Close-up of a hand with multiple rings featuring various designs and gemstones.

COMMERCIAL PHOTOGRAPHY

Product photography for brands that need it right. Based in Austin, TX, working with companies locally and nationwide. Every image below starts with a real product and real light. That part is non-negotiable.

Commercial Photography, Defined

The term gets used loosely. Commercial photography technically covers everything from fashion photography and real estate to food photography, lifestyle photography, and advertising photography. What ties it together is intent. These aren't personal images. They're not art for a wall. Commercial images exist to move a product or service forward. They sell, they persuade, they represent. They show up in an ad, on a shelf, or in a pitch deck and do work.

My corner of commercial photography is product. I photograph physical things for businesses that need those things to look exactly right. That means accuracy matters more than style, and execution matters more than concept. A concept nobody can deliver on is worthless. A clean, sharp, high quality image that's ready to ship the day the client receives it is worth everything.

How the Work Gets Built

Every project starts with one question: where are these images going?

The answer changes everything. An e-commerce product shot on white lives inside a listing and fights for attention against a dozen competitors in a thumbnail grid. A lifestyle photography image for social media needs to stop someone mid-scroll and feel real enough that they don't skip it. An advertising photography asset for a paid campaign needs to carry a message and convert at scale. Same product, three totally different shoots.

I figure this out before the camera comes out. Not after.

The shoot itself is where most commercial photographers either earn their rate or don't. Product photography is a lighting problem. Every surface behaves differently. Glass refracts. Metal reflects. Matte packaging absorbs. A bourbon bottle needs warmth and weight. A diagnostic device needs clinical precision. A skincare line needs to feel clean without looking sterile. These aren't creative preferences. They're technical decisions, and getting them wrong on set means burning hours in post production trying to recover something that should have been right from the start.

I shoot tethered so the client can see what I'm seeing in real time. The camera is connected directly to a monitor, and every frame shows up full-size as it's captured. No waiting until post to find out the angle was off or the color wasn't reading right. We catch it live, adjust on set, and keep moving. It sounds simple, but it eliminates the most expensive problem in commercial photography: surprises after the shoot is over.

Color management is the other non-negotiable. I calibrate against the physical product sitting on the table in front of me. What's on screen has to match what's in hand. When a brand is putting commercial images on packaging, on their website, and in advertising, all next to the actual product, the photography can't be an approximation. Consumers notice when a shade is off. So do retailers. Getting color right in-camera means the final image holds up everywhere it needs to, from a phone screen to a printed label.

Post production is refinement. Color correction, retouching, cleanup. I handle all of it in-house. If I'm spending hours in post fixing things that should have been handled during the shoot, something went wrong. The work that happens in post production should be about making a good capture better, not about saving a mediocre one. Sharpening detail, cleaning up a reflection, adjusting tonality to match the brand's visual standards. The final image the client receives is the final image. No additional editing needed on their end, no back-and-forth about color profiles. Done is done.

Built for More Than One Channel

A product shoot in 2026 doesn't end with a hero image and a handshake. The same set of commercial images needs to work on the website, across social media, in paid ads, on packaging, in sales collateral, and sometimes on a 10-foot trade show banner. Creating images that hold up everywhere isn't a bonus. It's baseline.

I account for this in pre-production. If a brand needs clean white-background e-commerce shots and styled lifestyle photography for social, I build the shot list to cover both in one session. Two looks, one booking, consistent visual language across every channel. It's more efficient and it keeps the brand from ending up with a patchwork of images that don't look like they came from the same company.

This is where the business background shows up. I spent eight years as a licensed CPA before moving into commercial photography full time. That means I think about cost per usable asset, not just cost per shoot day. I think about whether one well-planned session can replace two. Commercial work should make financial sense for the client, and I'd rather build that into the scope upfront than have a conversation about overages after the fact.

What I Specialize In

Product photography is the core. E-commerce, hero images, packaging, catalog work across beauty, food and beverage, consumer electronics, spirits, and health and wellness. If it's a physical product that needs to look accurate and compelling in a high quality commercial image, that's the work. The subject changes from project to project. The standard doesn't.

Advertising photography for campaigns, digital and print. More stylized, more planned, more concept-driven. These are the images that end up in paid media and brand collateral where the commercial images carry more weight than just showing what something looks like. They need to communicate a feeling and still sell.

Lifestyle photography that puts the product in context. On a bar. On a desk. In someone's hand. The product is still the subject, but it exists in its natural environment. These tend to perform well on social media because they feel lived-in without sacrificing the quality of a controlled shoot.

I don't shoot types of commercial photography outside this focus. No fashion photography, no events, no portraits, no real estate. The upside of staying focused is that every project benefits from a decade of solving the same category of problems, not a generalist approach stretched across unrelated work.

I also offer commercial videography across advertising, corporate events, interviews, and testimonials.

Frequently Asked Questions

How should I prepare for a product photography shoot?

The most useful thing you can do before a shoot is get clear on where the images will be used. E-commerce, social media, advertising, packaging. That determines the shot list, the styling approach, and how many final images you'll walk away with. Beyond that, have the products clean and ready, and send over any brand guidelines or reference images you want me to work from. I handle the rest.

How many final images does a typical product shoot deliver?

It depends on the scope. A straightforward e-commerce shoot on white delivers more frames in less time. A styled advertising shoot with multiple setups takes longer per image but produces higher-impact commercial images. I walk through all of this during the estimate so the deliverable count and the investment are clear before anything gets booked.

Do you work with companies outside of Austin?

Yes. About half the brands I work with aren't in Texas. Product photography ships well. You send the product, I shoot it in my Austin studio, and deliver the final images digitally. For larger projects that require on-location work, I travel. We'll figure out the logistics during the estimate.

What's the difference between product photography and lifestyle photography?

Product photography puts the product front and center, usually on a clean or styled background with controlled lighting. The focus is accuracy: color, texture, detail, scale. Lifestyle photography puts that same product in context, in a real environment, being used the way it's intended. Most brands need both. I typically plan the shot list to capture both styles in a single session so the final images stay visually consistent across every channel.

Let's Talk

If you're planning a product shoot, launching a new line, or need commercial images that actually perform for your business, I'd like to hear about it. Check out the videography work if video is part of the conversation, or get in touch when you're ready to talk through what you need.