Upload a set of listing photos and have them back in minutes, not days. We balance the lighting and clear the temporary clutter, and leave the actual property alone. No subscription, pay per photo. First 10 images are free, link in bio.
Same photo, lighting balanced in BiziEdit. The shelves and wood grain come back, the floor warms up, the windows balance out, and the room looks its real size. Nothing moved. We just corrected the exposure.
In person this library feels warm and full of detail. The phone underexposed it: the built-ins on the left sink into shadow and the whole room reads dark and closed in.
If you shoot your own listing photos, turn portrait mode off. It blurs the frame edges to fake depth, so corners go soft and straight lines bend. For real estate you want the whole room sharp, wall to wall.
A rental that sits with no inquiries usually isn't priced wrong. It's eight dark phone photos taken in a hurry between tenants. Renters scroll past bad photos the same way buyers do.
Same space, virtually staged. Lighter furniture, a few styled details, and the light brought up so it reads. The room is untouched: same walls, same floors, same layout.
Most rooms look smaller in photos than they do in person. Biggest reason: the shot was taken from the middle of the room. Back into a corner and shoot toward the opposite one. Same room, and suddenly it breathes.
Same photo, run through Twilight. Pink dusk sky, warm light glowing across all three levels, and the daytime shot you already took becomes the hero image. No going back to the property at sunset.
A coastal home shot on a flat, gray, overcast day. Nothing technically wrong with it. It just looks like every other daytime exterior a buyer scrolls right past.
What's the worst listing photo you've ever come across? Photographer reflected in the bathroom mirror, toilet seat up, a blurry shot of the ceiling fan. Drop the worst one you've seen.
Michael spent years shooting listings in St. Augustine and saw the same thing over and over. A house sits, the price gets cut, everyone blames the market. Then the photos get redone and it moves. Same house. Buyers were reacting to the pictures the whole time.
Shooting your own listings? Keep the phone level. The moment you tilt up or down, the walls start to lean and the whole room looks off. Straight vertical lines are the biggest tell between a pro shot and a phone shot.
Editing a 30 photo listing with us runs about $24. A reshoot is a few hundred and a couple days of waiting. Ours come back in minutes, you pay per photo, no subscription. First 10 images are free if you want to see the output before spending a cent. Link in bio.
Quick one for the agents: what's the first photo in your listing lineup? Exterior, kitchen, or the best room in the house? Feels like everyone swears by a different rule.
Same bedroom, virtually staged. We add the bed, nightstands, dresser, a corner chair, art and a rug so a buyer can read the layout. Carpet, walls, windows and ceiling stay exactly as they are.
Before you photograph a house, walk through and turn on every light. Lamps, overheads, under cabinet, even the closet bulbs. A half lit room reads flat and small on camera. Fully lit, it opens up. Thirty seconds of flipping switches is the easiest win there is.