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Glass lighting: Coca Cola

I'm trying it. I'm not good at it, but I'm trying. It would look better without it, I agree, and the CPL doesn't seem to take it away.
 
With commercial photography, post skills are at least as important as camera/studio skills.
 
That they are. I know how to do quite a bit, but dodging and burning I still SUCK at.
 
In the beginning set your density very low ... 10% to 15% ... you'll have to make a lot of passes ... But eventually you'll get there.
 
That's my problem. I always think "Ok I can do this in one or two passes" and crank it to 100%, then wonder why it's splotchy and terrible.
 
Are you using a diffuser over the lamps?
 
I don't have a snoot/grid/barndoors yet. But I can cover that part of the table with a black piece of foamcore.
 
Here's my attempt at burning. I don't like doing it. It seems to eliminate colors too.

Leaf_000589-2_zpsti40qoof.jpg
 
This may be a case of just not having the right gear.
 
Find the YouTube video of lighting a bourbon bottle and glass.

using tapatalk.


Edit: found it.
 
I immediately liked the green-tone feeling of this...I remember as a kid, how the old, old Coke bottles found around my grandfather's old barns and outbuildings had a greenish hue to them.
 
The glass does actually have that tone to it. I think my lights just blow that away, and this returns that look a bit. Also adds some detail where it was lost.
 
The white reflection on the bottle is from the strobes pointing down and bouncing off the white table. I would move the strobe so they are almost perpendicular to the bottle and add some diffusion paper/shower curtain/parchment paper/frosted plexiglass.... If your light stands are to high a. move your table up or get some Super Clamps or boom are with grip head.
 

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