How To Take Good Pictures Of Aquarium And Fish?

dorecs

Fish Fanatic
Joined
Apr 11, 2014
Messages
61
Reaction score
1
Location
GB
Hi All,
I think I've got a fish that could contend for Fish of the Month, but it doesn't look even half as good when I take pictures of it! Its blurry or the flash makes the colors bad...
 
I often see incredible pictures of aquariums that look vibrant and green, deep browns in the woods and crystal clear focus.
 
Any tips on how I can achieve this?!
 
I have a Canon G9 btw
biggrin.png

 
Thanks!
 
I can never get a clear focus either (let alone crystal clear!).  The fish never seem to stay still long enough <g>.  Any help / suggestions would be great too.
 
Obviously a decent camera is a good start, I've found I get the best pics in the evening turning the room lights off, just having the tank lights on & don't use flash
 
You'll need very deep depth of field, which should be easy to obtain with a G9 since it is a small sensor compact and those cameras inherently have lots of DOF. Use a solid, sturdy tripod, lowest possible ISO and DO use flash, but use it properly, off camera and remotely triggered. That's how the to get the crystal clear focus, saturated colors and dynamically lit tank photos.
 
You will need to use one or two remote flashes. Use remote slave triggers on the flash guns and run them in manual mode. Auto modes are gonna get fooled every time here. Mount the flashes over the tank using a flash stand ( a boom mic stand and duct tape also work), firing down into the water, and use a polarizing filter on the camera lens to help reduce any reflection from ambient lights. The flashes will be your main light so make sure you set a custom white balance to get your colors correct and properly saturated. Standard flash modes won't cut it because firing through all that water is going to bias the light towards blue, so you need to set the custom white balance. The use of flash will also allow you to use a much shorter shutter speed. Most of the blur in photos is not focus issues but usually movement by the fish....the flash will freeze the movement and when properly balanced, will light both the fish and tank in sharp focus with balanced colors.
 
Stop the lens down to around F5.6 or so. As for focus, the best way would be to manually focus your camera on something in the front third of your tank. Set your shutter speed to your highest flash sync speed and take some test shots. Adjust your flash outputs as necessary to get the most pleasing results. Then write everything down! :)
 
It's not as easy as point and shoot but it is not beyond the capabilities of a G9. A DSLR would make things easier, but it can be done if you work at it.
 
Marco lense makes thingd look epic. Used one and got some epic fishy photos
 
Thanks for the tips, these are the best two so far,
Well, its a start anyway!
 

Attachments

  • IMG_0281.JPG
    IMG_0281.JPG
    42.8 KB · Views: 30
  • IMG_0344.JPG
    IMG_0344.JPG
    40.9 KB · Views: 30
Nice start on the pics. The point about the macro is spot on, especially if you can get a hold of a DSLR rig and a 90mm macro. Another type you can try if you cannot do off camera flash is to get the lens right up against the glass and use your on camera flash. As long as the lens is against the glass you will not get the nasty flash reflection of the glass in your image. Anyway, the key is to get the highest shutter speed you can as almost all the blur is motion blur and not usually misfocusing. You've got a betta so he's gonna be kinda slow anyway! :'
 

Most reactions

Back
Top