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Technique Guide

Product Photography Lighting Guide 2025: Setups, Tips & Techniques

Master the single most important factor in product photography. Learn professional lighting setups for any budget, from natural window light to multi-light studio configurations.

Photographer adjusting large studio lighting equipment
Getting your lighting right is the single biggest improvement you can make to product photography

Lighting is the foundation of every great product photograph. You can own the most expensive camera on the market, but without proper lighting, your product images will fall flat. Conversely, a well-lit product shot taken on a smartphone can outperform a poorly lit image from a professional DSLR.

According to research from Etsy, listings with well-lit, clear product images receive 3.5 times more views than those with dim or shadowy photos. For ecommerce sellers, mastering product photography lighting is not optional — it is the single highest-impact skill you can develop.

The good news is that professional-quality lighting does not require a professional budget. The fundamentals of light — direction, intensity, diffusion, and colour temperature — remain the same whether you are using a £2,000 studio strobe or a £30 LED panel from Amazon. What matters is understanding how light interacts with your product and controlling it to produce clean, consistent, flattering images that build customer confidence and drive conversions.

This guide walks you through everything you need to know about product photography lighting, from the physics of why soft light looks better than hard light, through practical one-light, two-light, and three-light setups, to advanced techniques for challenging products like reflective surfaces and transparent materials.

We will also cover how AI-powered tools can correct and enhance lighting after the shoot, giving you a safety net that professional photographers never had.

Understanding Light: The Fundamentals

Before setting up any lights, it helps to understand the four properties of light that determine how your product will look in the final image. Every lighting decision you make comes down to manipulating these four variables, and once you grasp them, you will be able to diagnose and fix lighting problems intuitively.

Hard Light vs Soft Light

The most critical concept in product photography lighting is the difference between hard and soft light. Hard light comes from a small, direct source — think of a bare bulb or direct sunlight. It creates sharp, clearly defined shadows with abrupt transitions between light and dark.

While hard light has its place in dramatic portraiture or fashion, it is generally undesirable for product photography because it creates distracting shadows, emphasises surface imperfections, and produces hot spots (overexposed areas) on reflective surfaces.

Soft light, by contrast, comes from a large, diffused source. It wraps around the product, creating gentle shadow transitions that reveal form and texture without harsh contrasts. Softboxes, light tents, umbrellas, and overcast skies all produce soft light.

For ecommerce product photography, soft light is almost always the correct choice. It produces clean, professional images with even illumination and accurate colour reproduction — exactly what marketplaces and customers expect.

Direction and Angle

Where you position your light relative to the product and camera dramatically affects the mood and clarity of the image. Front lighting (light placed behind the camera, pointing at the product) produces flat, shadowless images that lack depth. While this might sound ideal for product photos, completely flat lighting actually makes products look two-dimensional and uninteresting.

The industry standard is to position the key light at approximately 45 degrees to one side and slightly above the product. This creates gentle shadows on one side that give the product three-dimensionality and visual interest, whilst keeping the overall image bright and clean.

Intensity and Exposure

Light intensity determines your exposure settings — aperture, shutter speed, and ISO. For product photography, you want sufficient light to shoot at ISO 100 (the lowest noise setting) with a narrow aperture (f/8 to f/11 for maximum sharpness across the product). More light gives you more flexibility.

Modern LED panels are adjustable, allowing you to dial in the exact intensity needed. If your images are too bright, reduce the light output rather than closing down the aperture excessively, which can introduce diffraction softness.

Colour Temperature

Every light source has a colour temperature measured in Kelvin (K). Warm light (around 3000K) has an orange cast, while cool light (around 7000K) has a blue cast. For product photography, the standard is daylight-balanced light at 5000-5500K, which produces neutral whites and accurate colours.

This is critical for ecommerce — if your product appears warmer or cooler than it actually is, customers will receive something that looks different from the listing, leading to returns and negative reviews. Always ensure all lights in your setup match in colour temperature. Mixing a warm tungsten lamp with a cool LED creates colour casts that are extremely difficult to correct in post-processing.

Professional lighting setup for portrait and product work
Soft, diffused light from a large source is the safest starting point for almost any product

Essential Lighting Setups for Product Photography

The setup you choose depends on your product type, budget, and the volume of products you need to photograph. Below are the most common configurations, progressing from simplest to most advanced. Each produces professional results when executed properly.

