I was up yesterday cleaning and a glass of left over wine was sitting on our kitchen table from dinner the night before. I thought the way the light hit the glass was neat because of how it reflected on to the table. It also reflected into the shadow. The reflection emits light in several different ways; the light bounces off of the glass and lands on the table cloth, it is also bouncing off of the wine which then transfers color on to the table cloth as well. The angle of the light hits the wine and also transfers color down the stem of the glass. I just thought it was cool how something as simple as an almost empty glass of wine can make that neat of a display on a table from light hitting it at a certain angle.
Monday, October 17, 2011
Week Three - Empty Wine Reflection
I was up yesterday cleaning and a glass of left over wine was sitting on our kitchen table from dinner the night before. I thought the way the light hit the glass was neat because of how it reflected on to the table. It also reflected into the shadow. The reflection emits light in several different ways; the light bounces off of the glass and lands on the table cloth, it is also bouncing off of the wine which then transfers color on to the table cloth as well. The angle of the light hits the wine and also transfers color down the stem of the glass. I just thought it was cool how something as simple as an almost empty glass of wine can make that neat of a display on a table from light hitting it at a certain angle.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Nice photo and analysis of its component complexity :-)
ReplyDelete