
Episode Title: The Business of Real Estate Photography
Guest: Clay Banks, Real Estate & Interiors Photographer, Catskills/Hudson Valley, NY
We Discuss:
Clay’s path from software developer and urbex hobbyist to in-demand property photographer
Why COVID-era demand in the Catskills/Hudson Valley accelerated the niche
Gear and approach: Sony a7 IV, 16–35mm + 50mm, DJI Air 2S, natural light only, Lightroom Denoise, subtle compositing
Composition rules Clay lives by: tighter crops, fewer walls, mobile-first storytelling
On-site workflow: staging, prop choices, what he moves and why, ideal client presence (or not)
Editing priorities: color cast fixes, distraction removal, polishing stainless, mirrors, windows, decks
Pricing evolution: valuing time, three-tier packages, travel, and smart add-ons
Trends and opportunities: lifestyle-driven branding for brokerages, reels, and leveling up with video
Client relations: referrals over ads, B2B ease, handling difficult collaborations with grace
Practical prep tips for homeowners and realtors
TLDR:
Clay built a thriving, referral-only property photography business by telling the story of a space, not just documenting it.
Natural light, thoughtful staging, and tight compositions are his signature.
Pricing rose with demand and clarity on value; add-ons like short drone clips close easily.
Brokerages want lifestyle branding, not just wide, bright rooms—video is the next lever.
Quick win for clients: clean the house, especially mirrors, before the shoot.
Resources:
Learn more about Clay’s work: www.claybanks.info
Follow Clay on Instagram: @clay.banks
Check out Clay’s Presets: www.claybanks.info/presets