View allAll Photos Tagged DRIP

Stuff comes out of these. That's the technical term, I believe.

Red Food Dye dripped onto plastic sheet

Canvas 30 x 90 cm

 

March 2006

another shot form last fall, when we had a week of fog that coasted everything with moisture.

 

texture by kim klassen

Fairmont hotel / Vancouver

I can't resist bustin' out the marco lens after a little rain.

I collected an inch of water in a stock pot from this drip overnight. it was orange.

more with the bubbles....

V-DRIPS(France)

SCOUAP et ROM1: Œuvre mix-média, alliance de peinture et d’arts numériques

 

V-DRIPS est le nom d’une nouvelle pratique qui mélange vidéo-mapping et peinture, sous lequel travaillent de nombreux artistes dont Scouap, l’initiateur. Pour Bin Ere, il exposera une peinture V-DRIPS réalisée avec ROM1 lors du vernissage de l’exposition CHANTIER NUMERIQUE #1 à Rennes réalisée en 15 mn top chrono.

  

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Taken with:

Camera model:Canon EOS 1000D

Exposure=0.005 sec (1/200)

Aperture=f/20.0

ISO=200

Focal length=119 mm

Flash:On, Fired

Exif info added with simashin flickr tools

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Drip from a medicine syringe. Not quite focused on the drip unfortunately.

Me and Halli managed to install the drip rail molding and the connector at the end. I am very pleased. I thougt I would not be able to ues the new pair. I was even prepairing to use the old ones. But we managed with just the right amound of violence.

Taipei City, Taiwan

Homework for my process painting class....

 

grated watercolour paint onto a page of my sketchbook, dripped water down it, blew away the remaining powder

A student creates drip paint art at the Arts of All Kinds Festival.

Milagros Dancehall Collective and Drip at Saguijo. Didn't bring my camera. I used Kat's digicam. Played with slow-sync flash. Experimented with temperatures in Lightroom

  

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Taken with:

Camera model:Canon EOS 1000D

Exposure=0.005 sec (1/200)

Aperture=f/20.0

ISO=400

Focal length=200 mm

Flash:On, Fired

Exif info added with simashin flickr tools

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A later effort to capture water drops falling from a kitchen faucet. I'm very happy with how this one turned out. In this instance, I used the high-speed sync mode on my flash, and manual focus and a fork to get my trusty 100mm macro lens focused at precisely the point where the water drops would be.

 

Set-up:

Canon EOS 40D on a tripod with a shutter speed of 1/2500 of a second;

Canon remote switch shutter release;

Canon EF 100mm f/2.8 USM Macro lens at f/5.6;

Canon 580 EX II flash mounted on the camera, bounced off a white ceiling in high-speed sync mode;

3 portable studio lights surrounding the sink

 

Note: while normally high-speed sync on a flash will not help you freeze motion, it was necessary in this case to provide enough light (even with three studio lights on the subject) for the extremely rapid shutter speed required to catch a drop falling without blur. I might have had even better luck with the flash set to the 1/250 second sync to freeze the motion direclty, but the glare from the kitchen tiles wouldn't permit anything but indirect flash and I wasn't getting satisfactory results that way.

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