One of the members of my "touring group" two weeks ago said:
"Distillery makes spirits, Winery makes wines, and Brewery makes beer." I wouldn't have a clue about the difference. So here we are in a strange place and all I want to do is take pictures. I couldn't care less what the guy was saying before the tour. He sounds good...know his stuff as it is only a small distillery -- office/display/sales and distillery next door where everything is almost hand produced. Anyway...
1. I have no idea how to describe this one...but in real life, this is not how they do it...
2. This is self explanatory I think...
3. The big drum where it all comes from...I can hardly move around the place because of the "tourists" in front of me, behind me, all over where I want to take my shoot so I shot the top of the container inside...
4. Filling 'er up...
5 The tubes from that container goes here to the larger bottle at the back then on 4 other smaller bottles to fill them up. I asked the tour operator how they keep up with demands if everything is almost hand produced like this...this is it! And then these bottles goes aside at the other end of table for labelling. He just simply said "We don't."
6. Some of the labels on top of a barrel at the back...
7. These barrels are located about 5 feet away from the wine filling zone...
8. This shot from the other side of the office/sales/display area...Big room but dark in most places. Must be a needed thing to keep the barrels of wine. I have no idea...I just like the textures of the barrels..
Thank you all for indulging me. I am not a wine/spirits/alcohol person but it is nice to be able to be allowed to see the process these bottles are subjected to before reaching the bottle shop/store. Compare this to the car operations where you are almost undressed so they can be sure you are not carrying any contraption at all to photograph their "secret". Oh well...c'est la vie!
Thank you for looking and bearing with my shots. Will appreciate any comments and critiques. Please do be aware that I was playing around with Nik's Software suite, particularly Color Efex and I enjoyed it very much, hence the different looks in each and every one of these depending on how much I wanted to show of the textures and how little I missed. It has been fun moving those sliders and creating recipes.