Ram_Puppy
Sun, 13th Jun 2004, 03:11 PM
some of you guys are taking some pretty jaw dropping pictures of your tanks, was wondering if you could share any tips?
I just got a Nikon Coolpix 4300, sadly, barely out of the box a defect showed up and it is on it's way to nikon usa for a warranty fix. (GRRR, I have always used nikons, owned ten of them and love the cameras, this really hacked me off.) any how... when I get it back I am planning on shooting some pics.. I have some corals I would like to show you, and a couple I would like to get a positive id on.
I would assume the basic tips are known:
Take your pictures at an angle to the glass to minimize reflection
Use a tripod if you have one
Make sure the glass is clean on both sides
My first shots before the camera went south with it's system error, were fuzzy, or green, green because I turned off the flash, or fuzzy because I was taking pics of softies that were moving pretty rapidly. I didn't have a lot of time to 'settle' into the camera, so I am sure there are features galore for me to take advantage of.
Thanks.
I just got a Nikon Coolpix 4300, sadly, barely out of the box a defect showed up and it is on it's way to nikon usa for a warranty fix. (GRRR, I have always used nikons, owned ten of them and love the cameras, this really hacked me off.) any how... when I get it back I am planning on shooting some pics.. I have some corals I would like to show you, and a couple I would like to get a positive id on.
I would assume the basic tips are known:
Take your pictures at an angle to the glass to minimize reflection
Use a tripod if you have one
Make sure the glass is clean on both sides
My first shots before the camera went south with it's system error, were fuzzy, or green, green because I turned off the flash, or fuzzy because I was taking pics of softies that were moving pretty rapidly. I didn't have a lot of time to 'settle' into the camera, so I am sure there are features galore for me to take advantage of.
Thanks.