southern wolf
Member
I figured I'd share my small studio with you.
I built this one back when I had my reptile breeding business and I was dealing with flighty lizards and snakes. In this photo it was set up for a snake shoot.
I have used it to photograph everything from snakes, lizards, scorpions, venomous snakes, tarantulas, misc spiders, amphibians, and of course flowers.
It was real easy to construct and depending on how much light you need... you just change out the bulbs. With the geckos I had to have softer light or they wouldn't open their eyes... with the snakes I could flood it with light and freeze tounge flicks.
As for the background... I just bought the reminents in the fabric department at China-Mart (aka walmart). The container is just the biggest storage container I could buy and I cut out one of the long sides and left a lip on the bottom to hold in the substrate. I've used the cypress mulch (in the photo), sand for the scorpions, and leaves and a log for a copperhead. It's really up to your imagination.
This is also the same studio setup I used when photographing the white daisy that I posted earlier in this thread.
I built this one back when I had my reptile breeding business and I was dealing with flighty lizards and snakes. In this photo it was set up for a snake shoot.
I have used it to photograph everything from snakes, lizards, scorpions, venomous snakes, tarantulas, misc spiders, amphibians, and of course flowers.
It was real easy to construct and depending on how much light you need... you just change out the bulbs. With the geckos I had to have softer light or they wouldn't open their eyes... with the snakes I could flood it with light and freeze tounge flicks.
As for the background... I just bought the reminents in the fabric department at China-Mart (aka walmart). The container is just the biggest storage container I could buy and I cut out one of the long sides and left a lip on the bottom to hold in the substrate. I've used the cypress mulch (in the photo), sand for the scorpions, and leaves and a log for a copperhead. It's really up to your imagination.
This is also the same studio setup I used when photographing the white daisy that I posted earlier in this thread.