
Thai Beef Salad above taken probably around midnight, on auto settings with my Canon Rebel XT,
Lowel EGO lights for food photography are magical. During late Spring to early Fall months at the Steamy Kitchen household, my photo “studio” was the ratty ottoman and a $3 foam board near a big open window. Ahhhh….I so miss those late sunset evenings where I could still capture wonderful natural lighting even at 7:30pm.
Now in the winter months, by the time the clock rolls around to 5pm, my light is gone (sniff sniff) and I don’t like using my flash. For the cookbook, I needed a solution that would provide me light, even when I cook at 10pm after the rugrats go to bed.
So I set out to find an inexpensive, portable solution and came up with the Lowel EGO lights.

They are portable, lightweight, provide a wonderful, soft, even lighting and relatively inexpensive for professional photography lights. Each light is less than $100 – and really, you only need one. The Lowel EGO lights are great for food photography, especially for food bloggers because each light weighs less than 3 lbs, and are small enough to hide in a closet. Each Lowel EGO light comes with (2) full-spectrum fluorescent bulbs which do a fantastic job of mimicking daylight.
For food shots, the one variable that makes the biggest difference in the quality of shots is the lighting. Yes, camera is important, but only secondary to lighting and sharpness. Let’s talk about sharpness first – if your food photo is blurry, it ain’t gonna look good. Fortunately most point and shoot cameras allow you to select which area you want to focus on. Most of you know how to take pretty sharp photos.
Lighting is the big wild card and can vary from hour to hour, from one side of the room to the other, and the type of light bulbs you use. If you are lucky enough to get good, natural, filtered light (i.e. not directly under the harsh sun but rather through a window, indoors, or even a piece of vellum taped to the window to give a nice diffused glow) then that’s your first choice. Your second choice would be to get lights that get as close to the look of natural sunlight as possible – so that the colors in your photo will look as true-to-life as possible. For food, its important. Does gray chicken look appealing to you?
Ok, here are some comparison shots for you–
Plain house lights
No fancy lights, just the cheap-ass Home Depot ceiling fan with 3 lights. The photo is bland, too orange and the flowers are flat. White of the label looks pink.

Now with the lovely built-in flash
Too harsh, the white is blown out, there are unflattering shadows and the reflection is distracting.

Magical EGO lights
And now…drumroll please…..beautiful natural, vibrant colors and textures.

This is the setup: only one EGO light + a plain, white cardboard used to reflect the light.
When I snapped this pic below, I must have moved the light and reflector back. The light should have tilted down and leaned down on the front edge and the reflector was placed closer to the bottle/glass.

Wanna see my point and shoot camera in action?…
Point and Shoot with EGO
Just for comparison, here is my 6 year old point-and-shoot camera whose battery doesn’t last for more than 2 minutes (because I dropped it in water 5 years ago). Pretty damn good. It’s not about the camera sometimes! If you’re on a tight budget, I’d recommend improving your lighting first before investing an expensive digital SLR camera.

