Great brushwork!
I agree it's best to use natural light, like daylight or a daylight lamp. Artifical light gives off a yellow hue which does not do credit to your paintjob.
Also, never
ever use the flash on your camera when making photos (unless you have an SLR camera and know how to do flash photography in a good setup). This goes for everybody making photos of miniatures! No flash! Never!
Making photos is really easy and you don't need a super expensive camera or professional studio to make them. In short, here's how to do it:
1. Use multiple light sources (one from each side, and one from above). Use daylight lamps as artificial light gives off a yellow hue.
2. "Diffuse" the light coming from each light source to prevent hard shadows.This is very easy to do. Take a sheet of white paper and tape it in front of the light source (make sure you lave some space left so the heat can get away...). The white paper "spreads" the light over the object.
3. Use a tripod or something else to put the camera on. This prevents the bluriness.
Here's a tutorial on making photos:
http://www.dakkadakka.com/wiki/en/Debun ... hotographyIn the tutorial he uses diffusion gel to diffuse the light but an empty sheet of white paper works the same (probably gives a better effect too).
Experiment until you have it right. Even professional photographers experiment with the settings each time they do a photoshoot. It's okay to shoot 50+ photos from different angles and select only 5-10 that are good.