This wine label is a favorite of mine, as this is my third photo of it.
The photo was made in a style that is more modern than most of my other images of wine bottles. Its simplicity makes it look easy to make even to me, but it was surprisingly difficult to make the four primary elements happen -- defining the shape of the bottle, separating the bottle from the background, displaying the texture in the background and lighting the corner of the background from top to bottom.
You may need to display the image in the largest size in the Lytebox to view the texture in the background and to see separation between the bottle and the background. Even so, if you aren't using a calibrated monitor and a browser that manages color very well you still may not be able to view those subtleties.
Setup
The tabletop is grey art paper and the background is part of a tri-fold, upright presentation board made of cardboard with a black finish. A medium continuous-light lamp fitted with a diffusion sock is to the right of the camera pointed on an axis that is parallel to the lens. A reflector is on the left side of the bottle adding a reflection to that side of the glass and foil and lifting the shadow on the left side of the label.
I desaturated the image only because the tabletop had a very slight green cast. The rest of the image appeared to be in grey scale so I took the easy way out by making all of the image in grey scale.