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To save you some clicks, if you are going to take pictures of your tropheus then shutter speed has to be around 150-200. Anything slower will make them look blurry.
Picture shutter speed, aperture, and ISO as a light triangle.
Depending on how much light is there will determine the value of these variables.
For what we do, the one that can not change is shutter speed. Slow shutter speed can capture the speed at which the tropheus and petros move. If you are taking pictures of the SW tank or some discus or something then you can slow down the shutter speed to allow in more light.
For the most part, I use my wireless flash so shutter speed is at 200. I normally only adjust aperture to allow more or less light in. Smaller the f-stop number means more light is coming in. I like to use high f-stop numbers cause more of the picture will be in force.
Sorry no real short answer to the question unless you have the same amount of light I have....
But here goes:
1) shutter speed: 200
2) Aperture: 7-11
3) Lowest ISO setting (to have less grain)
4) 90% of my pictures have wireless flash
cichlid1409 wrote: "save me some more and tell me iso and aperture settings your using.....please."
That is what experience and trial and error are for!
If one tells you what to do and you follow it, you will never learn a different way to get a unique result!
Just play with the camera and see what happens when you change one or multiple settings at a time. A good starting point is the automatic mode. Then choose a setting to change above or below the original automatic mode setting. You will retain the result better that way. Just remember that you cannot break or ruin the camera by changing the settings! You just get one of the following: no picture at all, bad picture, an interesting result or just maybe a master piece!
For best results, just try to take shots at night with all the lights off except the tank. Try to add as much light over the tank as possible. Use lamps or table lights or anything you can find to place over the tank.
Also, turn off all the filters and let the water settle down. Parties in the water may also cause blurs if you you trying slow shutter speed.
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