![]() |
Photos of my aquarium
I just took these pictures with a new (x-mas present) digital camera.
Happy holidays to all. -- Regards, Marvin Hlavac Toronto, Canada |
Photos of my aquarium
http://www.onehappygirl.com/aqua1.jpg
http://www.onehappygirl.com/aqua2.jpg ....forgot to add the link... -- Regards, Marvin Hlavac Toronto, Canada |
Photos of my aquarium
What great tank you have!!
Is that X-mas moss as the foreground and background? Amazing!! Your lotus looks stunning!! Care to list your tank params? If you ever do get tired of the moss, send me an email. I would love to give it a try. "Marvin Hlavac" wrote in message t.cable.rogers.com... http://www.onehappygirl.com/aqua1.jpg http://www.onehappygirl.com/aqua2.jpg ...forgot to add the link... -- Regards, Marvin Hlavac Toronto, Canada |
Photos of my aquarium
What great tank you have!! Is that X-mas moss as the foreground and background? Amazing!! Your lotus looks stunning!! Care to list your tank params? If you ever do get tired of the moss, send me an email. I would love to give it a try. Hi "dam n" I just added three pictures he http://www.onehappygirl.com/aqua3.jpg http://www.onehappygirl.com/aqua4.jpg http://www.onehappygirl.com/aqua5.jpg Here are the details: It is a 90g (360L) which was setup just over a year ago. Lights: 4 x 55W with AH Supply reflectors. Lights come on at 8am and off at 9pm. Filter: Eheim 2260 canister. This is an overkill since it is designed for 400g (1500L) but at least I don't have to open it too often. In fact I haven't yet open it since I bought it a year ago. Also I have a 20g sump. Substrate: 100% Florite Plants: Only three species: 1. Red Tiger Lotus, 2. Echinodorus 'Rubin' narrow leaves and 3. Christmas Moss covers the back, both sides and some of the bottom. Inhabitants: Not too many actually for a 90g tank. Only about 20 Tetra Cardinals, 4 Black Neons, 1 SAE, 6 Oto Cats, about 20 perhaps more Algae Eating Shrimps and some snails that long time ago were imported with some plants against my will. CO2 5lb cylinder is used When the tank was newly setup I had to battle variety of algae, you name it I had it. Happily now though, for a long, long time I don't even have to scrub the inside wall of the front glass. At the moment it is a very low maintenance setup. I don't do any vacuuming of the bottom. Once in a several months period I trim the Lotus plant and less frequently even the Echinodorus. I change 4g (one bucket) of water daily (unless I'm lazy). That only takes 3 minutes. I feed once a day. -- Regards, Marvin Hlavac Toronto, Canada |
Photos of my aquarium
"Marvin Hlavac" wrote:
http://www.onehappygirl.com/aqua1.jpg http://www.onehappygirl.com/aqua2.jpg Gorgeous! -- www.ericschreiber.com |
Photos of my aquarium
Hi Eric,
Thanks. Here is a picture of the full tank. However I don't like it much because the areas that look white are supposed to be beautifully light green fresh color of X-mas moss. I tried to play with WhiteBalance setting on the camera but I obviously don't know what I'm doing :-( Here it is: http://www.onehappygirl.com/aqua6.jpg -- Regards, Marvin Hlavac Toronto, Canada "Eric Schreiber" wrote in message ... "Marvin Hlavac" wrote: http://www.onehappygirl.com/aqua1.jpg http://www.onehappygirl.com/aqua2.jpg Gorgeous! -- www.ericschreiber.com |
Photos of my aquarium
"Marvin Hlavac" wrote:
Thanks. Here is a picture of the full tank. However I don't like it much because the areas that look white are supposed to be beautifully light green fresh color of X-mas moss. I tried to play with WhiteBalance setting on the camera but I obviously don't know what I'm doing :-( Taking photos of a fish tank can be infuriating. I have a *very few) tolerable shots on my web site, and they were selected from far more otherwise ruined rolls of film than I care to admit. One of these days I'm going to get a digital. I've got a decent mineral and fossil collection I'd like to photograph, too. Ah, if only I had the money I'm sure I deserve :) -- www.ericschreiber.com |
Photos of my aquarium
Eric, my 7 year old daughter would say: "Just write to Santa next year".
