In order to Honor visiting Canadian Royalty…
It has been far too long since I made a mess of any note in my studio/garage! So I decided to go for a three-fer this time to make up!
Two areas of moving liquid and a mid-air ice cube with a nod to all of my Canadian buddies who enjoy a taste of the Recipe from time to time!
I liked this bottle because of the embossing and I knew that would be a challenge to light nicely. Further, due to the angle I wanted to shoot from I didn’t want to shoot a “standard” bottle shape, such as a wine bottle, or the like. I wanted a shorter, more angled bottle because I’m not a fan of the distortion/compression caused by shooting this angle with these “standard” types of bottles. Everyone knows what they look like and that kind of distortion just doesn’t look right. A different type of bottle is less prone to this. Further still I shot from a high PoV to get the angle I wanted and add some distance to shoot with a higher focal length. I stood on a two-step to frame the shot through the viewfinder and used a longer lens.
I’m not really a huge fan of the contents but I’m not so much a brown liquor guy. I do, however, have some friends who swear by this libation and defer to the Canadian Crown. It will make a good holiday gift after I’m through with it and pour it all back in the bottle!
The shot:
F/13 with a 70-200mmL @ 75mm
Shutter 1/200th
ISO 1000
Four lights fired.
There have been a couple of threads lately regarding flash duration so I will note the longest (slowest) flash duration of the shot, which determines the “stopping power” of movement and in this case is 1/8382 sec. t.1 on the studio strobes. I like 1/8000th minimum for spash work to stop the movement
Shot on a piece of opaque black plexiglass with a piece of diffusion material behind it and a light wearing a 7” reflector behind that causing the spot to reflect on the tabletop surface. The spot was gelled with blue to go with the manufacture’s royal blue color scheme and primarily lights the flowing water and the surface.
The liquor bottle is wearing a piece of thin white open cell foam as a diffuser on its behind with a light behind and off to camera right lighting it and the glass from behind. Cut to fit the bottle shape. Rear label removed. The tumbler is also wearing a piece of the same foam diffuser also cut to fit. The diffusers gives the liquor in the bottle and tumbler a nice glow when lit and helps ease the diffraction that would be evident inside the bottle/tumbler and result in more uneven who-knows-what refracting who-knows-where without it.
There is another light in front and to camera right wearing a snoot to light the label and give some extra speculars to some of the embossing and give some love to the texture on the bottle cap.
There is still yet another light wearing a 7” reflector and barn doors firing through a diffusion panel in front and to camera left to help with the label, glass, embossing on the bottle, and cap. The trick to getting the embossing to show is lighting it such that you get speculars/highlights and shadow of varying degrees showing to get depth otherwise it won’t show as a texture. Typically, side-lighting of some sort is the ticket.
The shot is 5 frames composited all shot under the same lighting as described. One base shot. Another for the ice cube splash. Another for the ice cube caught in mid air, another for the tabletop hosing, and still yet another for the turbulence hitting the bottom of the bottle and tumbler. All hand blended.
The way I understand it, in Canada if you are invited out to a pub you are expected to pay for a round of drinks! Awesome tradition! The shot may suck but the mess was World Class! So in celebration of visiting dignitaries I dip my straw into the Little Blue Pool (where most but not all of this mess ended up) and suck a toast to my Canadian Friends, and anyone else who enjoys a wee drop occasionally no matter where you are from!
After all? We are all Canadians at Heart, eh?
So straws all around! This one’s on me!