You should really listen to JBM .. he's right. Every beginner thinks a frame holder is useful but, in reality, they are a recipe for a disaster. Most people have one and never use it. If you hang a frame with bees on it outside the hive and you've inadvertently missed that there's the queen on there .. drop her in the grass and you are in trouble !
Have a dummy board in the hive, take it out to make space, then look at one frame at a time - putting each frame back in the hive when you've inspected it. At the end of the inspection push them all along in one go - not one at a time - less bees crushed that way. Replace dummy frame at end of hive.
If for some reason you do want to keep a frame outside the hive for any reason, shake the bees off it and either lay it flat over the top of the hive. rest it an an angle in the upturned roof or if you really must - prop it against the hive stand.
If you want to take photos .. design a frame hanger that allows frames to sit above the hive so that any bees (or the queen) drop down into the hive not on the floor.
JBM's not a troll .. lots of good sense if you have the sense to read it.