​ASSIGNMENT: A POUR SHOT
THE POUR SHOT
You can use beer, or wine, or lemonade, or root beer, or ginger ale… Whatever you want to pour. The brief: A close-up of a pour shot… it can be from oblique to the camera to straight over top. It must show an interesting ‘splash’ or something interesting in the glass as it is pouring in. Props include a bottle to pour from, a can, or a container, and a glass/goblet/container to be poured into.
We must see the color of the liquid being poured.
- We must see the pour into the container.
- The background must remain uncluttered.
- The masthead of the magazine must be easily seen.
Lighting Cues: Often to light something pouring, we need some backlight. Liquid rarely looks good when it is front-lit. We lose the liquidity of it, as well as the inherent color – or at least the perceived color of it – with front light. Whether window or strobe, make sure the light is coming through the liquid.
Shooting Cues:Â One way to get a perfect pour is to mount a bottle with no bottom on it. Take a wine bottle and cut off the bottom of it with a glass cutter. Be very careful to do this without having a sharp edge that can cut your hands. Put some masking or gaffers tape along the sharp edge if you have no way to dull it. Mount the bottle with the spout coming into the frame at the exact point you want it to be, and pour the liquid in from the backside of the open bottle.
You can use Gaffers tape to mount the bottle to a stand or boom if you wish… be creative. If mounting a bottle or can is not going to work, then you must have something to cue you for the pour to make sure the can or bottle is not too close to the glass or out of the frame. I do want to see the vessel pouring as well as what it is being poured into.
Here is a whole page of beer shots for you to examine. Notice the lighting. Here is a page of wine pouring shots as well. And for the non-alcoholic approach, here is soda being poured as well.
Do not copy. Look, see and learn… then do something fantastic. It will be going on the cover of a magazine.
The layout is included here. POUR-COVER.psd NOTE: IMPORTANT.
POUR-COVER.psd
PLEASE UPLOAD THE LAYOUT SHOT AND THE ORIGINAL SHOT WITHOUT LAYOUT.Â
And a BTS shot as well, of course.
VIDEO
PHOTOGRAPHIC INFO
PHOTOGRAPHIC INFO
APRIL 2023
OCTOBER 2020
PREVIOUS STUDENT WORK FOR INSPIRATION
APRIL 2022
Peter McKinnon on idea generation
Peter knows his stuff. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6H31k2o3TBI
Understanding Light (Subject Centric Lighting)
This is how I think of light, and it will make a huge difference when you start to see the subject as the most important variable in the application of light. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ERxVM_SCMpo
Making Simple Tools
Presented by an actual simple tool. 🙂 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HPxMO6QgYxA
Photographing Texture (Product Shot)
Easy to understand product lighting. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S_8IaHr4WZs
How to Photograph Texture: Two
Simple explanation of the direction of light. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2CnAcWAO5bU
How to Photograph Textures
Simple video, with basic info. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WDmiT8pgHKY
Bottle Photography
Way too long, and too much selling - but there is some good info here as well. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XJuW7U-mLM4
Glass and Wine
Short. Gleen a few ideas. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2aawPN_vS24
Glass Product Shoot
Big set, lots of glass. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mBOydhqATrk
Glassware
A good tutorial. Watch twice. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BlQwt7_ZXKg
Want better PORTRAITS? – 8 TIPS
Very good tips! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6pCwW7xDAt0
How to become a better photographer through ‘visual exercise’
Sean Tucker is the real deal... and this is a very good little video. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gGngRlWHmZw