I need some help photographing wine bottles. I have a Canon EOS Rebel (300D) and no studio lighting equipment. I constructed a light box by taking a large cardboard box and cutting out holes in each side, covering them with muslin fabric, placing white posterboard inside bent at an arch for a seamless background, and used two clamp-on lights bought at Wal-Mart with 150 Watt "Reveal" bulbs. I realize my setup is not ideal, but I am a graphic designer by trade and don't do enough photography to justify purchasing a lot of studio equipment. I positioned my lights on either side of the bottle, one a little further away than the other. All of the bottles are dark glass. I thought the reflections I was seeing were OK (not great) but all of my photos were coming out too dark. And the very edges of the bottle were almost vignetting. Of course I want a shot with "hard" or defined edges and nice, pleasing reflections. Any suggestions on getting good results with what I have to work with?
Thanks in advance!
Neil
Anyhow, here is a link to the pic I posted on my website.
http://www.brownadvertising.com/IMG_1672.jpg
I did meter for the scene rather than the bottle, so thanks for the tip. Also, on this one I used the Auto White Balance setting, but on some I changed it to Tungsten which helped get rid of the yellowish tint, but of course didn't do anything to solve my lighting problems. And I didn't use a tripod on these photos but will in the next round. I'll take ANY suggestions I can get because I'm not really even in the ballpark on my first round of photos (hey, I'm not even in the "parking lot"...it looks more like my car broke down on the way to the game...:lol:)
Thanks!!!
http://www.thephotoforum.com/forum/showthread.php?t=2631
It was a progression and the original photo I took is no longer on my picturetrail site but the final image is still there towards the bottom of the thread.
Just brainstorming...
I'm assuming this is a DSLR and a white backdrop. Take a picture of just the backdrop without the bottle and set your white balance.
Is the camera on a tripod? If not, set on a tripod (or some support) and stop down your aperture (higher f number). Use a remote shutter or timer and don't worry about slow shutter speeds.
Perhaps use a spot light of some sort to backlight the bottle itself.
Any feedback and suggestions on what else might help improve would be appreciated!!!!
Neil
http://www.elkintribune.com/ragapple.jpg
Any feedback and suggestions on what else might help improve would be appreciated!!!!
Neil
http://www.elkintribune.com/ragapple.jpg
Looks professional.
In fact, I really like it
Does your lightbox have an opening/fabric in the top. A third light directly above may help too.
I think you're wrong about not being in the ball park. I'd say you're at least taking some batting practice swings. :)
Samples will get you much better answers than my guess.
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