Propped up pistols?

GR0M

CGN Regular
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Location
GTA
I've bought and sold a few pistols here and am curious about an ongoing trend displayed in photographs of pistols. What's the appeal in propping up pistols offered for sale with pencils, screw drivers, 50bmg rounds, insert inanimate object here, etc?

Capturing firearms 'good side'? Action shot? Scale?
 
  • Smooths out flash for those without pro equipment.
  • Adds depth, otherwise it looks like a 1D drawing.
  • Removes straight on reflection from stainless/nickle.
  • Also removes blinding flash from stainless/nickle.
  • Allows for a slightly better inspection than a straight on view, perhaps showing the buyer a problem/nick in the finish without providing more pics.
  • Gives you reason to ask "does it come with the .50bmg round?" :p.
 
  • Smooths out flash for those without pro equipment.
  • Adds depth, otherwise it looks like a 1D drawing.
  • Removes straight on reflection from stainless/nickle.
  • Also removes blinding flash from stainless/nickle.
  • Allows for a slightly better inspection than a straight on view, perhaps showing the buyer a problem/nick in the finish without providing more pics.
  • Gives you reason to ask "does it come with the .50bmg round?" :p.



image_zps61591624.jpg



50 bmg round not included!
 
It's very hard to photograph a gun from overhead without light glare, shadows in the wrong places, or the goofyness of toes in the pic. Having the gun propped up on an angle eliminated a lot of problems.
No it's not! :)

MK23a_zpsaff487d0.jpg


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These were taken on my back deck on overcast days--I used a bit of old cushion floor (reversed) as the backdrop, put the camera on a tripod and that's it. (well, there's a bit of editing afterwards but nothing too tricky).
 
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