Image & Video Galleries > 5D MK III Sample Images
5D mark iii & 100L - Heineken product shot
dturano:
Not as good as the above images, breaking in my new 100mm f/2.8 L, recycling my St. Peters Organic Ale bottle. 5Dmark3 as well.
castillophotodesign:
--- Quote from: dturano on April 29, 2012, 06:49:45 PM ---Not as good as the above images, breaking in my new 100mm f/2.8 L, recycling my St. Peters Organic Ale bottle. 5Dmark3 as well.
--- End quote ---
Its an amazing lens, you will love it. In my opinion is the sharpest lens i have and the colors come out great
dawgfanjeff:
Love the lighting, colors, etc...One minor critique, the bottle isn't precisely vertical. My eye caught that immediately. I dragged it to the edge of my monitor to verify it.
Love the shots I see from the 100L.
castillophotodesign:
--- Quote from: dawgfanjeff on May 04, 2012, 10:10:30 AM ---Love the lighting, colors, etc...One minor critique, the bottle isn't precisely vertical. My eye caught that immediately. I dragged it to the edge of my monitor to verify it.
Love the shots I see from the 100L.
--- End quote ---
You are right, thank you! also thanks for the trick of dragging the pic to the edge of the monitor to check if its straight, i didn't know that one
TotoEC:
--- Quote from: castillophotodesign on April 26, 2012, 08:36:47 PM ---here is my attempt at an advertising product shot... constructive criticism is welcomed but keep in mind that I'm just starting out with studio photography, this is my second attempt at a product shot
Heineken Beer 2 by CastilloPhotoDesign, on Flickr
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You asked for it - so, here's my take . . .
1. why is the bottle still capped? And what is that 3 little beads at the very top?
2. The ice at the bottom of the bottle? What is that? I'm at a loss of how to describe the over-all effect. Put it on a bucket! If you have those ice all-around then shoot the product inside the cooler at least.
Here's what I would suggest:
Open the bottle, tilt it a bit like it's leaning on the glass, take a tight shoot of the upper 1/3 of the product.
Close down your aperture to get the bubbles and the neck-logo in focus.
Tone-down your lighting so it does not wash-out the logo.
Take a shot of the mouth of the glass and you'll have a winning presentation.
;)
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