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Posts Tagged ‘Food’

Food Photography Tips – Some Video Tutorials

19 May

Photograph Want one...? by Brian Shaw on 500px

Want one…? by Brian Shaw on 500px

This weekend is a focus on food photography. Earlier I shared a collection of food images to get you hungry, and encouraged you to do participate doing some food photography in the weekly challenge.

As well two recent articles with some food photography tips:

  • 8 Steps to Create Mouth Watering Food Photography
  • 5 Tips to Seriously Improve Your Food Photography Techniques

Today I wanted to find some video tutorials on food photography for you. Here’s a few that I found.

This first one is by photographer Chris Marquardt as he photographs on location at a restaurant and shows tips for using simple gear, and what you have on hand. Watch as he gets the restaurant owner to be his assistant and uses things like a tablecloth, tin foil and some vegetable oil to help make the food look appetizing and juicy.

Marc Matsumoto, food photographer and chef, (who also has his own food blog where I found some great recipes AND food photos) gives some quick tips in this video that you can apply to take better food photos even if you just have a point and shoot camera or Smartphone.

Lastly on the other end of the scale is a studio food photography set with this video from Adorama featuring photographer Rick Gayle. He talks about lighting, composition, focus, positioning items, food styling, tools of the trade that food photographers use such as: dental tools, WD-40, oil, glycerin, water, Scotchgard, reflectors, mini-mirrors, props and more.

Have some other tips or good videos on food photography, please share in the comments below. Remember the fun of food photography is you get to eat it after you’re done.

Photograph Basil and Lime by Natasha Breen on 500px

Basil and Lime by Natasha Breen on 500px

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Weekly Photography Challenge – Food Photography

17 May

By il-young ko

Earlier today I shared a collection of food photography to make you hungry and hopefully get you inspired. Now it’s your turn! This week’s photography challenge is of course:

Food Photography!

Here are a few more to get you drooling and thinking. There’s a lot to good food photography but if I had to give you one tip to get started it would be this – keep it simple and clean. Keep the background uncluttered and your props plain. Let the food be the star.

By Anne

By Cat

By liz west

By Nick Nguyen

By Christopher Chan

By chotda

Share your food photography

Simply upload your shot into the comment field (look for the little camera icon in the Disqus comments section as pictured below) and they’ll get embedded for us all to see or if you’d prefer upload them to your favourite photo sharing site and leave the link to them. Okay, make us hungry.

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Collection of Food Photography to Make you Hungry

16 May

Lately we’ve had a few articles on food photography including:

  • 8 Steps to Create Mouth Watering Food Photography
  • 5 Tips to Seriously Improve Your Food Photography Techniques
  • 11 Quick Food Photography Tips to Make Mouth Watering Images

So I thought I’d share a collection of some appetizing food photos to get you not only salivating but inspired to get motivated to photograph your food!

