A pure white background isn't just an aesthetic choice for product photography — it's a requirement. Amazon, Shopify, eBay, and virtually every major marketplace mandate white or near-white backgrounds for main listing images. Getting that background to true #FFFFFF without losing product detail is the central challenge of e-commerce photography, and it's entirely achievable — even with a smartphone.
This guide covers everything from budget-friendly DIY setups to professional studio configurations, along with the camera settings, lighting techniques, and post-processing workflows that separate amateur product shots from images that convert browsers into buyers.
Why White? The Business Case
Conversion rate data consistently shows that products on white backgrounds outperform those on colored or lifestyle backgrounds for primary listing images. The reason is straightforward: white eliminates distraction. The viewer's eye goes directly to the product because there's nowhere else to go. The background provides zero information, which means 100% of the visual bandwidth is dedicated to the thing you're selling.
There's also a trust factor. White backgrounds create visual consistency across a catalog. A storefront with twenty products, each photographed on a different surface or in a different environment, looks amateurish. The same twenty products on pure white look unified, professional, and branded — even if they're shot in a garage.
White background images aren't just for your main listing. Use them as the foundation for creating composite images, social media graphics, and print catalogs. Shoot on white once, reuse everywhere.
Marketplace Standards at a Glance
| Platform | Background | Min. Size | Fill Ratio | File Format |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amazon | Pure white (RGB 255,255,255) | 1000×1000 px | Product fills 85% | JPEG, TIFF, PNG, GIF |
| eBay | White or light grey | 500×500 px | No strict rule | JPEG, PNG |
| Shopify | Recommended white | 2048×2048 px (rec.) | Square 1:1 preferred | JPEG, PNG, WebP |
| Etsy | White or neutral | 2000 px shortest | 5:4 aspect ratio | JPEG, PNG, GIF |
| Google Shopping | White, grey, or light | 100×100 px (min) | Product fills 75–90% | JPEG, PNG, WebP, BMP |
Amazon is the strictest — their automated systems actively scan uploaded images and may reject listings where the background isn't close enough to RGB(255, 255, 255). It's worth targeting Amazon's standard even for other platforms, since it ensures compliance everywhere.
The DIY Setup (Under $50)
You don't need a professional studio. Here's a budget-friendly setup that produces results comparable to setups costing thousands.
The Sweep
Tape a large sheet of white poster board (or white seamless paper roll) so it curves smoothly from a wall down to your table surface. This curve — called a "sweep" or "infinity curve" — eliminates the visible horizon line between wall and table, creating a seamless background.
Window Light
Position your setup next to a large window. Natural window light is beautifully diffused and free. If the light is too harsh (creating sharp shadows), hang a white bed sheet or piece of parchment paper over the window to soften it further.
The Bounce Card
Place a white foam board on the side of the product opposite the window. This bounces window light back onto the product's shadow side, reducing contrast and filling in dark areas. Adjust the distance to control shadow intensity.
The Tripod
Any tripod works — even a $12 smartphone tripod. The tripod eliminates camera shake, allows slower shutter speeds (keeping ISO low for less noise), and ensures consistent framing across all products in a batch shoot.
Lighting for Pure White
The key to a genuinely white background is lighting the backdrop separately from the product. If you light them together with a single source, you'll inevitably get a grey or off-white background — because the product absorbs some light that would otherwise hit the backdrop.
The Two-Light Method
Place your main light (key light) at a 45-degree angle to the product, slightly above. This creates depth and dimension. Then aim a second light directly at the backdrop, behind the product. This "background light" pushes the backdrop toward pure white independently of the product lighting. The background light should be 1–2 stops brighter than the key light.
The Three-Light Method
Add a third light on the opposite side of the product from the key light, set about 1 stop dimmer. This "fill light" reduces shadows on the product without eliminating them entirely. The result: a product with visible dimension and form, sitting on a perfectly white background.
Don't overexpose the backdrop — light that's too intense will wrap around the product edges, creating a "glow" or "halo" effect that eats into the product outline. The backdrop should be bright white, not nuclear. Aim for 1–2 stops over the product exposure, not 3+.
LED vs. Strobe vs. Continuous
For beginners and smartphone shooters, continuous LED panels are the easiest option — what you see is what you get. For DSLR or mirrorless shooters working with volume, strobes (flash) offer more power, more consistent color temperature, and cooler operating temperatures. Both work; the key is consistency. Don't mix light types or color temperatures.
Camera Settings
Post-Processing Workflow
Even with perfect lighting, post-processing is usually necessary to push the background to true #FFFFFF. Here's a reliable workflow.
Step 1: White Balance Correction
In Lightroom or Camera Raw, use the eyedropper tool to sample the background area. This neutralizes any remaining color cast. If the background reads slightly warm or cool, this single click fixes it.
Step 2: Levels / Curves Adjustment
Open the Levels dialog (or Curves). Drag the white point slider left until the background histogram spike hits 255. Watch the product — if highlights start clipping on the product itself, you've gone too far. The goal is to push the background to 255 while keeping the product's tonal range intact.
Step 3: Selective Masking
If the background isn't uniform — darker in corners or near the product base — use a mask or selection to target just the background. Apply a Levels or Brightness adjustment to the masked area only. Tools like Photoshop's "Select Subject" or the Magic Wand make this quick.
Step 4: Verify
Use the Info panel (eyedropper) to sample multiple points across the background. Every point should read R:255 G:255 B:255. Pay special attention to corners, edges near the product, and the product's shadow area — these are where off-white contamination hides.
1. Select → Color Range → Highlights (Fuzziness: 40)
2. Select → Modify → Expand: 2px
3. Select → Modify → Feather: 1px
4. Image → Adjustments → Levels
Input White Point: 240 → 255
5. Deselect
6. Verify with Info panel sampling
Smartphone Photography Tips
Modern smartphones are remarkably capable for product photography. The sensors are small, but the computational photography makes up for a lot. Here's how to optimize the smartphone workflow.
- Use the rear camera — always. The front camera is for selfies, not products. Rear cameras have larger sensors, better lenses, and more processing power.
- Lock exposure manually. Tap and hold on the product to lock focus, then adjust the exposure slider. The phone's auto-exposure will try to compensate for the bright white backdrop by underexposing — override it.
- Use the 2× zoom (if available) to reduce wide-angle distortion. Products shot at 1× on a smartphone often have curved edges and exaggerated proportions near the frame edges.
- Enable gridlines and center your product. Consistent positioning across images creates a professional, catalog-like feel.
- Use your screen as a light source. Open our Full-Screen White tool, set brightness to maximum, and position it opposite your window to act as a fill light or bounce surface.
Troubleshooting Common Problems
Need a White Screen for Lighting?
Use our full-screen white tool to turn your monitor into a soft, diffused light source for tabletop product photography.