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Owned by Zack

Master cinematic food & cocktail content from lighting, equipment and editing to creative shots, finding clients and marketing your work!

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35 contributions to Food & Drink Content Creation
The case for hospitality content
Content creation for hospitality is the single most important skill set that nobody in this industry is properly trained for. And it's wild because every other part of the business gets attention. Chefs go to culinary school. Bartenders train for years perfecting their craft. Owners pour hundreds of thousands of dollars into buildouts, interior design, menu development, staffing. And then when it comes to showing all of that to the world, the thing that actually gets people through the door, it's an afterthought. Someone grabs their phone, takes a quick photo of a dish under fluorescent lighting, posts it with a generic caption, and wonders why nobody's engaging.
0 likes • 10h
@Gwynne Conlyn love that! Ill check it out!
Lighting Gear Essentials
If there's one thing I need you to walk away from this lesson understanding, it's this, lighting is the game. Everything else is secondary. I don't care what camera you're using, I don't care what lens you have, I don't care how expensive your setup is. If the light is wrong, the image is wrong. And if the light is right, you can shoot on just about anything and make it look professional. I've seen people with a phone and a window create more compelling food content than photographers with five thousand dollars worth of gear shooting under bad fluorescents. Lighting is that important. It's not eighty percent of the equation.
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Influencer tip for better lighting!
Stop using your light like it’s for make up application, its time to get dramatic!
0 likes • 1d
@Thomas Lindway No problem. Let me know if there are specific topics you want me to do a video on!
0 likes • 1d
@Thomas Lindway That was done in photoshop express for iphone.
The best lens for Food & Cocktail content
The 50mm f/1.8 is where most people should start. Every major manufacturer makes one. Canon, Sony, and Nikon. And they're all around two hundred to four hundred dollars. This lens does a ton of the heavy lifting. It's wide enough to capture a full table scene, a portrait of a chef or a cocktail pour, but tight enough to isolate a single plate or a single cocktail. The f/1.8 aperture means you can blur the background out beautifully, which instantly makes your subject pop and the whole image feels more intentional. If I could only shoot with one prime lens for the rest of my career, I'd probably pick something in this range. It handles about seventy percent of what you'll ever need to shoot in this space.
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1-10 of 35
Zack Perl
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63points to level up
@zack-perl-7940
Food & cocktail content creator. 1,000+ photoshoots. Known for my lighting techniques and editing style. Here to teach all that i’ve learned!

Active 10h ago
Joined Jan 2, 2026
Miami, Florida
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