Quick answer
Menu photo shot list built for hotel restaurants: Hotel restaurants manage breakfast, lobby dining, room-service-style menus, multilingual guests, daypart changes, and high expectations for menu clarity.
What this template helps you do
This shot list helps hotel restaurants photograph the items that most need visual support on a mobile menu. Hotel restaurants manage breakfast, lobby dining, room-service-style menus, multilingual guests, daypart changes, and high expectations for menu clarity.
Best use case
Use it before menu refreshes, seasonal launches, new specials, or a QR menu redesign. Use the QR menu to separate breakfast, all-day dining, bar, and event menus while supporting language clarity for international guests.
Hotel Restaurants photo shot list example
| Item | Priority | Plating note | Image need | Publish action |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Breakfast buffet | High | Show variety not crowd | Wide crop | Breakfast section |
| Club sandwich | High | Cut and fries visible | Square crop | All-day menu |
| Lobby cocktail | Medium | Hotel bar context | Vertical crop | Bar section |
| Kids pasta | Medium | Simple plate | Mobile crop | Family section |
| QR room card | High | Show scan placement | Operational crop | Room menu |
Hotel Restaurants photo checklist
How to plan the shot list
Choose priority items
Start with items that need more attention, explanation, or upsell support.
Write plating notes
Make each photo match the real service standard.
Shoot for mobile
Check every image at phone size before adding it to the menu.
Publish and measure
Add photos to the QR menu and watch whether item views change.
Photos should reduce ordering uncertainty
For hotel restaurants, the best menu photos help guests understand portion, ingredients, style, or value before ordering.
How this connects to your QR menu
Use the QR menu to separate breakfast, all-day dining, bar, and event menus while supporting language clarity for international guests. FlipMenu lets managers add item photos and update them as the menu changes.
Use the worksheet first, then publish the guest-facing result only after the manager review is complete. That keeps the digital menu useful without turning it into an unapproved operations notebook.