suzette
Contributor
Hello- I saw there were a few people asking about the Reefmaster Mini and what kind of results to expect, so I wanted to post here and give my first impressions for anyone who finds it useful.
I've been diving for a few years and have been shooting with an Olympus 1030SW in that time. I got entirely sick of having to go in manually in a photo editing program and remove the blues/greens (thereby removing a lot of color as well) from my shots and really wanted a camera that had a red filter already in it. I was eyeballing the DC1200, which I will likely still get down the road, but also wanted something I could stick in my BC pocket for when I didn't want to drag a big camera in.
Today was my first day shooting with the Reefmaster Mini and I love it. I thought it ate the batteries pretty fast (although I was using the ones that came with it, which could have been old/bad quality; I'm using it again tomorrow and will do a comparison) but I was really pleased with the results. The only touching I did in these photos was in Picasa, where I used the "I feel lucky" button to adjust the contrast a bit and lighten them up. Since I wasn't using a strobe, I used available light today. The vis was very good so I got some nice shots. Here are my keepers. I'm looking forward to taking it on a wreck tomorrow to see if I get anything good there.
I didn't have any luck with up close shots today but I was drifting on my first dive and keeping an eye on a new diver on my second, so not much time to fool with it.

queenangel by suzettetruesdell, on Flickr

spottedtrunkfish by suzettetruesdell, on Flickr

hogcoral3 by suzettetruesdell, on Flickr

hogandcoral2 by suzettetruesdell, on Flickr

bigpillar by suzettetruesdell, on Flickr

dorkfish by suzettetruesdell, on Flickr
I've been diving for a few years and have been shooting with an Olympus 1030SW in that time. I got entirely sick of having to go in manually in a photo editing program and remove the blues/greens (thereby removing a lot of color as well) from my shots and really wanted a camera that had a red filter already in it. I was eyeballing the DC1200, which I will likely still get down the road, but also wanted something I could stick in my BC pocket for when I didn't want to drag a big camera in.
Today was my first day shooting with the Reefmaster Mini and I love it. I thought it ate the batteries pretty fast (although I was using the ones that came with it, which could have been old/bad quality; I'm using it again tomorrow and will do a comparison) but I was really pleased with the results. The only touching I did in these photos was in Picasa, where I used the "I feel lucky" button to adjust the contrast a bit and lighten them up. Since I wasn't using a strobe, I used available light today. The vis was very good so I got some nice shots. Here are my keepers. I'm looking forward to taking it on a wreck tomorrow to see if I get anything good there.
I didn't have any luck with up close shots today but I was drifting on my first dive and keeping an eye on a new diver on my second, so not much time to fool with it.

queenangel by suzettetruesdell, on Flickr

spottedtrunkfish by suzettetruesdell, on Flickr

hogcoral3 by suzettetruesdell, on Flickr

hogandcoral2 by suzettetruesdell, on Flickr

bigpillar by suzettetruesdell, on Flickr

dorkfish by suzettetruesdell, on Flickr