Product photography tutorial. Learn photography & professional studio photography techniques.




Learning photography, especially professional photography can be a real challenge especially when you’re using a lot of studio lights and trying to capture a specific emotion of a photography scene.

Here’s a great photography product photography tutorial using multiple lights for a wine product photography shoot

Capturing the right emotion for this type of shot can be a bit of a challenge so I explain each step, one at a time as I build-up to the final image.

Enjoy the tutorial & please share with your photography friends.

All the best,
Karl Taylor

Get all my training, courses, live online workshops and lots more on my website: https://www.karltayloreducation.com

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44 responses to “Product photography tutorial. Learn photography & professional studio photography techniques.”

  1. wow:) Only Karl can take a raw photo that looks amazing without even touching the sliders in photoshop:) you are such a talented person and perfectionist Karl..its very rear these days to find people like you who work with such detail on everything..

  2. NOTE: the third light, with the snoot type nose, that was supposed to point to the ropes, was not used. I think the walnut wood and leather backdrop were also significant to the overall success.

  3. What I know for sure is that most of the photographs aren't familiar with the wine glasses options on the market… They would have made much better scenery with the bordo glass or chardonnay in the back for example instead of those small fat cheap ones. Salute

  4. Can you make a tutorial without adding all those expensive and a lot of lights, rather a setup with less lights and more simple setup to take the same results, may be not exactly the same, but near to it.
    But I really love the light setup, especially the red light and the top light setup.

  5. Very nice example/demonstration. Without all this gear, how much of these effects can be added post processing with lightroom/photoshop? Any suggested vids/tutorials?

  6. The overhead light also seemed to nicely bring out the red in the glass of wine, more so than the red light coming in from the side.

    Would you have been able to bring out more red from inside the bottle by having a small light with a snoot or something directly behind the bottle shooting light into it, or alternatively shining up through a hole in the wood surface that the bottle is sitting on?

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