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Underwater Photography
"Skip the patter and take
me straight to the pictures!"
OK. I admit it. I'm a junkie. I need a fix every so often, and there's only one
way to satisfy that craving. I have to go take photographs. Sometimes I'm lucky, and I can
satisfy my urges on the surface. That's reasonably cheap. But sometimes there's no
stopping the cravings without submerging myself and several thousand dollars worth of
photographic equipment in the warmest, clearest, most densely-inhabited waters I can find.
That's much more expensive.
I've been photographing people and things for almost 20 years now. Most of that time
was "dry," but over the past two years I have discovered the joys (and expenses)
of underwater photography. "Why under water?" many of my friends ask. I
can't explain it, other than to say that in the ocean is where I find the most outrageous
shapes and colors. It's where I'm regularly stunned and surprised by the riotous colors of
life and nature.
Photographic Systems
Aquashot
My obsession started innocently, and inexpensively, with an Ikelite Aquashot II.
These things are plastic housings for disposable cameras, which, when outfitted with a
strobe, allow you to take reasonable pictures at
depths of 100 feet (30 meters) or more. The Aquashot houses either Kodak or Fuji
disposable cameras. I prefer the Fuji cameras for mostly mechanical reasons. One of the
strongest points of the Aquashot is the Substrobe AQ/S, an external strobe which is slaved
to the flash from the disposable. With this strobe, the Aquashot can do many things which
other entry-level systems cannot. Aquashots have their limitations, however, and after a
year and a half with my trusty Aquashot, I upgraded. I still have (and occasionally use)
my Aquashot, although I have traded in my Aquashot II for the new Aquashot 3e.
Housed Nikon System
My main underwater photo system is a Nikon N90s in an Ikelite housing,
equipped with a single Ikelite Substrobe 200. I also have two Ikelite Substrobe 50
units, and an Ikelite
TTL Slave Sensor so I can use them together with only one sync cord. As for lenses, I
use the fabulous 60mm f/2.8D AF Micro-Nikkor lens, an ingenious piece of engineering
which focusses down to 8 inches (20 cm), delivering a 1:1 reproduction ratio. It's a lens
which lets me do fish portraits and macro work without changing lenses, and without
clunky macro framers. Occasionally I replace the 60mm lens with a 24 mm lens, a moderate
wide-angle lens which is good for panoramic shots and close-focus wide-angle (CFWA) work.
In 1999 I purchased a Nikon 20mm lens, a "super-wide" lens (which has the same
field of view behind its dome port as the Nikonos 15mm lens). I don't understand the finer
artistic points of wide-angle photography yet, but I'm learning, and I love the results so
far.
Recently (April 2000) purchased a new lens for the setup, namely the 105mm f/2.8D AF
Micro-Nikkor lens. This puppy does 1:1 at a distance of around 14 inches which
means that little fish don't mind you getting 1:1 shots of them because you're not as
close as with the 60mm lens, I've only done three dives with the 105 so far, but I
am blown away by the sharpness and usability of the lens. I can't believe I waited
so long to buy it!
Nikonos III
I also own a Nikonos III camera, which I purchased (used) in 1997. I am still gathering
the equipment to make this thing usable to me, so I haven't actually used it other than to
test its operation. I intend to use the Nikonos III for wide-angle work, mounting it to
the top of my Ikelite housing, but I haven't purchased a 15mm lens for it yet...thus I
stick with the housed N90s for the time being.
Locations
Approximately half of all the "camera dives" I have made have been made at
the Flower Gardens. Other places I've been with my
camera include Hawaii (Maui, Hawaii, Kauai), Roatan,
Cayman Brac, Bonaire,
Little Cayman, and Cozumel).
Most (if not all) of the images in the gallery below appear elsewhere at this WWW site.
What's below is a collection of my favorites, disregarding equipment, location, etc.
They're simply the images which I remember most.
Dave Read's Underwater Photo Gallery
I have a nifty new piece of code that I wrote for displaying photo galleries.
Check it out!
Go to the Photo
Gallery
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