Starting with morning coffee

Photograph hrrruuumm by U izmylove on 500px

hrrruuumm by U izmylove on 500px

Photograph Caffe Latte for two by Gert Lavsen on 500px

Caffe Latte for two by Gert Lavsen on 500px

Photograph Coffee and Donuts by Claudia Totir on 500px

Coffee and Donuts by Claudia Totir on 500px

Photograph Morning Joe by Jesse Pafundi on 500px

Morning Joe by Jesse Pafundi on 500px

Photograph Steaming coffee by Károly Nagy on 500px

Steaming coffee by Károly Nagy on 500px

Photograph Coffe by Viktor Pap on 500px

Coffe by Viktor Pap on 500px

Moving on to breakfast

Photograph a fried egg with bread by Luiz Laercio on 500px

a fried egg with bread by Luiz Laercio on 500px

Photograph Bonjour by Luiz Laercio on 500px

Bonjour by Luiz Laercio on 500px

Photograph ??????????? ????? by Natalia Lisovskaya on 500px

??????????? ????? by Natalia Lisovskaya on 500px

Photograph Breakfast with Berries by Claudia Totir on 500px

Breakfast with Berries by Claudia Totir on 500px

Photograph Breakfast by Mirage Gourmand on 500px

Breakfast by Mirage Gourmand on 500px

Photograph Winter breakfast 2 by Claudia Totir on 500px

Winter breakfast 2 by Claudia Totir on 500px

Photograph Breakfast by Natasha Breen on 500px

Breakfast by Natasha Breen on 500px

Photograph Healthy Breakfast by Daniel Waschnig on 500px

Healthy Breakfast by Daniel Waschnig on 500px

Next up is lunch

Photograph ????? ??????? by Natalia Lisovskaya on 500px

????? ??????? by Natalia Lisovskaya on 500px

Photograph ??????? ? ????????? by Natalia Lisovskaya on 500px

??????? ? ????????? by Natalia Lisovskaya on 500px

Photograph ?????? by Natalia Lisovskaya on 500px

?????? by Natalia Lisovskaya on 500px

Photograph Scallops with Noodles and Vegetables by Claudia Totir on 500px

Scallops with Noodles and Vegetables by Claudia Totir on 500px

Photograph cheeseburger by Peter Harasty on 500px

cheeseburger by Peter Harasty on 500px

Photograph Sandwich and Soup by Aisha Yusaf on 500px

Sandwich and Soup by Aisha Yusaf on 500px

Photograph ??????? ??? by Natalia Lisovskaya on 500px

??????? ??? by Natalia Lisovskaya on 500px

Need an afternoon snack between meals?

Photograph Food by Fabricio Garcia on 500px

Food by Fabricio Garcia on 500px

Photograph Fresh... by Mick Fuhrimann on 500px

Fresh… by Mick Fuhrimann on 500px

Photograph Green Organic Healthy Pears by Brent Hofacker on 500px

Green Organic Healthy Pears by Brent Hofacker on 500px

Photograph Cheese and Nuts by Natasha Breen on 500px

Cheese and Nuts by Natasha Breen on 500px

Photograph Avocado n friends by Zsolt MATHE on 500px

Avocado n friends by Zsolt MATHE on 500px

Photograph Kwilight by Marco Wahl on 500px

Kwilight by Marco Wahl on 500px

Photograph Untitled by matt wright on 500px

Untitled by matt wright on 500px

Dinner

Photograph Pasta with seafood by Mykola Velychko on 500px

Pasta with seafood by Mykola Velychko on 500px

Photograph Tortellini project by Sanja Kosanovi? on 500px

Tortellini project by Sanja Kosanovi? on 500px

Photograph Gigot with grilled vegetables by Mykola Velychko on 500px

Gigot with grilled vegetables by Mykola Velychko on 500px

Photograph Scallops by Peter Harasty on 500px

Scallops by Peter Harasty on 500px

Photograph Grilled skirt steak with tomato salad   by Claudia Totir on 500px

Grilled skirt steak with tomato salad by Claudia Totir on 500px

Photograph Spare Ribs by Derek Phillips on 500px

Spare Ribs by Derek Phillips on 500px

Photograph Skirt Steak Topped with Pickled Red Onions by Bradford Tennyson on 500px

