View allAll Photos Tagged Bulbs
For Macro Mondays
This week's Theme: Bulb
This is a night light bulb stuck into a piece of styrofoam.
This is almost SOOC. All that was done was a slight rotation and a square crop.
2 Tiny led lights on a circuit board.
I used the Raynox lens again to get really close.
This is 2,5 cm.
Happy Macro Monday.
Thank you for your views, faves and or comments, they are greatly appreciated !!!
Don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission !!!
© all rights reserved Lily aenee
There were many amaryllis bulbs on the wild while walking on the woods. Can't way to see them in full bloom!
Thanks for your visit and taking the time to comment so I can visit your photos, too... very much appreciated! Have a great day!🙋♀️
LinkTree // Instagram: @views4corners
A capture of two bulbs flipped upside down for this post. Was taken in a old school train car that I was drawn to because of the embellishing on the socket. An interesting find!
Many thanks for all views, fav's - and particularly comments - all are greatly appreciated!
Happy Macro Mondays to you all!
While I still had a packet of sparklers left I grabbed a 240v light bulb. (This was a dud bulb I just changed today) Hung it from some wire outside on the veranda. Twisted a sparkler around the wire at the rear of the bulb and light it up. Some of the night sky is appearing in the background.
Tulip bulb begins to unfurl in May 2014 at our home in Alaska. Despite having the warmest past three months on record, we have only small signs of spring.
Nikon D700, Nikkor 105mmm f/2.8
1/250 sec; f/3.5; ISO 400
manual exposure, tripod
Thanks for your kind and fun comments in the past.
Macro Mondays Theme: “Bulb"
On Godox LED64 full power
Sony HVL-F43M in a softbox at 8 o,clock 1/16th power
Shot at the "Meisel's Erlebniswelt" brewery tour. Don't miss that when you are close to Bayreuth someday!
Adoro molto fotografare i fiori e la natura soprattutto in primavera!
Seguitemi anche su instagram www.instagram.com/graphictutorials75/
Se cerchi dei tutorial informatici puoi trovarli qui www.tutorart75.com
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I really love photographing flowers and nature especially in spring!
Follow me also on instagram www.instagram.com/graphictutorials75/
If you are looking for computer tutorials you can find them here www.tutorart75.com
The bulb for a night light.
I put the bulb on the opening screen of my iPad to get the bright, colorful background.
For Macro Mondays theme: bulb
Thank you for visits, likes and comments!
HMM
A fairy light strung across Peel Street, caught against the warm colours of sandstone and terracotta of the building across Currie Street.
Macro Monday's and the theme of "Bulb".
This week after a little bit of thought I decided to use my little Maglite torch as the subject. It's focussing head can be removed to reveal the bulb which is what I needed.
As the colour temperature of the bulb is on the warmish side it was logical to use a cooler background so I found a blue glitter card. This card should provide detail when lit using flash and a silver reflective card was used to push light back onto the subject.
Then it was a case of moving the flash and bounce card around and altering shutter speed until I got a pleasing result.
This is a picture of a light bulb that I took from an electrical shop window in Kensington High Street, London.
Happy New Year!
Thanks for visiting.....
Every spring, they emerge :-)
The Bulb houses. Den Bosch, The Netherlands.
Design (1984): Dries Kreijkamp.
Some bulbs growing in my property. Nice to see something growing that doesn't get eaten by the wildlife!
Filaments of a small 60W light bulb.
'Behind Glass' for 'Macro Mondays'.
Thank you for your views, faves and comments.
HMM
MM-bulb-7032
This is a "vintage style" led light bulb. It only produces 20lm which made it possible to use my tetris light as a colorful background.
HMM to everyone :)
edison bulb
When I was trying to capture 'untitled 176', since the bulb was 60w (too bright), I had to aim the moment when the glowing was disappearing when I turned the 'on and off' knob. But this time, I failed to do so. So the camera captured the bulb with full brightness. That's why the bulb itself got washed out leaving the shape of it. And the filament of the bulb was seen outside of it!! I cannot figure out how the filament ended up being like that though...very interesting...
[PHOTO NOTE: Despite what the camera data says, this is a stack of three exposures at 1/60, 1/30, 1/20. Even the dynamic range of the D850 is not that good.]
Call this a bookmark shot when you're not having a bookmark. Next week I want to post a series on Industrialism and Post-Industrialism, so let this stand as a segue.
But... I do want to give you something to think about that is a real light bulb moment in relation to our social media practices.
Jaron Lanier - one of the founders of Virtual Reality - is a polymathic inventor, philosopher and writer. Since leaving Silicon Valley he has been warning people against the dangers of social media. This interview might be one of the most important you have listened to in a long time. Our future as real human beings (not inhabiting virtual reality space) might depend on these ideas. Remember the relaunch of FB as "Meta" a few weeks ago?
"How social media ruins your life." www.youtube.com/watch?v=kc_Jq42Og7Q
“What Turned Jaron Lanier Against the Web? The digital pioneer and visionary behind virtual reality has turned against the very culture he helped create”
www.smithsonianmag.com/innovation/what-turned-jaron-lanie...
For those creative artists among you, here is Julia Bausenhardt and why she is quitting social media. www.youtube.com/watch?v=31yF8eJJ8z0
Her most telling argument - and one I am thinking about very seriously - is to ask ourselves why we are giving away so much of our artistic content for free (and as PRO users paying for the "privilege" - US$71.88 at the latest billing). The problem you see is that social media is so flooded with free artistic content that people see no more reason to buy it. Thus further impoverishing artists while social media companies make fortunes from the advertising revenue WE generate for them.
Time for us humans to seize back control from the algorithms and artificial intelligence. And now of course my chances of an Explore go from 0.00001 percent to actual zero. Good! You know what I think about that whole scam.