Transparent objects need visible evidence
Glass is understood through edge highlights, refraction, thickness, internal liquid, reflections, and what the background does through the object. A generic transparent instruction often removes the silhouette or turns packaging into clear plastic.
Separate the material layers
Describe the container, contents, closure, and label as distinct physical systems.
- Container: glass thickness, tint, edge highlights, and base weight.
- Contents: color, fill level, opacity, and meniscus.
- Closure: cap material, threading, pump, or dropper geometry.
- Label: exact placement, opaque print, readable hierarchy, no warping.
Use a controlled background
A gradient, light panel, or structured environment gives the glass something to bend and reflect. Keep the background simple enough that refraction supports the silhouette instead of creating visual noise across the label.
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