View allAll Photos Tagged DRIP
Water-drip photography—too fun! I colored water in a bowl with food dye with a little milk added to make the water more opague. Then I varied drops of clear water, plain milk, or water dyed in a different color from the water in the bowl dripped with an eyedropper from different heights, which resulted in different heights of the splash.
Then I played with various filters in post-processing for an extra dimension!
This was an exercise to try and capture an image using the droplet as a lens. It didn't turn out quite as I had hoped, but I like the way the colours in the background blend.
It's already made explore, thanks to everyone for their great comments.
Posted on PigPog: pigpog.com/2014/03/01/drip-drip-drip/
The hole for an umbrella in a table at the Eden Project.
A cool rainy Lower Mainland day ... an opportunity to take a shot through the window from the comfort of the house ... a drip on my Mountain Ash tree.
This is a project the Monster Factory did for a company called splash works. They hired us to plushafy their logo...so this is 167 drips later.
phewf.
71/365 (2,293)
Our house is surrounded by scaffolding and ladders, in preparation for a new roof. The roofers are due to start next week and I only hope the rain and wind subside by then.
I have a white closet in my room, and I am really enjoying using it as a background.
I'm loving simple shots lately.
Circa 1773. 5 segmental arches 206' long exclusive of approaches. Single lane, now closed to traffic crossing the River Forth at its historic boundary between Stirlingshire and Perthshire. Ashlar piers, cutwaters and voussoirs, remainder rubble. Centre arch flanked by refuges.
The bridge was built by public subscription, rather than from the county funds or statutory labour which were more usual. Constructed during a vibrant period of road and bridge building Drip Bridge is considered a significant example of its type as recorded in the first Statistical Account:
“Great part of the public roads have been made anew, and bridges built where wanted, within the last 20 years. The bridge of Dript over the Forth, on the road to Stirling, is the only considerable one.” (Perthshire OSA, 1791-99).
Converted all my pots to drip irrigation and couldnt' be happier. Less water used and automated watering pots means a lot of time saved!
Shot with Sony A7, FE2870 kit lens and magnifier.
The water, pouring from my upstairs neighbor's porch. We haven't had much rain this summer. Some say this is the dryest summer in Buffalo and Western New York in almost 50 years. Today, the rain came down so hard, the house's gutters couldn't not take it all.