Ultra-realistic documentary-style Japanese seafood photography, Tsukiji fish market environment, handheld camera aesthetic, 35mm lens, f/3.5, ISO 800, 1/250, natural daylight, neutral white balance for accurate seafood color reproduction.
Foreground (separate plate): Geoduck Sashimi plated on a simple white enamel tray. Thinly sliced geoduck siphon meat, milky white to ivory-white with slight translucency, wet glossy surface, natural muscle fiber structure clearly visible, clean raw slicing with slight artisan irregularity. Accurate anatomical texture: the siphon (extended neck) is thick, elongated, cylindrical, slightly wrinkled with subtle longitudinal folds and soft elastic surface, resembling a heavy marine “tube-like trunk”, with realistic moist sheen and faint grain-like texture from muscle fibers. No excessive smoothness, no artificial uniformity.
Background (separate seafood display area, NOT same plate): Whole Geoduck arranged on crushed ice in a market display zone, multiple intact specimens placed directly on ice trays and stainless seafood counters. Each Whole Geoduck shows a small, thin, fragile oval shell composed of two modest valves, often slightly open and secured with rubber bands. The dominant visible part is the long siphon extending far beyond the shell, thick, soft, and naturally wrinkled with uneven surface folds, wet reflective texture, and slight natural curvature. Surrounding environment includes seafood crates, handwritten Japanese price tags, melting ice, stainless steel tables, and wet market tools. No shared plating with sashimi.
Lighting: natural daylight from market entrance, neutral-cool tone, soft directional diffusion, realistic shadow falloff, high dynamic range reflections on wet ice and shell surfaces, no warm cast.
Style: raw documentary photography, editorial reportage, imperfect composition, authentic fish market realism, ultra-detailed 8K, physically accurate seafood anatomy, extreme texture fidelity.