View allAll Photos Tagged Bubbles
Si formano come per magia
con poco o niente
salgono nell'aria
sferica lucente
il vento se le porta via.
S'innalzano sfidando
l'azzurro del cielo
e il calore del sole.
Esistono, sono trasparenti
e formano colori
e morir non vogliono
come i nostri sogni
It´s a little bit difficult to create a frozen bubble.
It´s not my first try ;-)
But in the morning with the first sunbeams there it works ;-)
Thank yu all for your nice comment, fav and Awards.
macromonday the theme this week is bubbles.
and i relearned that it's not easy shooting macro into a glass paperweight ~grin~
and i have to point out with pride that i *made* this paperweight!!!!
I shook up my bottle of dish detergent and took a macro of the bubbles sliding down the inside of the bottle.
I used dish soap, water and glycerin to make a small amount of mixture. Glycerin makes the bubbles a little more stable apparently, which I learned after my last foray into bubble photography. Put a small amount in an upturned mug with a black card behind it. Blew bubbles with a straw and eventually managed one decent image out of a LOT ;)) HMM
A bubble landed on the marble bench top, giving a perfect reflection to complete the sphere. Often the best images are not the ones you planned! Another image in comments will give you a better view of how that worked.
Dreams are like bubbles, they come in amazing forms; some colourful while others gigantic. Like bubbles, many burst soon after they are formed, yet there are those that last and while they do, give pleasures to those that chase after it. How do you treat your dreams? Do you burst it or do you chase after it?
You're probably wondering what this is, and I don't blame you. I wondered too when I opened this piece as a gift on my recent birthday. It was empty and at first I thought it looked like a large, glazed celery stick:) But no, it is a clay piece (vessel) by an amazing sculptor, Georgina Lohan. It is 14" long, 1 1/2" wide in the center, and 1/2" deep. Of course, my second thought was that I would use it for photography, so I took it outside and filled it with marbles. The possibilities are endless...
After many attempts using just sunlight and my meat thermometer case as a straw ( !! ) , this was the best of a bad lot. It's not pin sharp, but I can say I've finally tried it ! HLCoF :))
With the temperature at 17 this morning in Woodinville, WA, I thought why not go out and blow some bubbles.
One of my attempts at the "Macro Mondays" theme "Bubbles".
Shot with a Carl Zeiss "S-Planar 32 mm F 5.6" lens on a Canon EOS R5.
Though it appears ready to topple over the side of the mountain, Bubble Rock is a very secure fixture in Acadia National Park, Maine.
Carried here from 20 miles away by a glacier during the last ice age, Bubble Rock is known as a glacial erratic. Rounded by tumbling in the glacial ice, it's easy to see that it rests on bedrock of entirely different material.
Eagle Lake, seen to the middle left in this image, is the largest fresh water lake on Mount Desert Island and in the National Park. Also formed by glacial activity, the lake reaches 110' at its deepest point.
Select Fine Art prints of this and other images can be purchased at bit.ly/ProPeak
Fresh water flows through a granite fountain at St. James Farm, a historic equestrian estate in Warrenville. The fashionable fountain, designed by sculptor Marcia Weese, serves as a watering trough for horses during riding competitions. Thanks for viewing!
Nikon D7500, Sigma 18-300, ISO 1600, f/6.3, 300mm, 1/800s
"To photograph is to hold one's breath, when all faculties converge to capture fleeting reality. It's at that precise moment that mastering an image becomes a great physical and intellectual joy."
Henri Cartier-Bresson
Capturing the zooming colors flying across the surface of a soap bubble is a terrific way to make your heart skip a beat.