Hairy Squat Lobster

Hairy Squat Lobster (Lauriea siagiani) is beautiful small crustacean live on barrel sponge.

Hairy Squat Lobster (Lauriea siagiani) is beautiful small crustacean live on barrel sponge.
Filmed at Tulamben in Bali, Indonesia.
Shot on GH4 in 4K, Olympus 60mm lens in Nauticam underwater housing.
Music licensed through goej.co/audiojungle

Christmas eve in East Sea of Korea 4K

Christmas eve diving in East Sea of Korea.
Panasonic GH4, Panasonic 7-14mm, Olympus 60mm in Nauticam housing.

http://youtu.be/xSJ4YSt3SRI

Christmas eve diving in East Sea of Korea.
Panasonic GH4, Panasonic 7-14mm, Olympus 60mm in Nauticam housing.
Music licensed through the Audiojungle.

Happy new year 2015!
Happy holidays, everyone!

Living Colour – 4K Underwater Video

A sampling video of underwater 4K footage shot on Panasonic GH4.

A sampling video of underwater 4K footage shot on Panasonic GH4.
Filmed in Tulamben, Bali in Indonesia, Anilao in Philippines and Maldives.

Panasonic GH4 in Nauticam housing, Panasonic 8mm FE & 7-14mm, Olympus 60mm, Fix 7000, Aquako 4K, Sola 1200 lights, Nauticam SMC & Aquako diopters, Xit404 tripod.

Music licensed through The Music Bed.

Pygmy Seahorse (Hippocampus bargibanti) 4K

A Video of Pygmy seahorse (Hippocampus bargibanti) from Anilao, Batangas, Philippines.

Pygmy Seahorse (Hippocampus bargibanti) 4K

A 4k UHD (Ultra HD) video of Pygmy Seahorse (Hippocampus bargibanti) from Anilao, Batangas, Philippines.
Shot with a Panasonic GH4, Panasonic 7-14mm and Olympus 60mm in Nauticam housing, Aquako 4K lights and diopters.
Music licensed through http://goej.co/audiojungle

P.S
Try spot the seahorse on a seafan. :)

Southern Atolls, Maldives – Part 2

Underwater footage filmed in Southern atolls, Maldives.

Southern Atolls, Maldives – Part 2

Underwater footage filmed in Southern atolls, Maldives.
I included some footage of human garbage in the ocean(#floatingdeath).
For more information, please read Floating Death by Tony Wu and Ghost net article on wiki.

Ghost nets are fishing nets that have been left or lost in the ocean by fishermen. These nets, often nearly invisible in the dim light, can be left tangled on a rocky reef or drifting in the open sea. They can entangle fish, dolphins, sea turtles, sharks, dugongs, crocodiles, seabirds, crabs, and other creatures… quote from Wikipedia.