mmayo
Member
I have been using the top of my table saw until I finally made a portable frame today. Most of the materials I bought a Lowes inexpensively.
Here is the frame it is 36" x 25" and has a riser in the back to hold a black velvet cloth as a background. Other colors or white velvet would work great too.
To the frame I add a piece of diffuser used in fluorescent ceiling fixtures. I think it cost around $10. It fits into kerfs cut in the side rails.
I lay a 16" x 24" piece of "black glass" inside for nice mirrored effects. The velvet is long enough to span from the front of the glass to the rider in the back.
I have a piece of velvet from JoAnn's my wife bought me with a coupon for $15. You can also see my inexpensive high intensity light I use when turning pens. This one light plus the overhead light that filters through the white diffuser from my 6 - 4' shop lights is all the light I use. If it helps I turn off the overhead lights sometimes. I do employ a white card or piece of aluminum foil when highlights are needed.
The final setup shot shows my camera and tripod. Yes, that is not cheap, but I did not buy it to photograph pens. It has a macro lens so images are usually sharp.
Here is a photo from my setup of two "his/hers" pens in bocote
The above image was taken with a Nikon D80 and a 105mm macro on manual exposure at f22 for 1.6 seconds.
If I can help in any way with your efforts or if something about the setup is unclear, please send me an email or PM.
Here is the frame it is 36" x 25" and has a riser in the back to hold a black velvet cloth as a background. Other colors or white velvet would work great too.

To the frame I add a piece of diffuser used in fluorescent ceiling fixtures. I think it cost around $10. It fits into kerfs cut in the side rails.

I lay a 16" x 24" piece of "black glass" inside for nice mirrored effects. The velvet is long enough to span from the front of the glass to the rider in the back.

I have a piece of velvet from JoAnn's my wife bought me with a coupon for $15. You can also see my inexpensive high intensity light I use when turning pens. This one light plus the overhead light that filters through the white diffuser from my 6 - 4' shop lights is all the light I use. If it helps I turn off the overhead lights sometimes. I do employ a white card or piece of aluminum foil when highlights are needed.

The final setup shot shows my camera and tripod. Yes, that is not cheap, but I did not buy it to photograph pens. It has a macro lens so images are usually sharp.

Here is a photo from my setup of two "his/hers" pens in bocote

The above image was taken with a Nikon D80 and a 105mm macro on manual exposure at f22 for 1.6 seconds.
If I can help in any way with your efforts or if something about the setup is unclear, please send me an email or PM.