How to Photograph Products With Just Your Phone

Simple phone photography techniques that make your products look professional — no studio, no expensive gear, just better photos that sell.

Storehaus Team8 min read

Your products look great in person. You know that. Your customers know that — once they've received the package. But online, nobody gets to hold the product first. They get a photo. And 75% of online shoppers say that photo is the deciding factor in whether they buy. Here's how to take product photos that actually sell — with nothing but the phone in your pocket.

Your phone is already good enough

Let's kill the biggest myth first. You do not need a DSLR camera. You do not need a ring light. You do not need Adobe Photoshop.

The phone in your pocket has a camera that would have been considered professional-grade ten years ago. Any iPhone from the 12 onwards, any Samsung Galaxy from the S21 onwards, any recent Pixel — these all shoot photos with enough detail, color accuracy, and dynamic range for product photography. The sensor isn't the problem. It never was.

93%

of consumers say visual appearance is the key deciding factor in a purchase

Justuno, 2024

So why do most phone-shot product photos still look amateur? It's almost never the camera. It's the lighting, the background, and the angle. Fix those three things and your phone takes photos that look like they came from a hired photographer.

This is good news if you're watching your startup costs. When we looked at the real costs of starting a store, photography equipment wasn't in the top five expenses — because it doesn't need to be.

The difference between amateur product photos and professional ones isn't the camera — it's a $3 poster board and a window.

Every dollar you don't spend on a camera you don't need is a dollar you can spend on inventory, packaging, or shipping supplies. The gear matters far less than how you use what you already have.

The $20 setup that actually works

Here's your complete equipment list:

  • White poster board ($3–5) — your seamless backdrop
  • White foam board ($3) — your bounce card that fills shadows
  • Tape ($2) — to secure the poster board to a wall
  • A table or flat surface — you already own one
  • Your phone — you already own one

Total investment: under $15. Add a $10 phone tripod from Amazon if you want to skip the "stack of books" technique, but it's not required.

You don't need a $2,000 camera. An iPhone, a $20 poster board, and natural window light will outperform most studio setups for small product sellers.

Sarah Lazarovic · Product Photography Educator · Interview, 2025

Set it up like this: push a table against a wall near your largest window. Tape the poster board to the wall so it curves gently down onto the table surface — no hard crease, just a smooth sweep. Photographers call this an infinity sweep: a seamless background with no visible edges or horizon line. It makes your product look like it's floating in clean space, which is exactly what buyers expect to see.

The complete DIY setup: window, curved backdrop, product, phone, and bounce card

Place the table so the window is to one side of your product — not behind you and not directly above. Side lighting creates gentle shadows that give your product shape and dimension. A head-on flash flattens everything.

Natural light does the heavy lifting

Professional product photographers charge $50–200 per shot. Most of that cost is lighting equipment. You're going to skip all of it and use a window instead.

Here's why this works: a large window acts as a massive, diffused light source. The bigger the window, the softer the light. Soft light is what makes products look clean and professional — it wraps around shapes instead of creating harsh, ugly shadows.

Position your product so the window light hits it from one side — roughly 45 degrees. Put the white bounce card you bought on the opposite side. It reflects window light back onto the product and fills in the shadows, so you get even illumination without the product looking flat.

Two hard rules:

  • Never use your phone's flash. It creates harsh, direct light that washes out colors and throws sharp shadows behind the product.
  • Never shoot under overhead ceiling lights. They cast unflattering downward shadows and add a yellowish tint that makes everything look cheap.

Window light from one side, bounce card on the other. That's the entire lighting technique.

Product page photos vs social media photos

Here's something most photography guides completely skip: the photos that work on your product page are not the same photos that work on Instagram or TikTok. They serve different jobs, and mixing them up costs you sales in both places.

Your product page answers one question: "What exactly am I buying?" The photos there need to be clean, literal, and informative. White backgrounds. Multiple angles. Close-up details. Zero distractions. Research consistently shows that white or neutral backgrounds convert best on product pages because they keep attention on the product itself.

Your social media answers a different question: "Do I want this in my life?" Those photos need context, mood, and personality. A candle on a nightstand next to a book. A handmade mug being held with steam curling up. Earrings on a person, not on white foam board. Lifestyle shots consistently outperform plain product shots for social engagement.

Your product page sells the item. Your social media photo sells the click.

The two formats complement each other — the lifestyle shot gets someone curious on social, and the clean product shots close the sale on your store page. Both types of photography build trust with new visitors in different ways: clean product pages signal professionalism, while lifestyle photos signal personality and taste.

