My friend has loaned me his second guitar to photograph and I'm having a great time doing it. I only know that it's an electric resonator guitar made by the National company. Once he provides some more details, I'll add them to this post.
Once I make some detail shots of the guitar, I'll post them together in a separate thread.
Please click the image to display it at its largest size in the Lytebox to examine the details.
NOTES ABOUT THE GUITAR: The official name of the model is National Reso-phonic Style "0" Delphi. It is a single-cone resonator. It recreates the look and feel of the single-cone guitars first made in the 1930s. The neck is made of mahogany and the fret board is rosewood. The cross-grained binding is a made of ivory. The dark part of the body is steel covered with a highly textured black, baked finish.
This guitar was purchased new in 2002 but is no longer being manufactured. The style was popular in the early 2000s among blues bands. My friend replaced the original resonator and cover plate (the shiny area of the body) with a nickel finish electronic version called a "Hot Plate." That modification allowed him to electronically amplify the sound and to alter the tone to be more like traditional blues styles.
Setup
The background and tabletop are a single sheet of high quality black velvet.
First capture: The color of the velvet beneath the guitar was changed during post-processing. Medium continuous-light lamps on the left and right sides of the guitar's body rake light across it to define the dark metal texture. They also brightly light the body's exterior curves and the edges of the F holes. The lamp on the right was flagged to prevent the front of the body from being too brightly lit. A small continuous-light lamp above and to the right of the top of the guitar lights mostly the head and the top of the neck. A polarizer eliminates glare that otherwise would have appeared at the top of the neck. A white piece of foam core beneath the guitar held at about a 45-degree angle is reflected in the round chrome area of the body. Doing so makes the chrome appear mostly bright and shiny and helps define its shape.
Second capture: Everything looked as I wanted using the above lighting setup except that it was not possible to see the two strings on the right side along the neck. So, I had no choice in the confines of my makeshift studio but to light paint them along the neck with a small continuous-light lamp while I made a second exposure. The two captures were merged.