100ml200ml white vertical striped glass aromatherapy bottle fragrance diffuser bottle decoration
This essential oil diffuser glass bottle features a sleek, rounded striped design that’s a departure from the traditional shape.
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Kinda want to buy the Inis perfume but I already have D&G Light Blue which is also a fresh beachy scent and I try to keep my perfume collection to one 10/10 perfume for each mood.
Light Blue opens with a sharp lemon note which I really like and fades down into a freshie with hints of sweet citrus. It smells like 2004 and reminds me of a Mediterranean beach during summer, drinking freshly squeezed lemonade while surrounded by hot, wealthy people sunbathing and hanging out on nearby yachts. Feminine but not overly feminine.
Inis smells like actual seawater, moss, and some light florals and citrus. It smells like 1998 and reminds me of spending a nippy day on a rocky beach near a cliff in the West of Ireland, before going to a gift shop along the shore that sells handmade soap, Aran pattern merino scarves, and Celtic Woman CDs as the dulcet tones of Enya plays in the background, before going back to your hotel which was formerly a manor house and taking a calming shower, using the posh products in the ensuite bathroom that somehow smell just like the sea you'd just visited but fancy and refined. Unisex but slightly masculine leaning.
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perfume bottles, translucent flowers, universe, purple theme
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Custom 100ml empty reed diffuser fragrance glass bottle for aroma
This is a new 100ml colorful square aromatherapy diffuser bottle that can be matched with different lids.
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Remember this joke?
Well, I am going to do something similar only with photography. This is a photo someone took for an Amazon review of their Clinique products.
Honestly, it is not a terrible photo. They did some staging. They have an interesting background. All of the labels are legible. It is properly exposed. This would be a perfectly acceptable product photo for an Etsy page.
I've been taking these advanced photography courses in preparation for whenever I am able to create a new studio in the house. And my teacher is a photography badass. I just watched a 6 hour class on how to recreate a professional Clinique ad. And at first glance it looks deceptively simple. It's just some skin care products being splashed with a little water.
Which is why I wanted you to see an average person for reference.
This is what Karl Taylor came up with.
And I don't think I've learned so much about photography in one tutorial before.
Product photography is just loads and loads of problem solving. You have to light the chrome caps with a gradient. Which requires giant diffusion scrims.
Those big white panels are literally only there for the two chrome caps.
You need a pure white background, but you can't let light spill all over the studio, so you put up giant black light blockers.
And you have to add another light just for the orange bottle on the right.
Oh, and if you want the bottles to glow, well, you have to hide a silver reflector behind them.
But you still want the edges of the bottles to be darker so they have some contrast. So you add some black tape to the sides.
And in order for the reflective labels to have bold black lettering, you have to reflect black cards into them.
Ack! Karl's beautiful bald head is showing up in the chrome caps! He must put on the naughty blanket.
And once you get every aspect of every bottle perfectly lit, you finally get to yeet some water at it all.
I don't love product photography because I have a weird obsession to help greedy corporations make their wares look more beautiful. I love it because it is a complicated and challenging new puzzle every time. Every product is a different shape and requires a different technique to make it look its best.
I don't know if I will be able to live up to Karl's standards.
This is about the level I was at in 2017 before I quit photography.
I have so much more knowledge in my brain now. I'm really hoping I can surpass that.
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