Food Packaging Photography Examples

9 real food packaging photography photos from working restaurants — all enhanced by AI in under 30 seconds, not staged or AI-generated.

Enhance Your Photos Free9 photos · No credit card required
An Oatmeal Chai snack bar containing oats, seeds, and nuts, displayed next to its branded packaging with a cinnamon stick, cardamom pods, and loose tea leaves.
An Oatmeal Chai snack bar containing oats, seeds, and nuts, displayed next to its branded packaging with a cinnamon stick, cardamom pods, and loose tea leaves.
Stacks of golden brown egg roll wafers or barquillos neatly arranged and sealed in transparent plastic packaging.
A large foccacia sandwich filled with thin slices of cured ham and cheese, served inside a paper wrapper.
A loaf of rich, textured banana bread topped with glazed, caramelized banana slices, presented on the base of its packaging.
Three pieces of golden-brown citron cake or bars topped with a white glaze, tightly wrapped in clear plastic packaging with a central dark green label.
A dense, rectangular slice of carrot cake, individually wrapped in clear plastic packaging with a prominent green and white branded label.
Multiple packages of wafer cream rolls, featuring conical rolled wafers visible through clear plastic and labeled packaging in pink and brown with the text "CRE
This is a picture of the product packaging for Alpen 'The Original Swiss Style Muesli', which shows a spoonful of cereal mixed with nuts, oats, and dried fruit

Get results like these for your restaurant

Upload your food photos and get studio-quality results in under 30 seconds. No photography skills needed.

5 free photos30-second resultsNo credit card
Enhance Your Photos Free

Trusted by restaurants worldwide

Our Uber Eats orders went up 35% after we updated all our menu photos with MenuPhotoAI. The difference is night and day.

Maria R.

Owner, Italian Bistro

We used to pay $800 per photoshoot. Now we spend $39/month and update photos whenever we change the menu. Incredible ROI.

James C.

Head Chef, Asian Fusion

Customers tell us they chose our restaurant over competitors because the food photos looked more appetizing. Game changer.

Sarah T.

Manager, Farm-to-Table

Food Packaging Photography Photography Tips

Light packaging labels clearly

Packaging text and branding must read. Use side light that avoids glare on plastic or foil surfaces. A small highlight on the label shows material dimension without washing out text.

Peek inside to show product freshness

Open or partially tear the package to reveal food inside. This proves contents and quality; closed packaging alone looks generic and concealing.

Include context props for scale

Packaging size is ambiguous alone. Photograph with a hand, fork, or plate nearby. This context makes the package feel tangible and appetite-triggering.

Read the full food packaging photography photography guide

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best angle to photograph food packaging photography?+

For food packaging photography shots, the angle is part of the style itself. Overhead works for flat lays and pattern shots; eye-level works for cinematic, immersive frames; 45 degrees is the safe editorial default that flatters most plated food.

What is the hardest part of food packaging photography?+

Photographing latte art within 2 minutes before a surface film forms and the pattern loses definition. Working fast — and pre-setting your frame, lighting, and props before the dish leaves the kitchen — is what separates restaurant photos that look professional from ones that look like phone snaps. Our Coffee & Cafe photography guide covers the full workflow.

What kind of lighting works best for food packaging photography photos?+

Overhead soft diffused light for latte art; side window light for steam drama. Direct overhead flash flattens the surface gloss that makes food look fresh, so use a single soft directional source — natural window light or a softbox — and bounce the opposite side with a white card. The closer the light is to the dish, the softer and more flattering it looks.

What is one styling tip for food packaging photography that most restaurants miss?+

Light packaging labels clearly: Packaging text and branding must read. Use side light that avoids glare on plastic or foil surfaces. A small highlight on the label shows material dimension without washing out text.

How much does professional food packaging photography cost?+

A traditional photo shoot for food packaging photography typically runs $150 to $500 per image when you factor in the photographer, food stylist, props, and editing. AI enhancement tools like MenuPhotoAI start at $0 with 5 free credits and continue at $39/month for 25 photos — making restaurant-grade food packaging photography photos accessible to any kitchen. Browse the 9 food packaging photography examples on this page — every image was originally a phone photo.

Make your food packaging photography photos look like these

Upload one photo and see the result in 30 seconds. 5 free credits, no credit card needed.

Get Started Free

Real results from MenuPhotoAI users. Individual results may vary based on original photo quality.