Re: How I photograph my paintings...usually signed, finished - framed.
Didn't want to go into this yet. Much like backpacking - always more gear to buy when you start getting serious - but since you asked...
First thing is a good presentation - matting and framing.
You can go to any thrift shop and pick out good old frames... I like/look for those about 2' / 3', well-made, like thick wood, with glass panes (plastic sucks), and at least one (two better?) nice mat/mats already in place....(tell them you are an artist...barter/beg...$10 - $15). Probably though, your art is not going to fit in the old matted hole exactly. You could selectively crop your painting...(not use the ugly left side?), or you can introduce another mat color, thin...just inside the larger mats. This is where being able to cut your own mats is crucial (...bought a LOGAN 301...pics.)
This new, small, inner mat color makes things fit. BTW, this new inside color - choose wisely...should complement one color found in your painting...red rocks = red small accent mat?
Matboard comes in colored sheets 30" / 40"... ~$8/sheet, at good art shops...(pic)
Mats are heavy cardboard-like materials that are used to give a photograph, drawing, or other artwork a finished look during the picture framing process... learning how to cut matboard is simply a skill that takes practice. Don’t be discouraged if your first few attempts produce less than satisfactory results. Be patient and practice on scraps of mat-board until you have perfected your corner technique.
After all is cut, wash the inside glass, place in the two mats and tape in your picture...cardboard backboard last, and finally drive brads in (last pic) to hold all secure.
I photograph first using a cheap Canon ELPH 115, download pics, and edit/ crop on Canon download drivers.
Then open pic to PAINT - resize (pixels - 1000 max dimension so it fits there) - "Save As" in my art desktop folder..
Transfer to Photobucket...and it all goes round and round, and it comes out here.