Skirt Steak Topped with Pickled Red Onions by Bradford Tennyson on 500px

Photograph indian food by Peter Harasty on 500px

indian food by Peter Harasty on 500px

Photograph lobster by Peter Harasty on 500px

lobster by Peter Harasty on 500px

Photograph Steamy Spaghetti by Nicole S. Young on 500px

Steamy Spaghetti by Nicole S. Young on 500px

Photograph Bar Harbor Mussels by Nico Osteria, Chicago by Philip Chang on 500px

Bar Harbor Mussels by Nico Osteria, Chicago by Philip Chang on 500px

Photograph SuShi "Dragonroll" by Joe Haritat on 500px

SuShi "Dragonroll" by Joe Haritat on 500px

Finally, dessert

Photograph Feast of Taste by Zeynep Ugurdag on 500px

Feast of Taste by Zeynep Ugurdag on 500px

Photograph Raspberry cake by Katia Titova on 500px

Raspberry cake by Katia Titova on 500px

Photograph Cake by Estúdio Food on 500px

Cake by Estúdio Food on 500px

Photograph bottle and glass of wine by Alexandr Vlassyuk on 500px

bottle and glass of wine by Alexandr Vlassyuk on 500px

Photograph Temptation by Martin Cauchon on 500px

Temptation by Martin Cauchon on 500px

Photograph Cupcakes de Vainilla con Nutella by Diego Garin Martin on 500px

Cupcakes de Vainilla con Nutella by Diego Garin Martin on 500px

Photograph Sea view Spritz by Lucilla Cuman on 500px

Sea view Spritz by Lucilla Cuman on 500px

Photograph Wineglass by Sergei Fridman on 500px

Wineglass by Sergei Fridman on 500px

Hungry yet? I am! Inspired to do some food photography? Watch for the weekly challenge later today – guess what the subject will be? ;-)

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5 Tips to Seriously Improve Your Food Photography Techniques

15 May

11 Tip05 Neutral BG

Food photography is arguably one of the most challenging types of photography out there. Like painting, you start with a blank canvas and build. Layer upon layer, you construct the photo until you reach the perfect balance of reality and art.

Everything in the photo is a decision. Every piece is perfectly placed by the photographer.

Starting out is frustrating, I know. You’re the chef, stylist, and the photographer. Once you reach technical proficiency with the camera, what’s next? I have been, and in a lot of ways still am, in that position. So, how do you improve your food photography beyond the basics? You work on the story.

Whether it is an after-party from the perfect cocktail, or the homemade roasted chicken recipe on the farm, like all photography, you’re telling stories.

Some shoots are more complicated stories than others, and it may sound like a lot of work, but it’s really not. Here are five quick tips you can use to seriously improve your food photography and tell better stories.

#1 – CHOOSE YOUR ANGLE

There are really only a few camera angles in food photography that you see again and again, but you need to make the one you choose, a conscious decision. Where you place the camera will affect the type of story you’re trying to tell.

Think of the food beforehand. Its size, shape, height and what is unique about it. Then place the camera where you think best highlights these qualities. Some dishes look great when you shoot from right in front of the food, and others are best suited when the you are looking down from directly above the table. Take a look at the cupcakes below; their spiralled and delicate toppings really stand out when shot from in front, yet the viewer doesn’t even see the size or shape when photographed from above.

01 Tip01 45 vs 90 Cupcakes

On the other hand, it’s difficult to see all the ingredients and beautiful shape of these salmon tacos when shot from the front, so the shot from above was definitely the way to tell this story.

02 Tip01 45 vs 90 Tacos

#2 – SURROUND YOUR HERO

When shooting from the front of the food try to keep a great foreground and background to play with. Use these empty spaces to tell more of a story. Surround your main dish with ingredients and props that relate to the food. Ingredients, sauces, oils, and cooking utensils could indicate how the dish was made.

Tins, jars, herbs, glasses, fabrics and linens could speak about the origin of the dish or the season in which it is served. Placing a few of these in the foreground and background will definitely elevate your story and give it depth.

03 Tip02 Props

The props in this image of baklava bring more to the story. The viewer has a sense of place that describes the Arabic origins of this delicious sweet.

#3 – NATURAL IS BEST MODIFIED

Light is king, and acquiring a few tools to help you control it will bring your food photography up to the next level. Poor use of light will ruin your story and immediately turn off your audience. So making sure light doesn’t distract will help out your food photos big time.

04 Tip03 Natural vs Diffused

Direct natural light can give really hard and defined shadows like beneath the lemon cake on the left. Where those shadows are softened in the image to the right, with a little help from a cheap diffusor.

