<a href=showthread.php?s=&postid=8890895#post8890895 target=_blank>Originally posted</a> by Amphibious
Very nice pics, Cindy. Love the colors. Thanks for the update.
FWIW "color" is something that comes up all the time with pictures of peoples tanks. Sadly, there are just too many variables to accurately capture and reproduce the colors we see with our eyes.
Just a few of the variables:
*The Camera or scanner:
The CCD or other sensor
The white balance settings
The compression settings
The mode settings
The ambient room light
The tank light
The flash temperature and settings
The exposure and ISO settings
*The Image Editing Software:
The compression settings
The white balance and colorspace settings
The auto (or manual image adjustments)
The color depth and interpolation settings
*The Viewers Monitor
The monitors phosphors
The monitors calibration settings
The windows (or other) colorspace settings
The browsers color settings
...and a dozen other things.
If you go into Circuit City, Tweeter, Best Buy, Fryes, CompUsa, Sears, or any store with a large number of TVs and monitors, you will see a HUGE difference in color even with they are playing the same video from the same source! Broadcast source material is painstakingly color corrected and compensated for AT EVERY STEP of the production cycle from the studio lighting to the cutting room. All of the equipment is carefully and continuously calibrated and we still struggle to view correct colors on TV in our homes.
The average joe does a poor job at capturing color, working with color and displaying color. Few of us have calibrated monitors, let alone an understanding of colorspace.
What does this mean? Tank photos can be VERY pretty, but they rarely are a true representation of what one would see in person. Furthermore each one of us that look at the photos (as above) is not seeing the same colors.
Why here you ask? Again, what seems so very simple can be so very misleading. For all I know the colors in her tank are more brilliant that what I see on my monitor and it is a fully calibrated Viewsonic VP2030b (I am an ISF certified technician... that is I color calibrate high end display devices, mostly for home theaters)
Those who had no idea, just learned something. Those who choose to ignore it have the right too!
Again, very nice looking tank.