picture quality

  • We are currently upgrading MFK. thanks! -neo
jcardona1;1537842; said:
How? deep pockets thats how! You got to have the right equipment and that stuff ain't cheap.

Not true. Kodak DX7590 point and shoot:

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thats a fake sure!



hah jp power shots have that little flower thing i dont know what its called but i notice it helps a little... i think most of the time my fish knows what im doing... and stays still.
 
dang sounds like i need to learn how to do something else. for reference i have an olympus c-5500 will this do?
 
Quick question. I just pulled my ol' digital camera out after reading this thread and I'm curious if I sit in front of the tank for 20 minutes taking pics real close some with flash some without, am I going to stress the fish?
 
rallysman;1537756; said:
Practice, clean glass, clean water, and good lighting. A DSLR helps tremendously but will not give you instant good pix. You have to learn manual camera settings in order to get good pix IMO.

In the end, more light (especially from the top of the tank) will result in better pictures if the settings are correct.

I was wondering about getting good pics in aquariums too.

Hey rallysman, you like Redd Foxx too? I love sanford and son :headbang2
 
Even with all these fancy things and mad skillz, the secret is that most of these people (me included) take crap loads of pictures and sift through to find the good ones. I have had shoots where I fill up my 4 gig flash card in a matter of an hour.

Then I go through, find the right ones, and fix up the colors with photoshop.
 
I don't really know how to use photoshop (or GIMP in my case, it's a linux equivalent). I should try messing with the color contrasts and stuff and see what I can come up with.

Then I go through, find the right ones, and fix up the colors with photoshop.
Do you use any particular settings when your editing your photos?
 
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