btw, point and shoot flash SUCKS

I guess you’re all wondering if these Lowel EGO lights are worth the expense:
For the winter months when I don’t have good natural lights in the late afternoon, the Lowel EGO was great. I could take photos that looked wonderfully bathed in natural light. Working on the cookbook, it’s been indispensible. I would suggest getting 1 light first and trying it out. As I mentioned, $100 for professional lights is pretty darn good. I don’t think I’ll need them when the days grow longer and I can get back to my lovely ottoman next to the big glass sliding door.
This month, I’ll continue my posts on lighting – and show you before and after photos of food.
Where to get these magical lights?…
Where to buy:
One Two EGO lights* + magic light bulbs is $88.90 sold by Adorama via Amazon. I’d recommend buying here, since it’s guaranteed by Amazon.com. And you know they’d never piss off a food blogger.
*Another few weeks of playing with the lights and I’ve found that 2 EGO lights works way better than 1.
You could also get a set of 2 lights + magic light bulbs and the sweep. $219.95 sold by Adorama via Amazon. It comes with the white, plastic sweep (see my photos – I use the sweep for reflecting light) and sheets of very flimsy colored paper to clip onto the sweep so you can have a continuous background. IMHO, it’s useless for a food blogger. The paper crinkles and tears easily. Any drops of sauce or oil and it’s stained for good. Plus, food looks much better against neutral or natural fabrics, surfaces and papers. I just can’t think of too many dishes that would look scrumptious against a school bus yellow piece of construction paper. You could use a piece of $3 foamboard from the office supply store to use as a light reflector.
But wait one stinkin’ moment – it’s cheaper to buy them all separate. $88.90 per light x 2 plus $23.90 for the sweep/papers = $201.70. WTF???? Ok, buy them separate.
You could just get the magic bulbs by themselves, they are $19.99 each. You could screw them in your own light fixture, but I’ve found that the bare bulb is too harsh. You could use a shade to cover the bulb, but unless it’s pure white and semi-opaque, you’re wasting your money on the bulb. Well, if you’re McGuyver, I’m sure you could rig up something!
Buy here and I get a teensy weensey commission from my Amazon store – just enough for a double espresso latte!!
Buy two EGOs and one Sweep:
*Even though the photo for the sweep doesn’t show the construction paper, it does come with it according to the description in Amazon. The Lowel EGO lights each come with 2 magical light bulbs.
–
Or….if you want just the light bulb:
***
B&H Photo sells the same set for $229.95 – B&H is a very well-known photography retailer in NY. I actually bought this set from B&H – one of the light bulbs arrived broken and it took 2 weeks for a replacement bulb to arrive. But, that being said, I still buy stuff from B&H – my expectations are just a tad bit lower if I ever run into problems.
***
Here are more food photography posts:
Green Beans with Garam Masala Butter and Toasted Hazelnuts (light setup)
Kona Kampachi on Citrus Soy Soba (see my step by step photo analysis)
Sparkling Ginger Lime & Mint Cooler (see my step by step photo analysis)
Escargot with Garlic Butter and Splash of Cognac (see my step by step photo analysis)





