
OK, we'll admit this trend is somewhat confined to Gourmet magazine (and one particular photographer), but we're seeing food against this peacock, turquoise blue so much it's starting to get weird. Don't get us wrong, we love the color...

OK, we'll admit this trend is somewhat confined to Gourmet magazine (and one particular photographer), but we're seeing food against this peacock, turquoise blue so much it's starting to get weird. Don't get us wrong, we love the color...
We're just so used to seeing food against a clean, white backdrop. And yet, against this turquoise shade, brown duck looks toasty and crisp, not neutral, and green herbs stand out not because of a stark contrast but because they work so well with the color palette.
The photographer in all of these photos is Romulo Yanes. We appreciate that his pictures don't look like typical, white dish/linen napkin/soft light food shots. And we do really love the color. We just can't decide if it looks more like a wall color and less like dinner.
Huh. What do you think? Does this color make you hungry? Make you pay attention?
See the recipes along with the photos:
Related: Look! Peacock Blue Kitchen Cabinets
(All images: Romulo Yanes for Gourmet)
Makes me think of cold food. I associate blue with coolness so I see food against blue and think "Cold." It works well for the ice cream. Not so much for the duck. No matter, the food still looks delicious and very pretty.
view Tiamat_the_Red's profile
makes the food look rich, more complex, exotic, special -- but then I have a real thing for turquoise
view mschatelaine's profile
makes the scene more European to me.
I think of a hot AGA cooker in the background.
Maybe an overcast day and a garden through the window.
view art's profile
I love turquoise, so these photos are beautiful to me. I'm not picky when it comes to what colour delicious food is served on.
view revolution9's profile
I often plate on blue to offset colors in the food--it makes the colors of just about any food you put on it pop and the dish have a little extra added dimension. I like it especially well for brown foods and dark chocolate baked goods. The former are notorious for being unphotogenic, especially against a white backdrop, and the latter can look too stark. Food also seems to look more grounded on a color as opposed to just "floating in space" on white.
view OneWallKitchen's profile
I've been noticing this tooâI actually saved a picture from gourmet in my "decorating ideas" scrapbook because i loved the teal wall so much. (this color has also popped up in domino a little.)
view mgood's profile
I've been told that people eat less from blue plates. Maybe it would be good for dieters. Although I think the dishes above look delish. And turquoise has always been my favorite color.
view whytephoenix's profile
It feels like autumn or the holidays to me. Feels more decadent and rich. Probably because it's so saturated.
view Marbargarbo's profile
Another food photographer to watch is Ditte Isager.
Awesome.
www.thebitterfoodie.blogspot.com
view thebitterfoodie's profile
I think it makes the food look dreary
view ah-ha's profile