
Oh Mick, cheers for all the Corydora-they all made it back fine and have settled in very nicely

I think I may owe you a pint... or two... or three

Ashleigh
Moderator: LoachForumModerators
The delicate hue of the photograph changes by a spectrum of the illumination light and the white balance setting of the camera.soul-hugger wrote:Are the fins really green?
I use a Nikon D80 that i am still trying to get the best out of after several years (-: most of the time when i am taking pictures of fish i use a 105mm macro lens which has a mix of strengths and weaknesses.odyssey wrote:Hi LES..
You use a single-lens reflex camera, but I have only a compact camera.
A single-lens reflex camera wins the resolution feeling and the contrast as expected.
I can completely relate to that! For diving i got myself a Canon A85 and waterproof case for less than a quarter of what just a case for my SLR would cost. I definitely subscribe to the opinion that the only camera that matters is the one you have with you (-:odyssey wrote:Photography in the water is done by scuba diving, so I can't get away from the compact camera.
Unfortunately the waterproof case for single-lens reflex cameras is too expensive for me.
The camera I use at present is PowerShot G10 of Canon.
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