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Photos, Food and Fun at Tikka Restaurant

Learn how to photograph that visual culinary delight before you devour it!

Quick Details

Photographer

$ 129

Non-Photographer Companion

$ 60

For those of us who love to take pictures, it is VERY hard to be confronted with a visual culinary delight in a restaurant and not take a picture! You?ve been there, right? Food presentation has now become an art form. That gorgeous dessert dripping with sauce and calories just HAS to be photographed before it is eaten, right?

But it is not easy to do. The picture does not do justice to the dish: it comes out too bright, or too dark, or too blurry, or the wrong color. Or you have committed an even worse sin by leaving your camera at home, or eating the food before shooting it!

Help is now on the way from professional food and restaurant photographer E. David Luria, Director of the Washington Photo Safari, working in cooperation with the the Tikka Restautrant In the Forest Hills area of Washington, DC to show you how to get the best food pictures with your camera or phone.

Washington Photo Safari, is one  of the country’s largest photography instruction programs, having trained over 46,000 amateur photographers from 50 states and 71 countries on 6,900 photo safaris.

Tikka will serve the first of 3 plates, here all included in the fee.  Before you dive in to taste the samples served by the restaurant,  Mr. Luria (who has photographed over 300 restaurants for the Entertainment Book), will provide tips on camera settings, white balance, ISO, depth of field and composition and camera stability so that memories of your experience in the restaurant will exist not just in your stomach but in your camera as well,  a VERY valuable skill to have on your next vacation!

Plate 1 : Starter: Mango Palok: Baby spinach leaves and Mango chaat, (REALLY delicious!)

Plate 2 : Main Course: choice of Tikka Masala, chicken, lamb, goat dishes , vegetarian menu available

Plate 3 : Dessert: Mango ice cream or Gulab Jamun (fried dough balls soaked in roe-flavored syrup)

Side:  Garlic Naam Bread

For this safari any camera will do, even cellphone cameras, but cameras with adjustable apertures, shutter speeds and the ability to shoot on Manual are highly recommended to give you the maximum benefit from the safari. Lenses such as 18-55mm are fine, wide angle lenses (i.e. 10-20 mm or 11-16 mm) give broader coverage for interior shots, macro lens capability is also desirable for food close-ups that blur the background. We also suggest a table-top tripod or a handy Gorillapod for stability, but we will also show you what to do if you DON’T have one.