Posts Tagged ‘Apartments’

How to Photograph Your Apartment

December 17, 2008

Great photographs of your apartment will often lead a potential tenant to choose your apartment over another rental. Especially when you are trying to rent out property over the internet, photographs prove that the space is a real apartment and not an internet scam. But more than that, good photographs will prove that the apartment is also a livable home and serve as a warm invitation.

But interior spaces are some of the most difficult subjects to photograph and when you are photographing your apartment you will be facing a subject that can feel “empty” or “lifeless.” Here are a few tips to combat a lifeless photo and help you welcome tenants over the internet into your home.

Setting the Scene:
The first step is to clean the apartment. Clean everything. Make your bed, straighten the rugs and curtains, put away the magazines, hide the garbage can, and put the toilet seat down. You might even have to put away things that aren’t usually put away. Less is more when it comes to décor to help a room not appear “cluttered” in a photo. On the other hand, the apartment should seem like someone lives there, not totally empty, so set the kitchen table or put a vase of flowers on the nightstand.

Lighting the Scene:
Most cameras are designed to take photos outdoors and indoor spaces are just too dark to look good. Natural light from outside is best, but cameras are attracted to bright windows like moths to flames and everything else in the room will be darkened. Try to let the light in through the window without actually having the window in the shot. Don’t use the flash, unless you have a good flash that you can bounce off a wall or ceiling (if you don’t know what this means, don’t use your flash). Turn on every lamp in the room for a nice warm glow, but by all means, avoid fluorescent lighting, which can cast an alien green light in photos or make your apartment look like a hospital.

What to Shoot:
Everything. The more the merrier. You can always delete the ones that don’t look good or you can send them all to us and we will pick out the best photos of your apartment for the website. Shoot every room in your house. Take close ups of your best pieces of furniture and decorative art. Small architectural details or decorations may seem insignificant but can help represent the design style of the apartment. If you have a great view, photograph it. Great sunsets? Photograph one. If your apartment is in a historic building, photograph the exterior as well.

How to Shoot:
Steadying your camera is crucial. Even if you set the perfect scene and light it well, a blurry photo is useless. If you have a tripod, use it. If you don’t, try to rest the camera on a table or flat surface or steady your hand against the wall. Most basic cameras don’t have a wide enough lens to capture an entire room, so you’ll have to back into a corner or shoot a room through a doorway. Try the room from many different angles and all corners and doorways. Don’t always take the photos from eye level. Crouch down or stand on a stool for different perspectives, but try to have as little of the ceiling in the shot as possible.

Let the Room Be the Star:
People like to rent an apartment that is empty—that is, without other people living there, so photograph your apartment without yourself or your family members in the shot. Watch out for mirrors! A self-portrait of you with a camera in the bathroom mirror won’t help sell your apartment.

To Summarize:
• Clean the apartment
• Add a few small decorative touches
• Shoot during the day when it’s bright, but not too sunny
• Photograph every room
• Take lots of photos and choose the best

If you want to list your apartment with Red Apple Apartments, follow the above advice and send your beautiful apartment photographs to info@redappleapartments.com. We’ll get back to you right away and hopefully you’ll have tenants in no time at all.

Cruise Between Stockholm and Helsinki and Stay with Red Apple Apartments

November 26, 2008

The region’s first snowfall has been interrupting flights all over Scandinavia and the Baltic region this week, delaying journeys and leaving passengers grumbling in airports for hours. Meanwhile, travelers cruising between Stockholm and Helsinki and other ports in the Baltic are staying warm and happy aboard luxury ferries chugging along the popular sea routes. Ship travel is very popular in the Baltic and offers a year-round option for experiencing Scandinavia’s nautical history and culture.

Every day of the year ferries leave Stockholm for Helsinki and vice versa, departing in the afternoon and giving passengers time to watch the sunset over out-lying islands before they head inside to warm up and gorge themselves on exhaustive buffets (all you can eat and drink!). The ferries deliver their contented cargo by morning, and roundtrip passengers spend the day exploring either Stockholm or Helsinki before heading back in the late afternoon. One-way passengers can stay as long as they like exploring a new destination before heading back or heading home.

Ferry cruises are a great way to get a quick overview of the region or a sneak peak of another Nordic capital city. Red Apple Apartments has accommodation options in both Stockholm and Helsinki and if you contact us we can help you book a comfortable apartment or a stylish studio hotel room on both sides of your cruise with easy transportation to and from the city ports.

For ferry schedules and prices, check out: Viking Line or Tallink Silja Line.

You can choose from our selection of apartments in Stockholm and Helsinki at our website www.redappleapartments.com.