Awnings & Signs
Awnings and small signs can make a stall feel real.
Shade, stripes, labels, boards, and handwritten signs help the image feel local and public while keeping the copy simple and observational.
Look for a clear subject first.
A market image works best when the viewer immediately understands the main shape: a crate row, flower bucket, awning, basket, sign, or table edge.
Use color as the entry point.
Belaviro should feel warm and recognizable. Orange, yellow, green, red, and sunlit shade can carry the visual identity without needing heavy copy.
Keep the scene public and ordinary.
The best images should feel like a real market, street stall, or public aisle. Avoid luxury food styling and over-polished restaurant photography.
Avoid food and health claims.
Do not say the food is healthiest, freshest, organic, clean, detoxifying, or better for the body. The site is about visual culture and everyday scenes.
Use signs and labels carefully.
Small signs can make a stall feel real, but avoid price claims or sales language in the copy. Treat the signs as part of the visual scene.
Let repetition help the image.
Rows of fruit, buckets of flowers, stacked crates, or repeated labels can create rhythm. This gives the caption something concrete to describe.
Keep captions image-led.
The copy should sound like someone noticing a scene, not like a store trying to sell produce or a guide telling people where to shop.
Final note
The strongest market scene feels noticed, not advertised.
Keep the image bright, concrete, and grounded in the small public details people recognize.