Placing a diffusor between the window and your table is first on the list. When working with direct sunlight, a diffusor (or even a thin white bed sheet) will greatly improve the quality of light. Softening those hard, dark shadows and bright highlights caused by direct sun light.

05 Tip03 White vs BlackCard

Using white and black cards really gives you control over the shadow areas. A white card was used to brighten up that lemon frosting on the left, but if you prefer more contrast than grab a black card and you’ll get an image like the one on the right.

Next up are white and black cards. You can make these yourself using foam core boards, bought at any craft store. Size them to fit your needs, using white cards to bounce light into shadow areas, revealing important details, or black cards to make shadows stronger for more contrast.

06 Tip03 BG Blocked vs Unblocked

Nothing really changes between these two images except for a black card that was used to stop light from hitting the background, making sure the cake was the brightest area of the photograph.

Here is a little secret, when working with natural light. I call it, blocking (sometimes also called “gobos”). Sometimes that pesky natural light will fall on your background or props, causing them to be as bright or even brighter than your subject.

Since the viewer will always look at the brightest spot in your photo first, if it’s not your subject, it can harm your story. You can use your black cards to block light from hitting areas that will compete with your subject. This is also a very important technique for creating darker, low-key styled images.

07 Tip03 Final Image

Here is the final image, with a diffusor softening the window light, a white card to fill in the shadow on the lemon frosting and a black card to block the light on the background.

#4 – OUR OLD FRIENDS LINES AND LAYERS

With all these props and ingredients in the frame, how will we ever get the audience to look at our subject? Well, bring on the trusty techniques of composing with lines and layers. You can use props or ingredients to create lines and layered effects in your images. This is a compositional technique used by photographers to lead their audience’s eyes to the main subject.

You can use various props to create lines. Like this spoon, which forms a nice line, directing the viewer straight to the bowl of baked peaches and ice cream.

08 Tip04 Lines

Since shooting from above always gets you more graphic images, there are plenty of chances to create some great lines here as well. Some could be quite literal like this cutlery leading to the round of Brie – or more abstract, like how the knife and pomegranate seeds create lines, framing our subject.

09 Tip04 LeadingLines vs FramingLines

Composing images with layers is always a winner. This Brie, shot from the front, is set in the middle of various props and two large out of focus areas. This creates a layered effect, sending your eyes straight to the star.

10 Tip04 Layers

#5 – HOLD THE COLOR

11 Tip05 Neutral BG

This is my personal favorite. I love hunting for props, backgrounds and tableware to put in my images. This little tip was also the first big mistake I was making when I was starting out. It’s great to have props that are colorful, but if you’re not careful that colorful prop can easily upstage your food, and grab all the attention.

When placing items into your food images, try selecting neutral tones, something that makes the food really pop against it. Selecting a neutral background like this black metal tray and baking paper, amplifies the bright red strawberries and rhubarb inside these Crostatas, making them really steal the show.

Do you photograph food? Do you have any additional tips to share with us? Please add your comments below.

For more food photography tips, try these articles:

  • 8 Steps to Create Mouth Watering Food Photography
  • 11 Quick Food Photography Tips to Make Mouth Watering Images
  • The Ultimate Guide to Food Photography
  • SnapnGuide on Food Photography

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8 Steps to Create Mouth Watering Food Photography

07 May

On sale now at SnapnDeals for a limited time at 50% off Photographing Food 8 eBook Bundle by Taylor Mathis. Get it now if you want more great food photography tips.

Have you ever tried taking a picture of food and it just didn’t look as good as the dish tasted? Don’t worry, you aren’t alone. Taking pictures of food requires a different mindset and approach than what you would use in your portrait or landscape photography. Here are 8 steps you can take that will help you create mouthwatering food images.

Step 1. Choose one light source

Mathis photographing food 8 steps tip 1

I know what you may be thinking. The more lights the better, right? Adding lights in portrait photography does give you ability to shape and light the face in beautiful ways, but when shooting food, one large diffused light source will yield amazing results!

