Aquascaping

tankgirl

Active Member
Min got me started on the subject of aquascaping. I didn't want to hijack his thread, but wanted to share a couple pics I admire.
Hope everyone will post pics of aquascapes they like!!! And talk about why they like them!

This was a pic of Chucks (MtDewMan) tank (before it crashed). I admire how he's arranged his corals from warmer colors at the front to cooler colors then back to vivid warm colors again, at the very back. It creates a lovely feeling of depth in the tank.
 

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tankgirl

Active Member
Another pic of Chucks tank. Again from right to left, he's grouped warm colors to cool then to warm again.
And he kept the masses uneven but balanced. The two smaller warm colored groups balance the bigger cool colored group - and the centers of each group don't split the tank evenly. Very wonderful!
 

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tankgirl

Active Member
Also, here's that same post from psas on aquascaping;

One good principle is to avoid creating equal shapes (size, height, mass, etc.) And along with that goes avoiding splitting shapes visually in the center (either vertically and horizontally). And, avoid anything that grabs your attention that's dead in the center of the tank. It's more interesting to favor one side (of the tank) a bit.

Maybe a big mass of rock that's shorter and a narrower but taller rock mass. Some people like to use the seesaw principal; if you imagine the rock masses sitting on a seesaw, a bigger mass closer to center will balance a smaller mass that's farther from center.
Contrast come into it - horizontal vs. vertical, tall vs. short, big vs. small, color contrast, etc. On color contrast; if you put a purple acro next to a green one, both will look more vividly colorful because they're complimentary colors - across from each other on a color wheel. Another color scheme might be putting cooler colors at the back and warmer colors at the front.

Anything that "points", like a oblong rock, will pull your eye towards the direction it's pointing. You want the viewers eye to be continuously pulled, never coming to a stop. If your eye hits a rock wall, it will slide down it towards the bottom of the tank (or sometimes up if the rock is leaning differently), so (if your eyes go down) you want another rock mass (even a small spur will do it) or coral near the bottom that leads the eye back into another part of the tank again. Course, all this depends on what you want from your tank; some people want harmony and some others want a kind of colorful chaos? But, this "pointing" shape stuff is really helpful for achieving either one. If you notice what pulls your eyes around an aquascape, and start getting tuned in to that, you won't believe what a difference it will make.

Also, one really hard thing to do in most tanks is create depth, but you can do it with even a small spur coming forward from the main rock mass. Or, another really effective way to create depth is to put something narrow, like a gorgonian, behind an opening in the rock masses - anything to create layers of depth.

If you think of an aquascape as music; you probably don't want a monotonous beat, you want a little syncopation, some visual jazz. Some surprises.
As for avoiding even spacing - not easy to do since you want your corals to have room to grow and room so they don't touch other corals, but you can do it by just varying the distances between them a little, maybe putting a smaller acro a tad closer to a bigger one. Or slightly in front of another.
You don't want anything (rocks or corals) to be equal sizes or heights, and especially not a row of them.
But, you also want simplicity, and a way you can achieve that is by grouping. If you look at good aquascapes you'll almost always see things grouped into a few groups. If you look for that, I bet you'll see it right away.

Anyway, hope that's useful to you.
Not that I'm ever satisfied with my own aquascapes, of course! Smile
 

Witfull

Well-Known Member
i saw this on another site but im sure alot of us know steve weast 850 gallon monster tank. this is truly a thing of beauty!!
 

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ReefLady

Well-Known Member
Staff member
I've always loved that aquascaping. Not to go OT, but what happened to cause the crash? I just saw one day he was starting over... never got the scoop.

T
 

tankgirl

Active Member
Hey Wit, awesome addition! Yeah, Steve's tank is breathtaking. He's so smart! I love the way the alley wanders back and forth - that really creates a sense of depth!!! He also did that warm to cool thing - then an awesome very warm accent at the very back!

Hi Trav, do you mean Chucks tank? It was a DSB crash. Awful, but he's got a tiger spirit - building it right back up again!
 

jimeluiz

Active Member
We achieved some good depth in our tank by first getting a tank that is 18" from front to back, then by placing the rock such that the bulk of the rock is closer to the rear, sloping toward the front and with a few pieces sitting quite low and coming quite near to the front glass. We kept some areas open - just sand, and have a big arch near the back that you can view through to the rear wall of the tank. Still waiting on Santa for the digital camera - sorry no pics. But soon :D
 

Witfull

Well-Known Member
well here is my futile attemt to aquascape, this isnt exactly how it looks right now,,,,had to move a powerhead the other day so i rearranged abit but its close
 

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fidojoe

Fish Addict
Those are some awesome shots, yes even yours wit:D

Steves tank is the wallpaper on my desktop:D It is awesome!
 

tankgirl

Active Member
Another interesting aquascape - someone named Wasabi owns this one;
 

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cheeks69

Wannabe Guru
RS STAFF
wow TG !!! those tanks are incredible that includes yours Wit the aquascaping is something I have a lot of trouble, although I have a hex so that's a challenge in itself:D
 
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