Reef Bass
colors and textures
I shot my first pics in my lps tank which is lit exclusively by 6 54w T5s, compared with my sps tank which is lit by 2 400w MHs and T5 actinics.
When I opened the first pic, I was disappointed by what I saw:
My first reaction was that the quality of light is terrible. Incredibly flat. Way too soft. I know the pic isn't underexposed, as I had to reduce exposure somewhat when converting from RAW inorder to reduce areas displaying clipping / highlight blowout.
While speaking with a fellow reefing photographer, he suggested the issue was merely with the intensity of light, as lighting is less intense in the lps tank by design, and that I could eliminate the flatness with a flash or other supplemental light source. I don't doubt a flash would change the appearance considerably.
I feel pretty stupid asking this, but is this an issue with quality or quantity of light? Another example of how the camera's image sensor sees things differently from the human eye?
I was able to save / salvage / rescue the image by squeezing in both sides of the levels graph.
That's better...
When I opened the first pic, I was disappointed by what I saw:

My first reaction was that the quality of light is terrible. Incredibly flat. Way too soft. I know the pic isn't underexposed, as I had to reduce exposure somewhat when converting from RAW inorder to reduce areas displaying clipping / highlight blowout.
While speaking with a fellow reefing photographer, he suggested the issue was merely with the intensity of light, as lighting is less intense in the lps tank by design, and that I could eliminate the flatness with a flash or other supplemental light source. I don't doubt a flash would change the appearance considerably.
I feel pretty stupid asking this, but is this an issue with quality or quantity of light? Another example of how the camera's image sensor sees things differently from the human eye?
I was able to save / salvage / rescue the image by squeezing in both sides of the levels graph.

That's better...