A few photos

Doodles

Retired Staff
Apr 8, 2009
8,786
3
36
Just photos from my first attempt using a DLSR around a month or so ago, not that good but not overly bad lol

The whole fish woulda been good:whistle:
IMG_0292.JPG


IMG_0310.JPG


IMG_0325.JPG


IMG_0331.JPG
 

scatz

Retired Staff
Apr 8, 2009
5,379
2
38
48
Devon, UK
they are great pics, especially as they are all fast moving fish, but yeah, the whole fish would have been good lol
 

macvsog23

Pleco Profiles Team - RIP FRIEND
May 1, 2009
2,671
0
36
71
Bristol
Fantastic photos
Great thing with DSL is you can take 300 shots look at them and pick the good ones with out having to send film away or make a contact sheet.

Down side is the delay even a super duper camera like the Nikon D3s is going to have a lag time even if it is measured in milliseconds fish sure move fast if they want to.
 

Joby

Retired Staff
Aug 9, 2009
2,068
0
36
59
West Midlands
Some nice pics there :clap:

The first one gives me an idea for a whole new photo competition, guess this fish :D
 

Doodles

Retired Staff
Apr 8, 2009
8,786
3
36
Thanks:D
I need to work out the settings on the camera better, hopefully borrowing one again soon plus using a tripod would help lol
 

macvsog23

Pleco Profiles Team - RIP FRIEND
May 1, 2009
2,671
0
36
71
Bristol
A tripd is great for set photos
A good flash is a better buy. With a good flash and a "Fast" lens your almost in the boat.

I use a 60 m/m macro lens with a SB 29 ring flash I mount the flash on the hot shoe but it can be removed and hand held or cliped on the lens this gives me a better chance to catch the fish as they fly about in and out of focus.
 

Doodles

Retired Staff
Apr 8, 2009
8,786
3
36
A tripd is great for set photos
A good flash is a better buy. With a good flash and a "Fast" lens your almost in the boat.

I use a 60 m/m macro lens with a SB 29 ring flash I mount the flash on the hot shoe but it can be removed and hand held or cliped on the lens this gives me a better chance to catch the fish as they fly about in and out of focus.
ok thanks Bob, and better lighting in the room would help too?

What camera were you using, I just bought a Cannon EOS 550D
It was a canon 450 that my other half borrowed from uni, he can get a 550 too, so hopefully that'll be next:yes:
 

macvsog23

Pleco Profiles Team - RIP FRIEND
May 1, 2009
2,671
0
36
71
Bristol
Ok thanks Bob, and better lighting in the room would help too?
The problem with lighting is that DSL, cameras are quite sensitive to white balance, in the days of wet film your film was balanced to the Kelvin of the light so for daylight you used a film balanced to day light ect as the digital camera has no way of knowing the light balance it needs fine tuning sadly the more expensive cameras are the only ones that you can fine tune.
I am not familiar with cannon as i use a Nikon.
Some were on the camera your have a WB setting it will have several setting plus a way of setting for the Kelvin.
Mine comes under the "Shooting" menu. It is basically a way of telling the camera what sort of light your using ie flash daylight tungsten ECT
It is possible to make a L066 look like a L173 with clever use of the white balance

This link may help




[ame="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_balance"]Color balance - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia@@AMEPARAM@@/wiki/File:Lily-M7292-As-shot-and-manual.jpg" class="image"><img alt="" src="http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/0/01/Lily-M7292-As-shot-and-manual.jpg/220px-Lily-M7292-As-shot-and-manual.jpg"@@AMEPARAM@@commons/thumb/0/01/Lily-M7292-As-shot-and-manual.jpg/220px-Lily-M7292-As-shot-and-manual.jpg[/ame]