This doesn’t mean you need to spend a ton of money to get started. All you need is a window. You can use a window where you live or if you are shooting on location, try a large restaurant window.

Step 2. Embrace food’s color

Mathis photographing food 8 steps tip 2

Food comes in a wide range or colors and textures. From your dark leafy greens, vibrant orange carrots, or pale purple shallots, you can have a rainbow of colors in front of you at meal time. Embrace this color with your prop selection and food styling. If you are lost on where to begin, look for inspiration in an artist’s color wheel! A color combination that I like is matching blue accessories with yellow or orange foods.

Step 3. Know when to use artificial light

Mathis photographing food 8 steps tip 3

I love using natural daylight in my food photography, but there are times when I need an artificial solution. A tungsten lamp or a small compact flash make great options for shooting your food at night. The key is to use a large diffusion source to create a beautiful, soft light that will fall over your set. I like to modify my light with umbrellas, soft boxes, or a large diffusion scrim.

Step 4. Get creative with the ingredients

Mathis photographing food 8 steps tip 4

Don’t overlook the ingredients and head straight for the shots of the main meal. With an ingredient shot you can create an interesting story that begins the journey to the final plated dish. For fruits and vegetables, I like to create visually interesting arrangements shot from an overhead angle. This is the type of shot that any camera can do, even just one on your cell phone. If you have a macro lens, take advantage of your close-up ability to shoot spices and ingredients with interesting textures. Close-up shots of these shapes and textures will bring an interesting and new perspective of food to your viewers.

Step 5. Think about final use

Mathis_photographing_food_8_steps_tip_5_new_crop

Your food image will commonly be cropped to a different size for its final use. It could be a square for use in a restaurant menu or a narrow rectangle that will fit on the side of a package. It doesn’t do you or the client any good if you create a beautiful image, but half the dish is cropped out when it comes time for printing. When shooting, you want to know what this final crop will be so that you can ensure that all the essential parts of the dish make it into the shot.

Step 6. Taking your food on location

Mathis photographing food 8 steps tip 6b

Taking your food shots out of the kitchen, and on location, will allow you to create images with beautiful outdoor scenic backgrounds. Whether it is a trip to the farm to capture fruits and vegetables ripe and ready to pick, or creating an outdoor entertaining event, an on location shot is one where weather may become a concern. There isn’t much you can do about rain cancelling a shoot, but you do have control over the harsh light from a bright and sunny day. When shooting outdoors, I always bring a collapsible diffuser with me. Placing this between my subject and the sun diffuses any harsh light that may be on my set. I am left with a soft evenly lit set on which I can create mouthwatering food images.

Step 7. Vary your background

Mathis photographing food 8 steps tip 7

What you shoot your food on top of will have a huge impact on the final photo. There are millions of options from which to choose. You can use anything from painted wood to cloth to stone. My favorite place to find backgrounds is at my local hardware store. There are thousands of potential backgrounds there. If you are feeling creative, you can stain and paint wooden boards to create a truly custom shooting surface. If you want a background that doesn’t require any customization, try painted ceramic or stone tiles. The large tiles, like you would use in a bathroom floor, are a sturdy surface with a ton of variety. Changing out your background to a new one, might just be the thing needed to create a more interesting food shot.

Step 8. Modify Your Light

Mathis photographing food 8 steps tip 8

A large soft diffused light is my go to for any food shot, but sometimes the shot may require a little bit more. Through blocking with black foam board, reflecting with white foam board, bouncing your light source or adjusting its height and placement, you can fine tune your lighting to create the mood and scene you desire. If you find yourself consistently using the same set-up, try switching things up. Using a different sized soft box or even a large white bed sheet can have a great impact on your final shot.

If you have felt intimidated or struggled with taking pictures of food, I hope these steps will help. If you want to take your food photography to the next level, give photographing FOOD issues 1-8 a try!

On sale now at SnapnDeals for a limited time at 50% off Photographing Food 8 eBook Bundle by Taylor Mathis. Get it now if you want more great food photography tips.

