Guitarcrazy
Contributor
My strobes are in manual. I was in Aperture mode, manual flash.
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Thanks for the replies. I shoot in RAW and use Lightroom to edit in post.
Part of your problem is composition, part of it is getting close enough to your subject and part of the problem is lighting placement. I have used gopros for the last six years and had gotten just about all I could out of them.
We just got back from Bonaire where I used a tg-6 for the first time. The first half of the week (10 dives or so) was a VERY steep learning curve. I learned positioning of light, strength of light and distance to subject is critical. It's why I don't use the 120° WAL and use the 81° wet lense. I don't need to get near as close. Plus, I really enjoy shooting small stuff, so I'm not too sure the 120° WAL would work that well for me. I'm afraid a new camera system will not help.
Pro photographers are using larger cameras because they have the skills to do so - and they have the skills to work around their limitations. A compact camera is smaller and easier to handle than a big ILC rig, which makes it easier to compose shots. A compact camera can shoot at larger apertures, which means you can get away with smaller, lighter, cheaper strobes. A compact camera can, typically, sync with strobes at very high shutter speeds (up to 1/2000s-1/8000s, depending on model), whereas ILCs are limited to 1/160s-1/250s, with some very rare exceptions reaching 1/400s-1/500s - this makes it much easier to shoot into the sun. When shooting macro, a smaller sensor camera does not need as much optical magnification to frame the same subject, producing a greater depth of field. The ability to change lenses also locks you into a single lens for the duration of a dive, or even a day trip if you're on a small boat where opening up the housing to change ports and lenses is risky.
No offense, but looking at the sample shots that you've posted earlier in this thread, you'd get a lot more return on investment if you'd spend the money on an underwater photography class with a seasoned pro, rather than on more hardware.