Product Page PhotosSocial Media Photos
BackgroundWhite or neutral — clean, zero distractionsStyled — textured surfaces, props, real settings
GoalShow exactly what they're buyingStop the scroll, spark curiosity
LightingEven, soft, no dramatic shadowsMoodier or warmer tones are fine
Crop ratioSquare (1:1) or 4:54:5 or 9:16 vertical
PropsNone — product onlyHands, surfaces, plants, books, context

The good news: you can shoot both types in the same session. Shoot your clean, white-background versions first. Then swap in some props, change the surface to wood or linen, and shoot your lifestyle versions for social. Same light, same product, ten extra minutes.

The five shots every product needs

Single-photo listings are leaving money on the table. Listings with multiple angles get 2–3× more engagement than those with just one image. Five shots is the sweet spot — enough to tell the complete story without overwhelming the buyer.

Your product shot list

0 of 5 completed

The hero shot is the image that shows up in search results, category pages, and social previews. Spend the most time on this one. Shoot it at product height — not from above, not looking up. Imagine you're sitting across a table from the product and looking straight at it. That's the angle.

For the scale reference, use something universally understood: a hand, a coin, a coffee mug. Shoppers can't judge size from a photo alone, and 22% of returns happen because the product looked different in person. A simple scale reference solves this.

Your lifestyle shot can double as social media content. Shoot it last, after you've nailed the clean product page versions.

Batch your shoots to save hours

If you set up, shoot, and tear down for each product individually, you'll burn an entire weekend. The fix: batch everything into a single session.

Set up your backdrop and lighting once. Gather every product you need to photograph. Shoot all five angles for one product, then swap it out for the next. You'll build a rhythm after the first two or three and start moving fast.

Here's a realistic schedule for a one-person store with 10–15 products:

  • Morning (2 hours): Set up backdrop, shoot all clean white-background photos
  • After lunch (1 hour): Add props and surfaces, shoot lifestyle versions for social
  • Evening (1 hour): Edit everything on your phone

That's one day to photograph your entire catalog. If you're still setting up your store, add this to your launch checklist. If you're already live, pick a weekend and reshoot everything at once.

Photographing one product takes 20 minutes. Photographing ten products takes an hour.

The setup is the bottleneck, not the shooting. Once your backdrop and light are dialed in, each additional product takes five to seven minutes.

Edit on your phone in five minutes

You don't need Photoshop. You don't even need a laptop. Your phone's built-in photo editor handles 90% of what product photography requires. For the remaining 10%, download Snapseed (free, made by Google) — it's the best free photo editing app for this work.

Here's the five-step edit that works on nearly every product photo:

  1. Crop to a consistent ratio — 1:1 square for product pages, 4:5 for social posts
  2. Increase brightness by 10–15% — phone cameras tend to underexpose against white backgrounds
  3. Bump contrast slightly — makes the product pop against the backdrop without looking harsh
  4. Adjust white balance if the photo looks yellowish or bluish — aim for neutral, true-to-life tones
  5. Sharpen at 20–30% — just enough to add crispness without making edges look crunchy

The most important editing rule has nothing to do with any single adjustment. It's consistency. Every product in your store should have the same crop, similar brightness, and the same background tone. Inconsistent photos make a store look cobbled together from different sources. Consistent photos make it look like a brand.

If you're already measuring what drives results in your store, track how photo quality changes affect your numbers. Better photos often show up as higher click-through rates and lower return rates — two of the KPIs that actually matter for growing a small store.

Your one-afternoon project

Pick your best-selling product. Tape a poster board to the wall. Push a table near a window. Shoot five angles. Edit in Snapseed. You'll have better product photos than most stores by the end of the afternoon — and you'll have spent less than $20 doing it.

Then do the next product. And the next. By dinner, your entire catalog looks like someone who knows what they're doing shot it. Because now you do.

References

  1. [1]The Ultimate Guide to Product Photography — Etsy Seller Handbook(accessed Feb 2026)
  2. [2]Product Photography Guide — Shopify Blog(accessed Feb 2026)
  3. [3]The Impact of Visual Content on Purchase Decisions — Justuno(accessed Feb 2026)
  4. [4]Product Photography Tips for Small Business — BigCommerce(accessed Feb 2026)
  5. [5]Ecommerce Returns Statistics 2025 — Shopify Blog(accessed Feb 2026)

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