1

Natural Window Light + Reflector

The simplest and most accessible lighting setup uses a single large window as your light source with a white foam board or card as a reflector. Position your product on a table next to a north-facing window (or any window without direct sunlight). Place the white reflector on the opposite side of the product to bounce light back into the shadows. This creates beautifully soft, even illumination with gentle shadow transitions.

The key to making this work is diffusion. If direct sunlight streams through the window, hang a sheer white curtain or tape a sheet of tracing paper over the glass. You want the entire window surface to glow with even, diffused light. The larger the window relative to the product, the softer the light will be. A large patio door produces incredibly soft light for small products.

Best for: Handmade items, food, cosmetics, small products. Budget: effectively free if you have a suitable window. Limitations: Inconsistent throughout the day and weather-dependent. Not suitable for batch shooting large catalogues.

2

Single Light + Softbox Setup

A single continuous LED light with a softbox attachment is the entry point into controlled studio lighting. Position the softbox at 45 degrees to the product, slightly above, and angled downward. Place a white reflector on the opposite side to fill the shadows. This mimics the natural window setup but gives you complete control over intensity and consistency — you can shoot at any time, in any weather, and get identical results every time.

When choosing a softbox, bigger is better for product photography. A 60cm x 60cm softbox is adequate for small items like jewellery and cosmetics, while a 90cm x 60cm softbox handles products up to the size of a microwave. The softbox fabric diffuses the light, converting a point source into a large, soft panel of light. Some softboxes include an inner diffusion panel for even softer light — use it.

Best for: Most small to medium products. Budget: £50-150 for an LED panel with softbox and stand. Limitations: Shadows on one side may still be noticeable without a strong reflector. Single-light setups require more careful positioning.

3

Two-Light Key and Fill Setup

The two-light setup is the workhorse of professional product photography and the configuration most ecommerce studios rely on daily. The key light (your main light) goes at 45 degrees on one side, and the fill light (set to roughly half the intensity of the key) goes on the opposite side. This creates dimensional lighting with controlled shadows that never become too dark or distracting.

The ratio between key and fill light determines the mood. A 2:1 ratio (key twice as bright as fill) produces gentle, commercial-looking images ideal for most ecommerce applications. A 3:1 ratio adds more drama with deeper shadows, which can work for premium products like watches or spirits. A 1:1 ratio (both lights equal) produces very flat, shadowless images — useful for clothing photography or when marketplace requirements demand minimal shadows.

Best for: The majority of product photography. Provides the best balance of quality, consistency, and ease of use. Budget: £100-300 for a pair of LED panels with softboxes and stands.

4

Three-Light Setup with Background Light

Adding a third light behind or beneath the product, aimed at the background, gives you a fully controlled studio environment. This background light ensures your backdrop is evenly illuminated, which is essential for achieving a true pure white background (RGB 255,255,255) in-camera rather than relying entirely on post-processing. For non-white backgrounds, the background light prevents the backdrop from appearing muddy or uneven.

Some photographers use the third light as a rim light or hair light instead, positioning it behind and above the product to create a subtle bright edge that separates the product from the background. This adds a polished, premium look that makes products appear to "pop" off the page. Rim lighting is particularly effective for dark products on white backgrounds, where the product edges might otherwise blend into shadows.

Best for: High-volume studios, premium product lines, or when in-camera white backgrounds are required. Budget: £200-500 for a three-light LED kit with softboxes, stands, and background support.

5

Light Tent (Shooting Tent) Setup

A light tent is a collapsible cube made of translucent white fabric. You place your product inside and position lights outside, shining through the fabric walls. The fabric acts as a massive diffuser, surrounding the product with even, soft light from every direction. This virtually eliminates shadows and reflections, making it the go-to solution for reflective products like jewellery, glassware, chrome hardware, and electronics.

Light tents range from small 40cm cubes for jewellery to large 120cm versions for medium-sized products. Most come with interchangeable background inserts in white, black, and sometimes grey or gradient. The limitation is creative control — because light comes from all directions, you get very flat, even illumination with almost no shadows. This is perfect for catalogue-style shots but unsuitable when you want to create mood or drama.

