some pic i just took

MIREEFER

New member
well i just took these pics let me know what you all think i'm trying to get better at this photo taking thing so any help would be welcome:mixed:
keep in mind i only have a cheep walmart samsung digimax A503
for a camera.

pencil urchin
S5030026-1.jpg


mouth of open brain
S5030005.jpg


naso tang
S5030027.jpg


midas blenny
S5030026.jpg


tomini tang
S5030029.jpg


bubble coral
octobubble.jpg
 
Last one is the best.
All others seem to suffer from some fuzziness that could be due to the resizing (could have kept them a bit bigger than that)
or may be some motion blurr (use tripode)
Also turning your water circulation off before taking pictures decreases teh amount of floating particules that appear as white small lines on pics 3,4 and 5.
 
Two tangs in a 55 gallon? expect some people to get on you for that one.....but all the pics look good.....especially the last one
 
If you can do it on your camera, try to speed up the shutter speed when taking pictures of your fish. They will be more in focus if you do this. It should help a bunch.
 
The last picture is by far the best, the detail is greater. Do you have any pcitures of your clown? It's an A. chrysopterus correct?
Cheers
 
thanks everyone
i cant adjust anything on my camera its just a cheep point and shot .i do use a tripod but i find it hard to get good pics of the fish with it . its also hard to get good pics of anything in focus . it takes me about 100 pics every time to get one pic that you can actually see good enough to post and when i get a really good one it takes me about 200 pics to get that .i guess i just need a better cam but don't know what to get .any help on that would be grate.
 
When you say that it is hard to get pictures of anything in focus do you mean that by the time the camera has focused the fish has moved or does the camera fail to lock focus on your subject?
As you say you can't adjust anything on your camera I guess it does not offer manual focus?
Anyway you can try puttting your camera on tripod, then compose on an area where the fish usually goes and then wait for it to go in the frame then shoot.
Usually fish in aquariums have certain spots that they visit continuously so a little observation before waiting for the fish works great. Still it will require a lot of patience.
I've taken pictures with a 1.3 Mp and a 3.2 Mp (Olympus and Sony) that I still feel proud to post even after moving to DSLRs and much more expensive lenses...
 
here are some pics of the clowns you asked for i'm not really sure
what kind they are but was told they are clarkii clowns i got them as a mated pair. the one with the strange tail is my favorite

tankpics493.jpg


tankpics464.jpg


tankpics463-1.jpg
 
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