Will update this post more, but here is an epic example of why flash photography at an aquarium is a bad idea:
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| Photo ruined by someone’s popup flash. |
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| Sea Turtle |
Will update this post more, but here is an epic example of why flash photography at an aquarium is a bad idea:
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| Photo ruined by someone’s popup flash. |
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| Sea Turtle |
I’ve been lusting after the Sony A77 DSLR camera, which is the slated successor to the A700, which I currently shoot with. However, between the economic slump, wanting to save up for bigger and better things for the family, and getting great advice from the likes of Zack Arias to justify everything you spend on, I’ve been wondering, do I really need a new DSLR body, short of my camera just dying?
As folks who know me knows, I like photographing wildlife, in the wild or on display. My goal is always to photograph wildlife in a pleasing manner, as if they were free. To that end, I’ve worked to take great shots with the gear that I have. Flashes and lights don’t help, if the light will harm the wildlife or if such lights are not allowed where you are shooting. Say… at the Monterey Bay Aquarium’s deep sea exhibits.
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| Spotted Jellyfish – Shot with A700, 70-200/2.8, ISO 6400 |
The above Spotted Jellyfish was photographed with my aging Sony A700 DSLR, which I’m so eager to replace. Shot handheld at ISO 6400 to freeze the motion in the dim aquarium lighting. I absolutely love this shot. I couldn’t help notice that as I shot this and other shots, others equipped with DSLR(s) were engaging pop up flashes *shudder* or had their ipod and android camera phones pressed to the glass to photograph or record a video of the wildlife.
I’m also a big fan of the swifter underwater wildlife currently on display at the Monterey Bay Aquarium: sea turtles.
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| Sea Turtles – Shot with A700, 70-200/2.8, ISO 6400 |
This sea turtle was photographed handheld at ISO 6400. Click on the image to see more sea turtle photographs from the same shoot. I just love how the images turned out. They are beautifully rendered.
Note, these were shot during a busy weekend. There were many adults, children, and swarms of pocket cameras thrust out at the turtles. However, there are always openings for taking a shot and I’m finding that my patience is often rewarded.
Image Quality Has Gone Up… But The Equipment Hasn’t Changed
The funny thing here is that I’m getting more sharp images despite not taking along a monopod, no tripod, no external lighting, and no special filters. Same camera, same lens, same processing via LR.
There are some differences, however, in how I’m shooting:
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| Sea Turtle – Show with A700, 70-200/2.8, ISO 640 |

I bought the 64GB wifi iPad. Why not the 3G version? Well, because I already pay for a mobile device and saw no point in paying again just so that I can surf the web. I also happen to own a 3G to wifi converter
, so I can share my wireless goodness with my iPad and that of others as well.
The image above was taken on my dslr and was published on Smugmug with my laptop. Downloaded it to the iPad, dunked with it a bit with filter storm, and am posting it to my blog using Blogpress.
It’s not perfect, but it is very workable. The camera connection kit is on the way, which would let me do some preliminary work on jpegs and do quick uploads online from my iPad while on the road, without hauling around a laptop… At least not until I get back to the hotel room. :)
It is certainly no laptop replacement, but then again, I didn’t buy it to replace my laptop. I bought it to supplement my laptop and give myself more options. It can do 90% of what I normally do on a laptop, but weighs half as much, is small and thin, and has no critical moving parts. Oh, and it has a phenomenal battery life. So far, with video playback, app installs, game playing, and heavy network use, it is still able go pull 9-10 hours of usable life. That is amazing.
Next time, remote and tethered shooting with an iPadtwist..