background (RGB 255,255,255), minimum 1000px on longest side (2000px recommended for zoom), product fills 85% of frame, no text or logos on main image. Electronics benefit from all 9 image slots: main product, angles, ports/details, infographics, lifestyle.

eBay

Minimum 500px on longest side, white or neutral backgrounds preferred for main images. Up to 24 photos allowed—use generously for electronics to show condition, included accessories, and functionality.

Shopify/Direct Ecommerce

No strict requirements, but consistency matters. Use 1:1 or 4:3 ratios throughout your store. Electronics benefit from lifestyle context—show products in use, on desks, or in hands to communicate scale and utility.

Grey and white headphones on a plain background
For marketplace main images, a single product on white gives the clearest, most compliant result

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I photograph electronics without screen reflections?

To eliminate screen reflections, shoot in a controlled environment with diffused lighting positioned at 45-degree angles to the screen. Use a polarising filter on your camera lens to reduce glare. For completely dark screens, photograph in near-darkness with only product edge lighting, then composite a screen image in post-production. Many professional photographers capture screens separately using screen capture software for pixel-perfect results.

What lighting setup is best for electronics photography?

A two-light softbox setup works well for most electronics. Position your key light at 45 degrees to one side and a fill light opposite at lower intensity. Use a large diffuser or shoot through a light tent to minimise harsh reflections on glossy surfaces. LED panels with adjustable colour temperature (5000-5500K) provide consistent, flicker-free illumination ideal for electronics.

How do I show scale for electronics products?

Include familiar reference objects in lifestyle shots—a hand holding the device, the product next to a coffee cup, or placed on a desk setup. For technical accuracy, create infographic images with dimension callouts. Many sellers photograph electronics next to coins or standard objects, though this works better for secondary images than main product shots on marketplaces.

Should I show electronics powered on or off?

Both serve different purposes. Powered-off shots on white backgrounds work best for main marketplace images and catalogue photography. Powered-on shots showing the interface, display quality, or features work well for secondary images and lifestyle content. For screens, consider using mockup software to add perfect UI images rather than photographing actual screens, which often show colour banding or refresh lines.

How do I capture small electronics like earbuds or USB drives?

Use macro photography techniques with a dedicated macro lens or extension tubes. A light tent provides even illumination without harsh shadows. Position products on a non-reflective surface and use a tripod for sharp focus. For very small items, focus stacking (combining multiple shots at different focus points) ensures the entire product is sharp from front to back.

Can AI tools help with electronics product photography?

AI tools like ImageMerger excel at electronics photography. They automatically handle background removal on complex shapes like cables and ports, correct reflections and hot spots, and generate consistent lighting across product ranges. AI is particularly useful for creating white background versions of products originally photographed in lifestyle settings, and for batch processing large electronics catalogues efficiently.

Transform Your Electronics Photography

Create professional, marketplace-ready electronics images in seconds. Let AI handle backgrounds, reflections, and compliance while you focus on growing your business.

Related Guides

AI Product PhotographyAmazon Product PhotographyWhite Background GeneratorProduct Photo Enhancer