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Islandbound

New to UW photos and need some advice...

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I have a used SeaLife DC 500 and need some advice. I have been lurking on this site for sometime and know that not many people like that camera but thats what I have. My main problem is lighting and I am forever trying to get the right light and exposure from the camera and a YS-110 strobe. To further complicate things I do not use air tanks and do all my diving "free". This cuts my setup time to seconds which doesnt help considering the currents I swim in.

 

Is there a combination of settings that will optimize photos taken with the Sealife camera? I know there isnt a "magic button" setting or anything I just need a good point to start from. Most of the shots I take are less than 10 feet in heavy current and silt flow or along a reef wall where I dont normally go deeper than 20 feet. I am in the water about 4 days a week (I am in Okinawa) so I can test and retest any suggestions that some of you more experienced people might have.

 

Recently my wife bought me a Sony N2 for normal land picture taking, has anyone used this for water shots? She gave me a choice of the Canon SD900 as well and I can still get that camera if its better. Any help would be greatly appreciated! I will attach some pics from last week and would like some helpful criticism on color, composition etc. I am not trying to win awards or anything, the pictures are for my wife and I to enjoy, thats all.

 

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Can't answer questions about your specific cameras be here are a few key rules.

 

First NEVER light up the water between you and your subject.

 

Second get close to your subject. This usually involves getting into macro mode or use a (auxiliary) wide angle lens. No strobe system no matter how powerful or advanced will project light more than 6 to 8 ft UW. So you have to be within this limit. Your strobe probably will only light a subject at most 3 ft away. You may need to get a more powerful strobe. The above mentioned auxiliary wide angle lens will let you get close enough to properly light your subject.

 

Or use the sun.

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Thanks for the info Dave, one of the biggest problems I have is forgetting to put the sun behind me when I am underwater. With all the hard corals and limestone reef shelves there is alot of glare and reflection here.

 

Looking at the pictures I posted, are they all too illuminated? I have to admit I cant pick out which ones have too much light between the subject and the camera.

 

Unfortunately my camera wont do Macro worth a hoot and so about the closest I get is 2 or 3 feet from what I am shooting.

 

So far I have been using the automatic settings on the Sealife and am looking to learn just which settings that would be beneficial to adjust. It seems that here and there I find references on adjsuting ISO, exposure, strobe strenght etc but cant find a particular source to study the relationship between all the factors of shooting a clear, sharp and well-lighted photo.

 

Any suggestions?

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