View allAll Photos Tagged Diffuser
The sun was behind the buildings and passed through the greater part of orange tree before hitting this orange and flower on the branch. Naples, Italy
I've been cutting up plastic milk containers to make flash diffusers - the Gary Fong looks great but seems expensive for a bit of plastic. I wanted to throw some diffused light forward and also get plenty of widely diffused light from the ceiling as well. I marked up a 3 litre and 2 litre bottle as shown in the picture, then cut round the line to make a kind of clamshell shape, with a tail that will slip through a couple of rubber bands on the flash head.
The picture shows the fixing.
I rotate the upright flash head through 90 degrees, so that when the camera is used vertical, the head can just be folded up to the new position.
ديفيوزر من نوع
QRD
يتم تركيبه على الحائط الموجود خلف مهندس الصوت
طبعا بغرفة الكنترول
وهو يقوم بتشتيت الصوت بغرفة الكنترول وعدم تحرك الموجات الصوتية في شكل حزم متوازية
مما يرفع كفاءة و جودة الصوت ووضوح ادق تفاصيله
مما يؤدي الى الحكم الصحيح على الصوت اثناء عمل المونتاج والمكساج و ضبط الاكولايزر
- Canon EOS 30D
- Canon EF 100mm f/2.8 Macro USM
- Kenko 36mm and 12mm extension tubes (gives equilivent 2:1 or 2X magnification at 1:1 focus on the 100mm)
- Canon Macro Twin Lite MT-24EX diffused using the top of a Castrol oil quart container, lined with silver flashing tape and diffused with a small soft-box cloth for the left strobe and for the right a stofen diffuser with milla grid craft material.
New diffuser. Idea from SteB on juza forum. www.flickr.com/photos/9578475@N02/
A variation of SteB's cup diffuser.
Transparent PP material from a mineral water bottle with 2 layers of polystyrene sheet over it.
More info here: orionmystery.blogspot.com/2010/10/mt24ex-concave-diffuser...
Color Digital
Macro of an Orchid. Taken at the Atlanta Botanical Garden.
My Website: Jerri Photography
My Tumblr Blog: jerriphotography.tumblr.com
Instagram: jerriphotography
I'm working on an assignment to emulate the work of Jay Maisel. One of the things that inspires me about Jay Maisel is his ability to see and produce beauty from the mundane. Instead of copying his photos, I want to see if I could come up with my own mundane beauty. I also love his use of color and hope to go on a color search over the next couple of days! Here I love the diffused light that just kisses the window frame, and the texture created by the sloppy paint job and cobwebs.
Playing with a diffuser - made a little beauty dish diffuser to try out on the flash. Focus stacked using zerene
Late-day light, Mosquito Creek valley, Clearfield County, within the Quehanna Wild Area of Moshannon State Forest.
This is NOT the macro flash diffuser I have been using. That one is stuffed after being taken bush for a camping trip it never made it back. That one was smaller and more straight with toilet paper over the end. This is the replacement. The inside of the black part if lined with foil. The front is just a piece of white paper.
It seems to expose well in poor light conditions at around 1/160 and f 18 and ISO 100
The only issue I have with this is it does not let you shoot portrayed. But for now its better than shelling out over $500 for a ring flash.
I have seen other set up with a KFC bucket lid as a diffuser.. might be something I try next. www.flickr.com/photos/rundstedt/3152618442/ Also might try using a reversing lens. Something to get me past 1:1 macro into real science looking stuff.
This photo is diffuse because we know that there is light in this picture but we dont know where it is coming from.
Face-on spiral galaxy, NGC 5068, is split diagonally in this image: The James Webb Space Telescope’s observations appear on bottom right, and the Hubble Space Telescope’s at top left. Webb and Hubble’s images show a striking contrast, an inverse of darkness and light. Why? Webb’s observations combine near- and mid-infrared light and Hubble’s showcase visible light. Dust absorbs ultraviolet and visible light, and then re-emits it in the infrared. In Webb's images, we see dust glowing in infrared light. In Hubble’s images, dark regions are where starlight is absorbed by dust.
In Webb’s high-resolution infrared images, the gas and dust stand out in stark shades of orange and red, and show finer spiral shapes with the appearance of jagged edges, though these areas are still diffuse.
In Hubble’s images, the gas and dust show up as hazy dark brown lanes, following the same spiral shapes. Its images are about the same resolution as Webb’s, but the gas and dust obscure a lot of the smaller-scale star formation.
More information: webbtelescope.org/contents/media/images/2024/105/01HMC2AJ...
Read the feature: science.nasa.gov/missions/webb/nasas-webb-depicts-stagger...
Full set of images: webbtelescope.org/contents/news-releases/2024/news-2024-1...
NASA, ESA, CSA, STScI, Janice Lee (STScI), Thomas Williams (Oxford), PHANGS Team
Image description: Two observations of a portion of the galaxy NGC 5068 are split diagonally, with Hubble’s observations at top left and Webb’s at bottom right. The galaxy’s core appears at top left. In Hubble’s image, the galaxy’s bar is a bright white region at center-left. Scattered across the scene are many bright blue pinpoints of light and patches of bright pink and wisps of dark red that are mixed with less obvious dark brown dust lanes. In Webb’s image, the galaxy’s arms are shown in shades of orange and red and are intermixed with black regions.