Wow, awesome pictures!!!:beer:
Thanks!
Wow beautiful!!! You are best photographer on the net so far that I have seen who manages to take excellent photos of corals under LED's. It is so damn hard to get the white balance right, but you are doing it fine.
These pics are your best yet.
Can you share in some detail how you sort the white balance out? Is it done on the camera or do you shoot in RAW and then adjust manually via software? - I ahave a Nikon camera and so maybe I can set my white balance the same way that you do.
Also, do you use a camera top down box to get the crystal clear photo?
Would be awesome to know. Thank you.
Thanks for your compliments, I'm not really a photographer, I've just spent months after months experimenting through trial and error, to come up with the correct combination of aperture / shutter speed / white balance / ISO and coloration until I got it right :lolspin:
I wanted to capture the photos so they look as close to what I actually see with my own eyes as possible, I used to use Nikon vivid mode when taking those shots, but the results aren't always better, and it also gives a very artifical look and feel, so I've switched back to standard mode since then.
Just to give you an idea, this is taken with Nikon Vivid Mode:
This is taken with the standard mode:
I like the latter not only because it's a lot shaper than the former (it took alot of practices), but without using vivid mode the color looks more natural and now resembles 90% of what the frag indeed looks like in my tank with my own eyes.
Since our tanks are usually very bright (lit by lighting fixtures) so I usually use very high shutter speed with relatively low ISO and small aperture.
These photos were taken with around 1/250s up to 1/400s shutter speed, aperture is usually f/8-11, ISO is no higher than 800, tho I like to use 400.
I also use 10000K color temperature white balance, and use a tripod when I'm taking FTS, with manual focus, VR turned off and timed shutter to capture that crisp shot.
When I'm taking tank top shots, I've to rely on auto-focus and VR to get those photos, so I usually take up to 20 photos in high-speed sequence, and then pick the one that looked the best. I didn't use any camera box, I just used a 4"x3" small glass aquarium that I used to keep some small freshwater fishes, it worked well without having to spend a fortune
I don't take photos in RAW because it's too much work, I just take them in JPG then use the auto-adjust function in Nikon Capture NX to balance everything.