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Exposure: Chef April Bloomfield on smartphone food photography

02 Feb

Screen_Shot_2014-01-27_at_5.33.06_PM.png

Chef April Bloomfield is an avid smartphone photographer who has made something of an art posting largely behind-the-scenes shots of the work done in her kitchens. Rather than express horror at the low quality of food photographs swirling out on the Internet, Bloomfield embraces the medium, advising potential culinary photographers to hold out for good lighting or hold off altogether. Click through for a sample of her images on Connect.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Playing With Food: Fruits & Vegetables as Temporary Art

24 Jan

[ By Delana in Art & Sculpture & Craft. ]

food photography

Romanian photographer Dan Cretu loves to play with his food. His series of food-themed photographs takes everyday foods and turns them into something that looks far more permanent.

food photography dan cretu

Cretu takes normal pieces of food, then cuts and bends and twists them into shapes that make up objects we see and use every day. The exceptional food sculptures are created without the use of Photoshop or other digital manipulation.

regular objects made of food

What Cretu does require, however, is speed. All of his sculptures have to be constructed and photographed within a few hours before the food begins to get squishy and unattractive.

photography with food

One of the more interesting aspects of Cretu’s series is the juxtaposition of the very temporary pieces of food and the far more permanent objects they become in the photographer’s hands. Cut oranges which right now look just like bicycle wheels will, very shortly after the photograph, look like withered piles of decaying fruit.

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Past Food: 10 Creepy Closed & Abandoned McDonald’s

21 Dec

[ By Steve in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]

abandoned closed McDonald's
I’m leavin’ it! You can bet your sesame seed buns these 10 closed and abandoned McDonald’s have swirled their last McFlurry and will bag burgers no more.

Archless In America

abandoned McDonald's (image via: Flavio Grana)

The usual knock against modern architecture (or should we say, “ARCH-itecture”) is that it lacks character, and the stereotypical mansard-roofed “McStore” style of McDonald’s outlets is the poster child for the genre. With that said, Flickr user Flavio Grana has managed to coax a supersized amount of depth out of the anonymous abandoned McDonald’s location above. Stripped of all brand identity yet instantly recognizable, the moonlit McD’s stands alone in silent glory, a washed-out monument to conspicuous consumer culture.

Sweet & Sour Saucer

Megatron McDonald's Alconbury(images via: Reddit, Comfortable Disorientation and Geograph UK))

If you thought the UFO-shaped McDonald’s in Roswell, NM was out of this world, then feast your eyes on the former McDonald’s restaurant in Alconbury, UK. First opened in 1990 as The Megatron, the distinctive saucer-shaped eatery was an interplanetary flop: in 1993 it closed but soon re-opened under the McDonald’s banner.

McDonald's Megatron Alconbury(images via: Daz, Comfortable Disorientation and HuntsPost24/Geoff Soden)

After roughly 15 years serving up burgers, fries & shakes to hungry Huntingdonshire locals, the location shut down for good and (oddly for a closed McDonald’s franchise) remained shuttered for a further half-decade before finally being demolished in mid-2008. Plans are now afoot to allow six “gypsy pitches” to occupy the land where the McUFO once stood. Tramps and thieves are advised to look elsewhere.

Arch-Criminal?

abandoned McDonald's golden arches sign(image via: rustyjaw)

It’s not often an item (with emphasis on the “em”) this large and obtrusive escapes the watchful eyes of the McBrand Police but it seems to have happened here. Flickr user rustyjaw doesn’t explain what the Big M is doing inside an abandoned naval communications station or what plans (if any) he has for this piece of fast food M-orabilia, and that’s probably in his own best interest. Imagine refurbishing and re-electrifying the signage, then mounting it on your dining room wall… awesome to be sure, though it would definitely ruin the mood during intimate gourmet dinners.

