der_wille_zur_macht
Team RC
I have a general interest in photography but have never been happy with pictures I've taken of fish tanks. Recently I've decided I'll never be happy unless I put some effort into it. 
So, here's where I am. I have a Cannon Rebel XT with a kit lens (28-80) and another crappy no-name lens of similar focal lengths that I never use (I think it's a Sigma). To date, for macro photography in fish tanks, I've used screw-on close up filters on the kit lens. I have 1x, 2x, and 4x. No flash except the built-in one on the camera.
What I'd like is some point-blank advice on what I'm doing wrong. Do I need different equipment? Different settings? Am I just not cut out for this stuff?
Here are some macro shots I've taken recently. All were in an LFS that had no ambient lights (just the tank lights) which seemed to make the entire environment way too dark. The camera was on full-auto for most of these shots. I'll include my own thoughts.
This one I like:
Though the focus isn't very clear on the crab.
This one is OK, but clearly the white balance is WAY off, and again, focus isn't good:
Poor focus, colors washed out, bad composition:
Focus maybe a bit better, depth of field too small, colors accurate but not popping like they did in real life:
I can get very good results in bright light outdoors doing macros of bugs, flowers, etc. with the same equipment and technique, but when I point the bloody thing at a fish tank, it all goes to heck. It seemed like half the time the camera was stuck on it's biggest aperture and trying to use a really long exposure. Do I need a lens that stops down lower? Or simply a real macro lens and ditch the filters? I can't imagine a flash would help since it would just create glare on the glass, correct?
Clearly, I need to either start shooting in RAW and adjusting white balance later, or figure out how to adjust it on the camera, or both. . .
Please help me, oh gurus of the photography forum!

So, here's where I am. I have a Cannon Rebel XT with a kit lens (28-80) and another crappy no-name lens of similar focal lengths that I never use (I think it's a Sigma). To date, for macro photography in fish tanks, I've used screw-on close up filters on the kit lens. I have 1x, 2x, and 4x. No flash except the built-in one on the camera.
What I'd like is some point-blank advice on what I'm doing wrong. Do I need different equipment? Different settings? Am I just not cut out for this stuff?

Here are some macro shots I've taken recently. All were in an LFS that had no ambient lights (just the tank lights) which seemed to make the entire environment way too dark. The camera was on full-auto for most of these shots. I'll include my own thoughts.
This one I like:

Though the focus isn't very clear on the crab.
This one is OK, but clearly the white balance is WAY off, and again, focus isn't good:

Poor focus, colors washed out, bad composition:

Focus maybe a bit better, depth of field too small, colors accurate but not popping like they did in real life:

I can get very good results in bright light outdoors doing macros of bugs, flowers, etc. with the same equipment and technique, but when I point the bloody thing at a fish tank, it all goes to heck. It seemed like half the time the camera was stuck on it's biggest aperture and trying to use a really long exposure. Do I need a lens that stops down lower? Or simply a real macro lens and ditch the filters? I can't imagine a flash would help since it would just create glare on the glass, correct?
Clearly, I need to either start shooting in RAW and adjusting white balance later, or figure out how to adjust it on the camera, or both. . .
Please help me, oh gurus of the photography forum!
