The orange color of this Chateau des Tours Brouilly label shot from April 1998 betrays uncorrected color variation from artificial light, and the sharply rounded perspective, deep side shadows and not-quite-level alignment are telltale signs of a quick, careless snapshot.
Label shoot
Back in the early 1980s, when I started writing about wine, the personal computer was just coming on the scene and digital cameras were far in the future. If I wanted a wine-label image to accompany my column (which of course was printed only on paper), I had a couple of options: I could beg the winery to sent me a clean label (postal mail, of course, not E), or I could try my best to coax the label off my bottle with hot water and, sometimes, a dash of ammonia and a sharp razor blade.
A generation later, the world of wine hasn't changed too much (although that's another good subject for a very long article), but the tools we use to report on it have changed a great deal. From wild-eyed inspiration to your E-mail box, these words never see paper (unless for inscrutable reasons of your own you print it out); and the label images that accompany most of my wine reports come straight from the bottle to the Wine Advisor through the seeming magic of digital photography.
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The Marilyn Merlot shot featured in Monday's Wine Advisor was taken using the principles in this article. It takes close observation to see it was photographed on the bottle: Can you pick out the clues? |
Not any more! Frankly, the digital photography revolution came around just in time, as the art of soaking off wine labels - once a relatively easy task - became much more complicated during the 1990s when many of the world's wineries switched over to modern wine bottling lines and labeling machines using sticky-backed labels that cling to the bottle like Crazy Glue and require considerable effort to get off.
I got my first digital camera in the spring of 1998 and started using it for label photos almost immediately. It was a tiny Nikon about the size of a pack of cards, with a lens the size of a green pea and pea-size memory, too; and it made photos that were serviceable at best. (See the Chateau des Tours Brouilly image at right above, or click through to /text/UploadFile/200662112443848.jpg if you're reading the plain-text edition and would like to view it online.)
Over the ensuing years, I've upgraded cameras periodically, and tuned up my my photo-shooting skills and PhotoShop image-tweaking abilities a little more. Just for fun, here's a summary of the how-to-do-it report I sent Randy. If it inspires you to start creating your own digital scrapbook of the wines you enjoy, that's great! And if by chance you're a photography or graphic-arts professional or skilled hobbyist and have tips you'd like to share, I'd love to have them. See TALK ABOUT WINE ... below for contact links.
Sound like a lot of work? It isn't really ... at least not if you bring a fraction of the enthusiasm to photography that you do to wine.