Here is one of my 1st clip using gopro.
[video=youtube;fsIuPTVhClU]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fsIuPTVhClU[/video]
[video=youtube;fsIuPTVhClU]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fsIuPTVhClU[/video]
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Ok start. Bit dark in some shots and by using 1 or 2 lights it would have been better.
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Brilliant , many thanks for sharing.this is a fantastic first effort. I guess you have to balance the quality of the pictures you get with the cost , hassle factor and inconvenience of lots of extra gear. I bought a Canon S110 for our first underwater photo trip and was also delighted with the results. It's just a question of practicing and practicing.
Best fishes
My impression is that your technique is remarkably stable, and you a good job filling the frame. Perhaps using protune you could adjust the exposure? My own experience shooting with a red filter and no ligthing is that I actually have to underexpose much of the time.
Just a curiousity, and this could be my browser. In some of the transistions the entire frame seems to "jiggle" or turn on itself. Its as if you were watching a TV and the TV turned itself left and right.
The jiggle is due to image stabilizer that is performed by YouTube...
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If it was shot in Protune, I think it should have originally been much brighter than that. You could try adjusting the brightness/contrast a bit to lighten it up i'm sure. Plus not using YouTubes "warping" stabilizer.But if I use lights, then it will show the redness as I am on red filter... Also I used the gopro studio "protune" setting.
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