Best for: Reflective and small products, high-volume catalogue shooting, sellers who want consistent results with minimal skill. Budget: £20-80 for the tent, plus lights.

Lighting for Challenging Product Types

Certain products require specialised lighting approaches that go beyond the standard setups. These products are the ones that trip up even experienced photographers, because they interact with light in ways that create unwanted artifacts in the final image. Understanding the specific challenges each product type presents — and the targeted solutions for each — separates professional results from amateur attempts.

Reflective Products (Metal, Glass)

Use a light tent or very large softboxes. Position lights so their reflections fall outside the camera’s view. A polarising filter on the lens reduces surface glare by up to 90%. For chrome or mirror-finish products, create a “black card” technique: place black cards around the product to create controlled dark reflections that define edges and shape.

Transparent Products (Glass, Clear Plastic)

Backlight is your friend. Place a light behind and below the product, shining through a white acrylic sheet. This illuminates the product from within, revealing its form beautifully. Add a subtle key light from the side to define edges. Avoid front lighting, which creates flat, lifeless images of transparent items and picks up every fingerprint and dust particle.

Dark or Black Products

Dark products absorb light and lose detail in shadows. Use a bright key light at a shallow angle to skim across the surface, revealing texture and form. Add a rim light from behind to separate the product from the background. Slightly overexpose compared to your normal settings, then recover highlights in post. A light-coloured background helps cameras metre correctly.

White Products on White Backgrounds

The trickiest combination in product photography. Light the product and background separately. The background should be 1-2 stops brighter than the product to ensure pure white. Use subtle grey cards or black reflectors on the sides to create shadows that define the product’s edges against the white background. Without these edge definitions, white products simply disappear.

Textured Products (Fabric, Wood, Stone)

Use directional side lighting at a low angle to create shadows within the texture. This is called “raking light” and it reveals surface detail that flat front lighting would hide. A single key light at 30-45 degrees with no fill on the shadow side works well. For fabric, this shows weave patterns; for wood, it reveals grain; for leather, it highlights natural texture.

Food and Beverage Products

Backlight or side-backlight produces the most appetising food images. Position your key light behind and slightly to one side of the product, then use a reflector in front to fill the shadows. This creates a luminous quality that makes packaging pop and liquids glow. Use a flag (black card) above the camera to prevent lens flare from the backlight.

Person holding a camera lens, preparing for a product shoot
Your lens choice matters less than your light placement — get the lighting right first

Step-by-Step: Setting Up Your Product Photography Lighting

Whether you are using a single LED panel or a multi-light studio, the process for setting up lighting follows the same logical sequence. Take your time with each step — rushing the setup inevitably shows in the final images.

1

Prepare Your Shooting Space

Start by eliminating ambient light. Close blinds, turn off overhead room lights, and block any light sources you cannot control. You want complete darkness so the only illumination on your product comes from lights you have intentionally placed. This gives you full control over shadows, colour temperature, and exposure consistency.

2

Set Up Your Background

Position your sweep or background paper. For a white background, use a sheet of white card or foam board curved gently from the table surface up behind the product. Ensure there are no visible creases or seams. The curve eliminates the harsh line where the table meets the wall, creating a seamless gradient that looks like infinite white space.

3

Position Your Key Light

Place your primary light at approximately 45 degrees to the product, at roughly the same height or slightly above. Turn it on and observe the shadows. Move the light closer for softer shadows (the light source becomes relatively larger) or farther away for harder, more defined shadows. Adjust the height until the shadows fall where you want them.

4

Add Fill Light or Reflector

Position a reflector or second light on the opposite side of the key light. Start with no fill and gradually add it until the shadows are present but not distractingly dark. A white foam board reflector provides subtle fill; a silver reflector or second light provides stronger fill. The goal is dimensional lighting with readable shadows, not flat illumination.

5

Fine-Tune and Test Shoot

Take a test photograph and review it on your computer screen (not the camera LCD, which is too small and often inaccurate). Check for unwanted reflections, shadow direction, hot spots, and overall exposure. Adjust light positions in small increments, shooting a test after each change. Once satisfied, mark your light positions with tape on the floor for consistency across the entire shoot.

