Looks good to me! You're getting the green and red.
Any of you guys know roughly much par you giving them?
I've had mine at 450+ since I got it and it's doing great.Any of you guys know roughly much par you giving them?
In my 29 tank mine was probably around 280 par. As for the 32 I can't begin to guess it maybe more or maybe less. Since the 32 is 3 inches taller than 29, but also there would be less shadowing since rocks aren't 2 inches below water line any more. Over all very interesting in comparing color differences of frag photos with par ranges they are kept in.I've had mine at 450+ since I got it and it's doing great.
I've got a piece for you if you want one (don't think it will count toward the contest though unless everyone agrees to allow it).Any pieces left? I’ll enter the contest late if there is.
I've got a piece for you if you want one (don't think it will count toward the contest though unless everyone agrees to allow it).
~180Any of you guys know roughly much par you giving them?
I just think you had a rough frag. When we first fragged the colony. It was pink. The frag that I got for the contest is brownish. It’s stressing big time.~180
maybe it wasn't enough
This plus a knife or file to mark the length afterwards seems like a great way to measure.Folks: regret for being late, it was quite a week, and then.. did not have a clean plastic ruler ( kids had marker ink on pretty much all of them) so did a “Jugaad” see photos; it is approx 1 inch frag, still waiting for it to color up.
If you are wondering what Jugaad is here is a fun article : https://www.thinkwithgoogle.com/future-of-marketing/management-and-culture/jugaad-innovation/
I appreciate that. I am trying to get better.This is an incredible pic.
You're saying the only real difference here is that this one was shot with more pure blue lighting (with filter)?
Correct. The camera processor is able to get a better color balanced image if it's only dealing with one spectrum. We can get into the weeds, but I don't think this thread would be the best place for it. I'm working on a photo guide and will eventually have it in the photography section.I've been trying to take my pics when the lights have the most white in them, sounds like maybe that is actually backwards when using an orange filter.
Water turbidity is a huge issue for me. That was another difference between the two images too. Freshly scraped glass versus not. A little more air in the water. Pumps turned off. Differences in glass quality. Post processing. Lens quality and camera capabilities. Yadda yadda...the list can go on and on from everything I've done. By all accounts, the second image I posted should have been MUCH better. But with slightly turbid water, it created a less focused image with more noise/pixelation too.What I struggle with most of all is just getting items to focus - what's your routine for getting these close-up shots in focus? And how close to glass is your phone?
Because you volunteered to be a judge.@ReyDeFarts you skipped me.