Depends on the scape but yes it can make a big difference.
That second one though. Hngggghhhh!!!
I would add blue or black background to hide the equipments and wires. The scape is very nice, but you might run out of space for corals in no time. If you are keeping mainly zoa, then that aquascape will look beautiful.I not artistic by any means but I found that looking at pictures helps me get an idea of what I want to do. I have a 10g cycling now and I went with the less is more approach.![]()
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Well this is more of my introduction to saltwater tank. I'll have maybe 2 fish and a shrimp with easy coral. Once I upgrade, this will serve as my QT tank and I'll have some decent liverock seed to start.I would add blue or black background to hide the equipments and wires. The scape is very nice, but you might run out of space for corals in no time. If you are keeping mainly zoa, then that aquascape will look beautiful.
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I like what you've done here. My biggest issue right now is finding place my plugs. I have load of nooks and crannies, but few stabil places for actual plugs.As I said a few pics of my efforts. Hope it remains like that until i get more rock in few months time.![]()
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I'd rather try to shave a tiger than aquascape a tank.
The scape issue I normally ran into was placing the rock so that when the system is new and there are few corals it was still pleasant to the eye and not barren looking. Then only to find as corals were added and started growing in I would quickly run out of good places to mount the second and third round of coral additions, and voila moving them again. What I've ended up trying to do is simply place the rock so there are as many places to mount corals as possible (and know what main corals I definitely plan on having where) this way if I'm not happy with the way the rock looks, I just order more corals! I generally find that after 6 months, that half day of epoxy and trying to place the rock just right, was wasted because there is no resemblance to what I started with.
Now the contemplation of island(s), rock wall, lots of caves, or whatever the general scape scheme; once the corals grow in, will it resemble what you were after. The second picture most would agree it has great appeal to the eye and the depth shown by the split through the middle, however before all the corals grew in and it was mostly rock, I bet I would have moved the rock 20 times to try and make it look right for that moment in time when new corals were added.
The best way I've been shown is the do a quick sketch of what the end result would look like and work backwards.
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Probably. I was wondering the same thing. You'd probably have to have them pre made so you wouldn't have to deal with customer complaints about it being not like they asked. It could be mildly lucrative if not fun.Do you think there is a market for pre-made aqua-scapes?
Dry rock set up for dropping in the tank? 10 gal,20 gal, 50 gal,etc...?
Just pop your frag plug in a hole or glue it on the aqua-scape?