Probably at least 99% of all wine made from the Pinot Noir grape species is red wine. Yet recently some wineries are making white wine from that species. The red color of wine comes from the grape skins being in contact with the juice during fermentation; when white wine is made, the grape skins are never in contact with the juice.
I have never had a white Pinot Noir, so I look forward to the experience.
I could use your design help, please: I really struggled with the design of this photo and am not particularly happy with it. The bottle features gold tones and grey tones, which makes no sense to me and makes it even more difficult to come up with a design that works really well for me. The label's dominant color is blue, which in the context of the grey and gold also makes no sense to me. I want to make a photo that showcases that the wine from this grape species is white rather than red as normal and haven't come up with a concept that does that particularly well. I considered photographing only part of the bottle but still came up blank without coming up with anything that really excites me. So, I ended up settling at least temporarily on the very minimalist look shown below.
Any ideas are gratefully appreciated because I would like to have another go or two at photographing this bottle of very unusual wine.
Setup
The tabletop and background are a single sheet of translucent vellum. A medium continuous-light lamp on the right side lights mostly the background and that side of the tabletop. Another medium continuous-light lamp on the left side and above the bottle lights the subject and that area of the background and tabletop. A pair of flashlights handheld together above and in front of the subject brightens the label and the tabletop in front of the bottle.