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Re: Photographing Tiny fish
#11
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Thanks Melody.

That is an example of setting up the camera before the lights are out and then taking a photo with a flash (notice the shadow). These fish are just so fast when the lights are on it is hard to capture them.

Posted on: 2011/10/26 18:19
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Patrick
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Re: Photographing Tiny fish
#12
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I will have to try that, thanks.

Posted on: 2011/10/28 15:55
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Re: Photographing Tiny fish
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I got mine from Tampafishman1 a few years ago. This is one of my males that I selected to be the starting point for a newly established colony breeding situation.
Click to see original Image in a new window
[img/] I saw him and decided to simply use him to produce my idea of nice fry. the picture was taken using the best resolution that my camera would allow and the camera using the telephoto feature, then crop the photo to let him become the main subject. It turned out that he was almost a unique fish among my class N endlers.

Posted on: 2012/2/15 20:17
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Re: Photographing Tiny fish
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I just now saw the part of your post that said he was almost a unique fish among your Endler's. Do you currently have any that look like that? I ask because, unless I am missing something, most of mine look somewhat like that one.

Pics attached, and no, I never did get any that were any good. I paid a photography student to come try.

I was trying to get good pics of the spots, but mostly they wash out.

Attach file:



jpg  Pair of Endlers.jpg (0.00 KB)


jpg  3 Endler males.jpg (0.00 KB)


jpg  More Spots.jpg (0.00 KB)


jpg  I Have Spots.jpg (0.00 KB)


jpg  second Endler pic.jpg (0.00 KB)


jpg  Single Endler cropped.jpg (0.00 KB)


Posted on: 2012/6/22 10:29
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Re: Photographing Tiny fish
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The student did a great job! You have some lovely Endlers.

They're a variable species subject to some dominant genes that quite often default to a certain appearance in colonies. They may continue to throw variants, however, which can be (and have been) selectively bred into strains.


Posted on: 2012/6/22 14:26
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