{ 119 comments… read them below or add one }
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Thank you, thank you, thank you,
I have to say millions of thank you in order to express my appreciation of this post,
I learned so much from it, and I love your example photos,
I’m so glad that I found your blog!
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Oh! thank you WonderWoman for such a gift of advice on photography! I needed them!
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Wonderful advice on lightings. I always like to see how food bloggers set up their lights and reflector when taking their food shots. Thanks for the generous tips.
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Many thanks for your generosity of self and spirit.Super duper info.
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It’s very generous of you to share your tips and tricks. I’ve just bought two lights but they don’t have shades and now I realise that they will be too harsh. Oh dear, what a waste of money!
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Amen sister. I regularly find myself blue in the face attempting to extol the virtues of NOT relying on available light. That maybe good uv balanced lighting and/or off camera flashes can actually WORK. And it warmed my heart to see a tripod there. I can always tell which images of mine were taken with a tripod or not.
My little homespun trick, a handful of years ago, was to paint the inside of my kitchen cabinet doors white. This way I can open up a cabinet door, yank my flash to the right or left and reflect me some flash action. Close the cabinet door and my lighting equipment is all put away.
I’m hungry, what’s for breakfast?
Biggles
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It’s amazing that you can bring your food to me like that. I can practically smell it.
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while the photography tips are super helpful and amazing. i can’t help but wonder if you could put the recipe up for that beef salad that you so tantalizingly photographed. please? =]
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Damn, thanks for the awesome tutorial! I only have a simple little digi cam but it can get the job done well if there is good light. THis would solve a lot of problems for me!!!
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Wow – thank you so much for this post. As a new food-blogger I really appreciate you taking the time to help us all understand how you take such drop-dead gorgeous photos. TYVM!!
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Yeah that is amazing, taken at midnight (besides the fact that you are motivated to garnish like that at midnight…)! What a concept, it looks fantastic
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I take the worst food pictures ever! I blamed my point and shoot camera so I bought a DSLR. Photos are still bad. I thought maybe because it’s a Sony Alpha 100k and very basic. So, I searched online but most reviews of the cam were good. Thank you for this post. Now I have the “lighting”, and the lack of, to blame. I sure am running of things to pass the buck on. Unless you come up with another tip, I just have to face the fact that it is me!
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SK, thanks for sharing this – very helpful and yes, I LOVE, thai beef salad.
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Jaden, you are a darling. I’ve been looking into lighting for home and had a few items selected. I’ve heard good stuff about the Lowel EGO. However, it’s not available in Germany and Amazon.com won’t ship this to Germany. I really wanted to get you that latte! Bummer! I gotta think of another way to get my hands on this!
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That is a lot of useful info. Thanks for sharing, Jaden.
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Thank you SO MUCH for sharing the wonderful tips, comparison photos, etc.! You betcha — I’ve placed my order! Can’t wait to start using the light & sweep.
The beef salad looks gorgeous.
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thank you so much for the info. i’ve used my kit a couple of times–what a relief that i don’t have to take all my food photos before i go to work anymore
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Thanks for the wonderful review! I’ve been needing something like this for a long time.
Just one question, is there going to be any difference between the Lowel bulbs and standard daytime lights available from home depot?
eg:
http://www.homedepot.ca/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/CatalogSearchResultView?D=945574&Ntt=945574&catalogId=10051&langId=-15&storeId=10051&Dx=mode+matchallpartial&Ntx=mode+matchall&recN=0&N=0&Ntk=P_PartNumber
It’s a 2-pack Philips Twister Compact Fluorescent Lamp rated at 6500K for $13.
I know that the right equpiment makes all the difference, but I was just wondering if this could be one exception.
I’d expect the ‘ego’ shades are as important in generating the balanced light as the bulb? Otherwise one would be able to use any run of the mill
table lamp from Ikea.
I’d appreciate your comments. Thanks.
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Glasses of water can’t stand in for Shirakawago–shake that nigori up.
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I’ve just got into SLR photography, from the Canon G7 earlier… and lights were proving to be a challenge. Thank you!
Sid
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Hi all,
These lights sound great but I was wondering if using these lights for shooting wine bottles would work okay. I need some nice bottle shots and was thinking these lights might be the perfect match but I’m not sure. Anyone taken bottle shots with using these lights?
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Chase: this guy has:
http://lightingwithego.blogspot.com/
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Thanks so much for your tips. I will purchase these lights from your amazon for my blog. I’m very excited!
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Wow.It’s the answer to all my dreams
And i thought it was gonna be some cute nerdy chick.
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As a newbie blogger and a newbie blog photographer, can I just say I bow to you in recommending this incredible light? I took your advice and bought one. It is amazing! I am no longer hampered by only being able to shoot food shots during a two-hour period in my house when the natural light was just right. Now, I can take photos anytime. Thanks for spreading the word about it. It’s definitely a worthy investment for any food blogger.