:-) -- Regards, Marvin Hlavac Toronto, Canada "Marvin Hlavac" wrote: Thanks. Here is a picture of the full tank. However I don't like it much because the areas that look white are supposed to be beautifully light green fresh color of X-mas moss. I tried to play with WhiteBalance setting on the camera but I obviously don't know what I'm doing :-( Taking photos of a fish tank can be infuriating. I have a *very few) tolerable shots on my web site, and they were selected from far more otherwise ruined rolls of film than I care to admit. One of these days I'm going to get a digital. I've got a decent mineral and fossil collection I'd like to photograph, too. Ah, if only I had the money I'm sure I deserve :) -- www.ericschreiber.com |
Photos of my aquarium
On Fri, 26 Dec 2003 03:23:03 GMT, "Marvin Hlavac" wrote:
because the areas that look white are supposed to be beautifully light green fresh color of X-mas moss. I tried to play with WhiteBalance setting on the camera but I obviously don't know what I'm doing :-( That's not a white-balance problem. It is simply a case of the highlights being "blown out". In other words, the camera metered the light at a darker spot in the tank, and so the brighter areas ended up being too bright. A lot of times I find that in aquarium shots, the range of dark shadows and extremely bright highlights is more than the camera can handle. It's usually better to end up with a darker shot, to avoid blowing out the highlights. The shadows end up being too dark, but that can often be corrected afterwards in your image editing software. Blown out highlights can't be fixed, since there is nothing but white pixels saved by the camera. With the dark shadows, there is often enough detail to fix it. Many digital cameras have several metering modes. Usually they have a "spot" metering, where the metering is done from the very center of the shot. In that mode, I will usually put the center spot on an area that is the brightest, hold the shutter button part-way down, which locks the focus and exposure on most cameras, then re-frame the picture as desired, and push the button the rest of the way to take the shot. Another common mode is a "center weighted" where the camera takes the exposure reading from a wider area around the center point. This mode is more likely to pick a setting that will avoid some of the blown out highlights. And finally, most cameras have an "exposure compensation" setting. All this does is to tell the camera (take your exposure reading, and make it x.xx darker or x.xx brighter. If I see that the highlights were blown out on a shot, I'd retake the shot with a -1 exposure compensation. Chuck Gadd http://www.csd.net/~cgadd/aqua |
Photos of my aquarium
Gosh, Marvin, wonderful tank!
At what temp do you keep it? Those Xmas moss requires low temp to grow light green like that?? "Marvin Hlavac" wrote in message t.cable.rogers.com... http://www.onehappygirl.com/aqua1.jpg http://www.onehappygirl.com/aqua2.jpg ...forgot to add the link... -- Regards, Marvin Hlavac Toronto, Canada |
Photos of my aquarium
Hi Alex,
Thanks. The water temperature is 26 to 27C (79F). -- Regards, Marvin Hlavac Toronto, Canada "alex crouvier" wrote Gosh, Marvin, wonderful tank! At what temp do you keep it? Those Xmas moss requires low temp to grow light green like that?? |
Photos of my aquarium
Hey Marvin
what did you use (if anything) to hold up the x-mas moss it looks like a trellis like structure of some sort Ben |
Photos of my aquarium
Hi Ben
On both sides and the back wall the X-mas moss grows on a black color plastic mesh purchased in Home Depot. There is a nice big piece of driftwood behind the red lotus plant but it is no longer visible because it is now completely covered by the moss. -- Regards, Marvin Hlavac Toronto, Canada what did you use (if anything) to hold up the x-mas moss it looks like a trellis like structure of some sort Ben |
Photos of my aquarium
"Marvin Hlavac" wrote in message et.cable.rogers.com...
Hi Ben On both sides and the back wall the X-mas moss grows on a black color plastic mesh purchased in Home Depot. There is a nice big piece of driftwood behind the red lotus plant but it is no longer visible because it is now completely covered by the moss. -- Regards, Marvin Hlavac Toronto, Canada what did you use (if anything) to hold up the x-mas moss it looks like a trellis like structure of some sort Ben Hi Marvin, I've never seen such a nice moss before. Would you be so kind to send me some to get started in my tank? I'd gladly pay for shipping and a reasonable price. Please email me if it's ok. thanks! PR |
Photos of my aquarium
Ben wrote:
what did you use (if anything) to hold up the x-mas moss it looks like a trellis like structure of some sort Ah, thanks for asking that, Ben. Marvin's tank must have made a pretty big impression on me, because here two weeks later I'm still thinking about it, and was just about to post asking the same thing. I'm wondering what the odds are that I'd have any luck with growing that moss, because I'd sure like to steal that general tank design! -- www.ericschreiber.com |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 01:48 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
FishKeepingBanter.com