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General Photography
Wild Life
Fish photos?
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<blockquote data-quote="Stoshowicz" data-source="post: 488185" data-attributes="member: 31397"><p>I'd aim strong corrective color down into the tank without a cover on it angled a bit front to back .. scrub down thoroughly the glass on both sides before and after some intense water polishing ( diamataceous earth and so forth) . Substrate is going to make a big difference in the color of the water due to internal reflections even off the top water surface. Auto-focus is going to tend to be problematic and I'd lean towards manual focus , but If your camera can handle it , great. My pocket olympus did just fine. A fast lens should be a help, maybe just rent one. Anyway, I personally would be thinking it might be cool to use go-pro with wp-housing and corrective lens to either leave submerged a while or just make some videos of the tank and fish as they are now. I had tanks for many years and though I have some pix of some fish and configurations it would really be cool to have a clip of my oscars or corals as a screen saver ,, but I wasn't into photography back then. (nice cichlids though , I always planned to make a false 'salt-water fish' set up with them , but never did. They told me the trick was either give em plenty of space or plenty of company so that one one fish couldn't dominate so readily.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Stoshowicz, post: 488185, member: 31397"] I'd aim strong corrective color down into the tank without a cover on it angled a bit front to back .. scrub down thoroughly the glass on both sides before and after some intense water polishing ( diamataceous earth and so forth) . Substrate is going to make a big difference in the color of the water due to internal reflections even off the top water surface. Auto-focus is going to tend to be problematic and I'd lean towards manual focus , but If your camera can handle it , great. My pocket olympus did just fine. A fast lens should be a help, maybe just rent one. Anyway, I personally would be thinking it might be cool to use go-pro with wp-housing and corrective lens to either leave submerged a while or just make some videos of the tank and fish as they are now. I had tanks for many years and though I have some pix of some fish and configurations it would really be cool to have a clip of my oscars or corals as a screen saver ,, but I wasn't into photography back then. (nice cichlids though , I always planned to make a false 'salt-water fish' set up with them , but never did. They told me the trick was either give em plenty of space or plenty of company so that one one fish couldn't dominate so readily. [/QUOTE]
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