6

Set White Balance

Use a grey card to set a custom white balance in your camera. Place the grey card where your product will sit, fill the frame with it, and use your camera’s custom white balance function to calibrate. This ensures colours are accurate regardless of the slight variations between different light units. Set white balance once per session, not per shot.

7

Enhance with AI Post-Processing

Upload your images to ImageMerger for AI-powered lighting correction. The AI analyses illumination patterns, corrects uneven exposure, recovers shadow detail, and ensures consistent brightness across your product catalogue. This final step catches imperfections that even careful setup might miss.

The Impact of Lighting on Ecommerce Performance

3.5x

more views on listings with well-lit product images versus dimly lit alternatives (Etsy Seller Handbook)

33%

of product returns attributed to items looking different in person than in listing photos, often caused by poor lighting (Shopify, 2024)

67%

of consumers consider image quality "very important" when making online purchasing decisions (Salsify Consumer Research)

Choosing the Right Equipment

The product photography lighting market can be overwhelming, with options ranging from £20 desk lamps to £5,000 studio strobes. For ecommerce sellers, the sweet spot lies in continuous LED lighting — it is affordable, adjustable, cool-running (important for heat-sensitive products like food and cosmetics), and what-you-see-is-what-you-get, meaning you can see exactly how the light falls on your product before pressing the shutter.

When evaluating LED panels or lights, focus on three specifications: CRI (Colour Rendering Index), colour temperature range, and output brightness measured in lumens or lux at a given distance. A CRI of 95 or above is essential for accurate colour reproduction.

Bi-colour LEDs that adjust between 3200K and 5600K offer flexibility, though for product photography you will likely keep them locked at 5500K. Brightness matters less than you might think — even a modest 1000-lumen panel is sufficient for small product photography when positioned close to the product.

Modifiers matter as much as the lights themselves. A bare LED panel produces hard, unflattering light. Attach a softbox and you get beautiful, diffused illumination.

Budget for at least one softbox per light, and consider adding grid cloths (which narrow the beam without hardening it), barn doors (for directing light away from the background), and diffusion panels (large translucent sheets placed between light and product for ultra-soft results).

LED vs Strobe: Which to Choose?

Continuous LED lights are recommended for product photography beginners and most ecommerce applications. You see the light as it will appear in the photo, making setup intuitive. Studio strobes (flash) produce more light per pound spent and freeze motion, but the light is only visible for a fraction of a second, requiring modelling lights or experience to predict results. Strobes are primarily useful for very large products or when shooting tethered at high speed.

How AI Tools Fix Lighting Problems

Even with careful setup, lighting issues creep into product photographs. Perhaps shadows fall slightly differently on the fiftieth product than the first, or a reflective surface catches an unexpected highlight. Historically, fixing these problems meant hours in Photoshop. Today, AI-powered tools like ImageMerger can analyse and correct lighting issues automatically.

AI lighting correction works by analysing the illumination patterns in your image and comparing them against training data from millions of professionally lit product photographs. The AI identifies areas that are underexposed, overexposed, or inconsistently lit, then applies targeted adjustments to bring the image in line with professional standards. This includes evening out exposure across the product, recovering shadow detail without introducing noise, reducing hot spots on reflective surfaces, and ensuring the background is cleanly and evenly lit.

For sellers photographing large catalogues, AI post-processing also solves the consistency problem. Even if your lighting setup drifts slightly over a long shooting session, the AI normalises the final images to ensure every product in your catalogue has the same clean, professional look. This consistency is what separates brands that customers trust from sellers whose listings look thrown together.

Common Lighting Mistakes to Avoid

After reviewing thousands of product images, these are the lighting errors we see most frequently. Each is straightforward to fix once identified, but left unaddressed, they undermine the professionalism of your listings and suppress conversion rates:

Mixed Colour Temperatures

Fix: Ensure all lights are set to the same Kelvin value. Turn off room lights and block window light to prevent ambient contamination. Mixed temperatures create colour casts that are difficult to correct.

Shadows Too Harsh or Too Dark

Fix: Increase the size of your light source (move softbox closer or use a larger one). Add a fill reflector or second light on the shadow side. Aim for readable shadows that define shape without creating black holes.

