Oct 09

I’ve been working on a lot of shoots with glass lately. Glass is particularly difficult to shoot, especially curved glass surfaces like that of a bottle. It acts as a mirror, seeing everything around it, so it becomes an exercise in controlling light in every detail.

Here’s a behind-the-scenes look at how I shot this bottle of Hennessy Cognac with a glass. This diagram shows an overhead view of the lighting setup – the Hennessy bottle is the circle with the star on it.

LightingSetup

I used two light sources mounted behind a very large sheet of white plexi, sand-blasted on the side facing the set. The bottle of Hennessy was sitting on a large piece of oak. I wanted to completely back-light the bottle so the liquid would tend to glow and I wouldn’t show any reflections on the front of the bottle. I knew I was going to use a series of shots to create the final composited image.

The black gobos are used to cut the light coming from the large sheet of plexi – that allowed me to control exactly where the light was going to fall. The gobo behind the set in the frame of the shot was a section of black velvet – it’s still the best at absorbing light.

hennessy  0152 224x300 Shooting glass   HennessySo, here’s the first shot of the set – for the bottle details, the glass behind it, and the lighting along the left edge of the bottle.

The gobos make sure the thin strip of light down the left side of the bottle doesn’t migrate too far forward. If the left gobo were removed, you’d get a large, wide white strip down the left side of the bottle – resulting from the reflection of the white plexi behind the set.

The gobo to the right of the bottle cuts any light that may be reflecting around the room. Since it’s glass, it’ll see any light in the room that is strong enough. The gobo kills any of that ambient light.

Finally, the gobo beside the camera is cutting the light from hitting the lens. It is blocking the light from the plexi sheet coming from the strobe to the left, and it is also cutting the light from the strobe behind the plexi to the right. If that gobo were not there, I’d get lens flare.

hennessy  0153 224x300 Shooting glass   Hennessyhennessy  0159 224x300 Shooting glass   HennessyNext step is to light the labels.

That is done in two separate shots – one to light the main labels on the front of the bottle, and a second shot to light the cap.

To do that, I used a sheet of silver florentine and bounced the light back onto the front of the label. Silver florentine is just like a shiny piece of thin cardboard – great for reflecting light.

You have to be patient with positioning the card – you want the light to bounce from above and down, so you don’t get shiny reflections on the label. You also want to make sure the light is bouncing along the labels in the same location, otherwise it would look like the labels were each shot separately.

hennessy  0162 224x300 Shooting glass   HennessyIn the last shot, I placed a large sheet of silver florentine behind the bottle and positioned it so it would reflect the light from the white plexi toward the camera.

This shot will be used to illuminate the liquid in the final composite.

It’s important to fill the entire width of the bottle with light so all the liquid is lit up, being careful not to leave black gaps along either side of the bottle.

It’s also important to make sure the silver florentine card isn’t moved too far forward on the right side of the bottle, otherwise it will reflect on the front of the bottle and ruin the overall shot.

Remember not to adjust any of the settings on the camera – you don’t want to alter the aperture, otherwise it will make compositing the shots later virtually impossible. Keep everything the same from shot to shot, and be careful not to move the bottle.

Once all the pieces are shot and ready, you then composite them together to create one final shot. Here is the result.

hennessy  01521 Shooting glass   Hennessy

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Dec 20

In this shot, I wanted to combine the ring used in the pigment shot with a vortex of water spinning down through the ring. The first trick was to determine how to create the vortex.

We started by placing a large 4L beaker on a magnetic mixer, and played with different sized stir sticks to get the right effect with the vortex – we needed to use the larger sticks given the volume of water.

But the biggest problem was trying to light a circular beaker that is made of normal glass i.e., not sand-blasted glass like our custom tanks. On a whim, I thought we could try the magnetic mixer under the tank we used to create the splashing pearls, thinking it might be powerful enough to move that volume of water.

And it worked!

We were able to get the vortex dancing about in the tank, creating all kinds of shapes for us. So we started working on lighting, and came up with the following setup:

Vortex in tank

Vortex in tank

The magnetic mixer was placed under the tank in the middle, supporting the weight of the tank. We placed a silver card on the mixer so the top of the plate wouldn’t reflect up into the vortex formed above it.

To provide the background, we aimed a broncolor pulso-spot 4 at a scrim with some tough-spun attached to it hanging just behind the back of the tank. The pulso-spot 4 created a round light on the scrim, which was diffused even more by the tough-spun, resulting in a nice soft round light with gentle fall-off, without eminating light into the tank itself.

We took a number of shots of the vortex while it formed in the tank until we had a number of great shots to use in the final composite. The tank was then removed, and the ring was shot in the existing lighting setup to use in the final composite. Using the ring shot from the pigment setup would not have worked – a different focal length lens was used in this setup (120mm) and slightly different lighting setup. The differences would have been enough to make the ring look as though it didn’t belong.

Here’s the final shot after compositing:

Ring vortex

Ring vortex

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