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That is such a beautiful piece of information.I have just realised this few weeks ago that natural lighting is best for food.I am glad to know that Ego light are so cool and useful when we are short of natural lights in winter.Thanks for sharing the tips.It is an essential part of food photography.
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I’ve just discovered your blog through Marion’s ilenfautpeupour.canalblog.com and I love it. Thanks:-))
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Just bought both the Ego and the Sweep! I’m so happy I found this information, thanks for sharing it.
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Hi there,
I just wanted to let you know that I linked to this page from my blog. I just posted about my newly purchased Lowel EGO light and mentioned that I got some of my inspiration for that purchase from your blog.
The direct link is here: http://www.freestylecookery.com/2008/10/new-light-in-my-life.html
Many thanks for a great blog!
// Mike
http://www.freestylecookery.com
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Hello, Do something for help the hungry people from Africa and India,
I made this blog about that subject:
on http://tinyurl.com/556poc
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Thank you so much for this post and sharing this information. I have just ordered the lights on Amazon through this blog. I cant wait to use them!
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great site, found it through another blog
A question before jumping into buying the EGOs.
is the light source big enough for food? I know lot of people use them but I just want to be sure. Currently, I am using a speedlight (580EX) inside a westcott apollo softbox (http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/62245-REG/Westcott_2334_Apollo_Mono_Softbox_with.html)this is a 28″x28″ in size and on my first attempt I had decent results but wound up having some reflections that i could not control. I was told that a larger light source would be required. that is the reason for my comment here.
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Hey Jaden-Thanks for the awesome demonstration of the Lowel EGO lights. I first saw this post about six months ago and I just keep coming back to it and staring at it, wishing I had the lights. I finally broke down and bought a pair of them through Amazon just now. I hope I did it right so that you get your latte.
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Hey brilliant demo! I think anybody involved with food photography will find this post useful! Am going to order osme lights me thinks!
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You lady may have just solved a lighting issue for me. Thank you!
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Thank you for sharing this – I just purchased an EGO today as as result and look forward to better quality photos in my blog!
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Thank you SO MUCH for this excellent and very thorough post. I was looking for exactly this information months ago but did not find it anywhere.
I’m bookmarking this page so I can buy that light set in the near future. Very excited!!!
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PS: I originally found you on Twitter. Just so you know. Twitter is effective at introducing us to new readers!
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[...]Thanks for sharing your work with us! Your theme is just awesome![...]
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I don’t think they sell these in Europe. Do you know of any European alternatives to these lights?
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Murasaki-no I don’t. but i think you can order from B&H photo and will ship to you. -jaden
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Thank you so much for this post Jaden. I couldn’t take my terrible kitchen lighting any more and broke down and bought two of the lights. I clicked through here so you should get a latte or two…or actually considering the shopping I did perhaps a new coffee maker?! Now I’ll be checking the tracking number eagerly until they arrive. Thanks again!
Phoo-D
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hi jaden! I have a light box with two desk lamps with 23 watt bulbs just like lowell ego’s bulbs.I made the light box which you can see here http://www.shootfirsteatlater.com/2009/03/1-month-anniversary.html but since then I bought a new tent light box. Is the lowell ego and a white reflector a better set up than a tent with two desk lamps? If I get a lowell ego can I still use it inside or outside my tent? I love your pictures! I hope one day I can learn to make my pictures look like yours.
With the EGO lights, you’ll not really need a tent! They wouldn’t fit inside the tent anyways. ~jaden
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I run into the same scheduling issues as you and have do my cooking and shooting after the girls are in bed so these lights are gonna be a life saver! Thanks to @limelightfood for linking here and thank you Jaden for sharing your tips!
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Thank you Steamy!! I went to amazon and got the lights! They are remarkable.
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I purchased one light and it arrived a few days ago. Love it! I still seem to be struggling a bit with my photography (I bought a Canon SLR so I’m still learning the ropes), but the lighting has helped immensely. Glad I could toss a coffee your way! It’s the least I could do as a thank you!
thank you!!! ~jaden
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Great information of the Lowel Ego lights that surpasses even the manufacturers sight for foodies, anyway. Now to find a competetive dealer in Vancouver, Canada that will sell me a light for a decent price. (Groan)
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amazing post – great information and totally helpful. i’ve been really struggling with lighting my food (running around my house with a plate of food trying to catch good light) and this would just make my life sooo much easier….
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Thank you so much for your wonderful advice and tips, much appreciated!
I researched for a while and actually bought the Lowel Ego lights that star in this post. However, I found it difficult to assemble – pieces weren’t necessarily doing what they were supposed to do and it’s hard to see why the product is worth $90. Any insight for me? Thanks in advance!!
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Many thanks for your tip on lighting, I am only 6 months in to photographing my own food fro my Blog but quite frustrated with the lighting now that we are in our winter months. I like your tips on the EGO lighting, it is a maze out there on what to buy but this seems like a good first step into lighting. Thanks for sharing!
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