Learn how to create a mouth-watering food post featuring a delicious burger in this Photoshop tutorial in Hindi. Perfect for food bloggers and social media enthusiasts! Creating a professional food post in Photoshop involves a mix of high-quality photo editing and clean typography. Whether you're designing for a restaurant or a personal food blog, the goal is to make the viewer "taste" the image.Here is a guide to creating a high-impact food post.1. Document SetupFor most social media platforms (Instagram/Facebook), use the following settings:Dimensions: $1080 \times 1080$ px (Square) or $1080 \times 1350$ px (Portrait).Resolution: 72 ppi (standard for web).Color Mode: RGB.2. Editing the "Hero" ImageThe food is your "hero." It needs to look fresh and vibrant.Remove Distractions: Use the Healing Brush Tool or Clone Stamp to remove crumbs, smudges on plates, or unwanted background elements.Make it Pop: * Go to Filter Camera Raw Filter.Increase Texture and Clarity to show the food's detail.Boost Vibrance (rather than Saturation) to make colors look natural but appetizing.Selective Sharpening: Use Filter Sharpen Unsharp Mask. Focus on the most delicious part of the dish (e.g., the melting cheese or the sear on a steak).3. Layout & CompositionRule of Thirds: Place the main dish along the grid lines rather than perfectly centered to create a more dynamic feel.Negative Space: Leave "breathing room" on one side of the image for your text and logo.Layering Shadows: If you cut the food out from its background (using the Pen Tool or Select Subject), add a Drop Shadow or a manual "Contact Shadow" on a new layer underneath to make it sit realistically on its new background.4. Typography & BrandingFont Choice: Use a bold, clean Sans-Serif (like Montserrat) for prices/discounts and a "tasty" Serif or Script (like Playfair Display) for the dish's name.Hierarchy: The dish name should be the largest text, followed by the "Call to Action" (e.g., "Order Now").Color Sampling: Use the Eyedropper Tool to pick a color directly from the food (like the green of a garnish or the red of a sauce) and use that for your text or accent shapes. This creates a cohesive look.5. Final Professional TouchesGlow Effects: Create a new layer, set the blending mode to Linear Dodge (Add), and use a soft, low-opacity brush to add a subtle "glow" behind the food to make it stand out.Color Grading: Add a Color Balance or Curves adjustment layer at the very top of your stack to unify the colors of the entire design.