d2mini
Premium Member
No offense but obviously you are doing something wrong or having an equipment malfunction. I am not magic and it works for me all day long. It is a bit unreasonable to think I can teach you a photography lesson over a forum but I gave you the ground work.
If this is consistent in most of your work, perhaps send your meter in for calibration. What meter are you using?
If you are using gear that is in good order, and a descent camera that formula works very well. I was even able to consistently replicate it ten years ago with a 10D.
Keep practicing and you'll get it.
If you have to start a statement with "no offense" that's just another way of saying "I'm about to be an a-hole but here it goes anyway". :facepalm:
We're talking color here, not exposure. My meter is fine.
No matter what, the crazy lighting in our tanks is going cause some color issues. Even if you get one coral pretty much correct, the one next to it won't look right. I even encounter situations where one color on the coral is correct and then another color on the same coral but from the opposite side of the color spectrum does not look the same as it does in person. And no digital sensor this side of medium format can handle the dynamic range so if you are not using supplemental lighting to fill shadows, some post work is needed there as well.
I dunno what you are shooting all day, but it's high volume and I completely understand the need to get it correct in camera and I assume you are shooting jpg which applies in-camera settings. Bu when it comes to shooting my tanks I can take my time, shoot in RAW (which I always do anyway), and then enjoy the process of getting the image to look it's best. Shooting the tank is a completely different animal than shooting portraits, catalog items, etc.