Supersize My Storm

abandoned McDonald's Biloxi clown(images via: Imgur/1RgbS and Joel Carranza))

If Ronald McDonald wasn’t creepy enough already, check out his zombie clown alter-ego, still (barely) standing in Biloxi, MS, shortly after Hurricane Katrina devastated the area in September 2005. It took a while for reconstruction to get into full swing around Biloxi and the neighboring gulf coast but it was too late for both this shattered & shuttered McDonald’s and the tilted Ronald – they’ve been replaced by a Wendy’s.

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Past Food 10 Creepy Closed Abandoned Mcdonalds

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Past Food: 10 Creepy Closed & Abandoned McDonald’s

16 Dec

[ By Steve in Abandoned Places & Architecture. ]

abandoned closed McDonald's
I’m leavin’ it! You can bet your sesame seed buns these 10 closed and abandoned McDonald’s have swirled their last McFlurry and will bag burgers no more.

Archless In America

abandoned McDonald's (image via: Flavio Grana)

The usual knock against modern architecture (or should we say, “ARCH-itecture”) is that it lacks character, and the stereotypical mansard-roofed “McStore” style of McDonald’s outlets is the poster child for the genre. With that said, Flickr user Flavio Grana has managed to coax a supersized amount of depth out of the anonymous abandoned McDonald’s location above. Stripped of all brand identity yet instantly recognizable, the moonlit McD’s stands alone in silent glory, a washed-out monument to conspicuous consumer culture.

Sweet & Sour Saucer

Megatron McDonald's Alconbury(images via: Reddit, Comfortable Disorientation and Geograph UK))

If you thought the UFO-shaped McDonald’s in Roswell, NM was out of this world, then feast your eyes on the former McDonald’s restaurant in Alconbury, UK. First opened in 1990 as The Megatron, the distinctive saucer-shaped eatery was an interplanetary flop: in 1993 it closed but soon re-opened under the McDonald’s banner.

McDonald's Megatron Alconbury(images via: Daz, Comfortable Disorientation and HuntsPost24/Geoff Soden)

After roughly 15 years serving up burgers, fries & shakes to hungry Huntingdonshire locals, the location shut down for good and (oddly for a closed McDonald’s franchise) remained shuttered for a further half-decade before finally being demolished in mid-2008. Plans are now afoot to allow six “gypsy pitches” to occupy the land where the McUFO once stood. Tramps and thieves are advised to look elsewhere.

Arch-Criminal?

abandoned McDonald's golden arches sign(image via: rustyjaw)

It’s not often an item (with emphasis on the “em”) this large and obtrusive escapes the watchful eyes of the McBrand Police but it seems to have happened here. Flickr user rustyjaw doesn’t explain what the Big M is doing inside an abandoned naval communications station or what plans (if any) he has for this piece of fast food M-orabilia, and that’s probably in his own best interest. Imagine refurbishing and re-electrifying the signage, then mounting it on your dining room wall… awesome to be sure, though it would definitely ruin the mood during intimate gourmet dinners.

Supersize My Storm

abandoned McDonald's Biloxi clown(images via: Imgur/1RgbS and Joel Carranza))

If Ronald McDonald wasn’t creepy enough already, check out his zombie clown alter-ego, still (barely) standing in Biloxi, MS, shortly after Hurricane Katrina devastated the area in September 2005. It took a while for reconstruction to get into full swing around Biloxi and the neighboring gulf coast but it was too late for both this shattered & shuttered McDonald’s and the tilted Ronald – they’ve been replaced by a Wendy’s.

Next Page – Click Below to Read More:
Past Food 10 Creepy Closed Abandoned Mcdonalds

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The Dirtiest Secrets of Food Photography That Still Make Your Mouth Water

02 Oct

Food photography is an extremely cunning concept and industry. It essentially uses trickery to make food look so good to your eyes that you end up not being able to control yourself and want to indulge in that food. Naturally, the food-photography industry has aggressively worked to connect eating delicious food with the tactics of sex-sells marketing, which is why Continue Reading

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