Hi Christian
thanks for the good advice, I'm busy watching out for "old" and matching
accessories.
So far I have two bottles of the same age and that glass and some old silver
plates.
You can see them here, but this is by far not what I want to achieve in the
end, it's some bad photoshopping so far as an exercise only :-)

www.mypage.bluewin.ch/solicom/wine1959_2.jpg


I will try some lightning with a reflector and dark backgrounds too, maybe
one light from the side and above and a background light will be enough.
It is indeed an interesting "birthday project" for me and I will learn a lot
too :-)


greetings
Markus








-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of
Christian
Sent: Friday, February 16, 2007 2:58 PM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
Subject: Re: Looking for help for an old wine & glass still life


Markus Maurer wrote:
> Hi Pentaxians
> I know that some of you have very successfully photographed table tops of
> glass and other shiny reflecting materials so I'm looking for some advice
> here:
>
> I'm looking for a way to present two bottles of 1959 burgunder wine and a
> crystal glass from 1959 in a tasteful manner.
> I made a test shot with a Pentax Optio 330 and the integrated flash to
> trigger a slave flash from the top at 45 degrees and another slave flash
for
> the background only
> and the bottle and glass are in a large white light tent. The visible part
> of the tent in the background was then removed in Photoshop.
>
> The final photo will be made with the Pentax 50mm macro or Tamron 90mm
macro
> on film and I could use lights instead of the flashes too if needed. I
will
> not use the red tablet but  maybe some stones or old wood  branches
instead
> and seek for any ideas as well.
>
> But first I need some help how to set up the crystal glass so that the
> engraved 1959 (not visible yet) on the front and the other decorations
like
> the large eagle can be seen very well.
> Do I need some black paper on the opposite site of the flash to make the
> 1959 stand out?
>
> Thanks for any ideas regarding the glass or the overall setup in advance
:-)
>
> www.mypage.bluewin.ch/solicom/wine1959.jpg

for a "tasteful" setup of such a bottle and glass, I'd ditch the bright
red plate and high-key white background.  I'd try to find some warm
light and an old/antique table with a nice runner and some accessories
lying around (corkscrew, etc).

for lighting the glass so you can read the date, I'd suggest trying
different angles, no direct flash, and using a darker background (but
something "natural" like wood paneling.

fun project.  Good luck.


--

Christian
http://photography.skofteland.net

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