Hot Spots and Blown Highlights

Fix: Move the light farther from the product or reduce intensity. Use a larger diffuser. For reflective products, angle the light so reflections fall outside the frame. Check your histogram — no data should touch the right edge.

Uneven Background Illumination

Fix: Add a dedicated background light or position your key lights to spill onto the background evenly. For white backgrounds, the backdrop should be 1-2 stops brighter than the product to ensure pure white.

Overhead Room Light Contamination

Fix: Turn off all overhead lights before shooting. Fluorescent and tungsten ceiling lights mix with your studio lights, creating unpredictable colour casts and flat shadows from above that compete with your planned lighting.

Inconsistent Lighting Across Products

Fix: Mark light positions with tape. Use the same power settings for every shot. Shoot tethered to a monitor to catch drift immediately. AI tools like ImageMerger can normalise lighting across batches as a final safety net.

Camera lens on a table in a studio environment
Consistent lighting setups mean consistent results — document your setup so you can replicate it

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best lighting for product photography?

The best lighting for product photography depends on your product and budget. For most products, a two-light softbox setup provides the most versatile, professional results. Position your key light at 45 degrees to the product and a fill light on the opposite side at lower intensity. For reflective products like jewellery or electronics, diffused lighting from a light tent or large softboxes works best. Natural window light with a reflector is an excellent free alternative for smaller items, producing soft, even illumination that works particularly well for handmade and lifestyle products.

Can I use natural light for product photography?

Absolutely. Natural light from a large north-facing window (or south-facing in the southern hemisphere) provides beautiful, diffused illumination that is ideal for product photography. The key is shooting during overcast days or using a sheer white curtain to diffuse direct sunlight. Place your product near the window and use a white reflector board on the opposite side to fill shadows. Natural light works exceptionally well for food, cosmetics, handmade crafts, and lifestyle products. The main drawback is inconsistency - you are dependent on weather and time of day, which makes batch shooting challenging.

How many lights do I need for product photography?

You can achieve professional results with as few as one light plus a reflector. A single softbox or LED panel at 45 degrees with a white foam board reflector opposite is sufficient for most small to medium products. Two lights offer more control - a key light and fill light eliminate unwanted shadows more effectively. Three lights add a background or rim light for separation and polish. For most ecommerce sellers, a two-light setup hits the sweet spot between quality, cost, and ease of use. AI tools like ImageMerger can also correct lighting issues after the fact, reducing your dependency on complex setups.

What colour temperature should product photography lights be?

Product photography lights should be set to 5000-5500K (daylight balanced) for the most accurate colour reproduction. This temperature range closely matches natural daylight and produces neutral whites, which is critical for marketplace compliance and customer trust. Never mix colour temperatures - all lights in your setup should match. If using LED panels, choose units with a CRI (Colour Rendering Index) of 95 or above to ensure colours are rendered faithfully. Lower CRI lights can make products appear dull or shift colours, leading to customer returns.

How do I photograph reflective products without glare?

Reflective products like glass, metal, and glossy plastics require specialised lighting techniques. The most effective method is using a light tent (shooting tent) that surrounds the product with diffused light from all directions, eliminating harsh reflections. Alternatively, use large softboxes positioned further from the product than you normally would, and angle them so the reflection falls outside the camera's field of view. Polarising filters on your lens can reduce surface glare. For stubborn reflections, dulling spray provides a temporary matte finish. AI tools can also remove or reduce unwanted reflections in post-processing.

Do I need expensive lights for good product photos?

No. Professional product photography is achievable on any budget. A single LED panel costing under £50 can produce excellent results when paired with proper diffusion and a white reflector board. Even a desk lamp with a daylight-balanced bulb behind a sheet of tracing paper creates usable diffused light. The key factors are diffusion (soft light versus hard light), consistency (same setup for every product), and white balance accuracy. Budget LED panels from brands like Neewer or Godox offer remarkable quality for under £100. AI-powered tools like ImageMerger can further compensate for lighting imperfections, making professional results accessible without professional equipment.

Perfect Lighting, Every Time

Even imperfect lighting can produce stunning results with AI. Upload your product photos to ImageMerger and let AI correct exposure, shadows, and consistency automatically.

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