View allAll Photos Tagged Drips
There's green in a photo that I've actually taken recently...that means not from my archives...that means Spring is on its way!
Explored! 385 on Tuesday, March 9, 2010 was its highest. Thanks! =)
Experimenting w/ capturing water drops from technique learned here:
www.flickr.com/groups/d80/discuss/72157603740079365/
Done w/ on-board flash in a blue bowl in my sink. Added a bit of radial blur PP.
This is sooooo much fun, and sooo easy.....you gotta try it!!
Macro Mondays It makes it all worth while spending three hours with no fancy kit doing this when so many people have faved this. Just a water bottle dropper and guess work in a vase of water and wrapping paper turned upside down! :-)
#4790 - 2021 Day 41: Repeating an image idea I first made in my first 365 in 2008. A dripping ice disk. Imagine if the moon dripped ...
Hole, so wet, does explode
Its delicious juices, they unload
Squirting out, their softness lingers
Waiting to coat the sinking fingers
That in the wetness, slowly slips
Soaked by the exploding drips
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!
Watch my branch, rise and drip
Between your fingers let it slip
Feel its hardness , pull it up
Until its juices, fill your cup
Flowing between your thirsty lips
My branch is cleaned of its drips
That on your skin, slowly fall
As the branch is blown and you catch them all
Drip Drop.
Drops drip.
Drippedy Bop!
Joe Hedgehog
through the drops
has a trip.
His nose as a prop,
on his smile atop.
A gray day
is his heyday,
makes his colors pop.
A drop drips.
Drip Drip Drop.
Still feeling rough but had to take the dogs out this morning so took a few shots today. The light was so beautiful this morning.
Due to the Covid-19 this fitness center is closed as are many other businesses. An appropriate name as we are feeling the summer heat (tropical downpours, high winds, and thunderstorms - you know all the fun stuff)
189/366
A male mallard shoots out of a wetland pond on its way to a more favorable setting, at least for a while. Note the water flying off his body as he departs.
Mallards, like most ducks, have a wonderful natural system for staying dry after they have been in the water, a system that to a casual observer is largely a mystery.
Most ducks have a special gland near the base of their tale that contains an oil. Several times throughout a day, ducks will used their beak to spread this oil over their feathers. This oil helps waterproof the edges of their feathers so that water beads up and rolls off the feathers much like water acts on a well waxed car.
In addition, the structure of ducks feathers interlock, acting like Velcro to help the feathers form a tight barrier to water. The duck’s feathers are maintained throughout the day to keep the feathers effective. As we watch a duck, we often refer to this action as “preening.”
And, the simplest way ducks get rid of water on their bodies when flying off is to simply give a powerful shake, sometimes right after they take off and other times in mid-flight as well as right after landing.
The explosion of water droplets seen in this photo often happen too quickly to be seen by the naked eye but with the advent of faster shutter speeds on modern cameras, we are privileged to see natural actions that we were hard-pressed to a couple of decades ago.
(Photographed near Cambridge, MN)
Poznan, Poland
Jezyce District
Winter
Dripping today...icicle tomorrow. And so it goes.
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Rain, rain go away!! Anyway, it gave me the chance, between showers, to grab a shot of one of our light bulb solar garden lights with a drip, drop!!
Our Daily Challenge ~ Starts With The Letter D ....
Thanks to everyone who views this photo, adds a note, leaves a comment and of course BIG thanks to anyone who chooses to favourite my photo .... Thanks to you all.
dried out
drip dry
So, I have scored my first real photography job. eek i'm pretty scared.
I am going to buy some lighting, I'm thinking of getting two 300W professional lights, 2 stands and 2 umbrellas...I really don't have a clue about those kinda lights but I'll have to get some in order to learn.
This is kind of inspired by other people's work, Brooke and HollySkye – two very talented people
This Australian pelican had just lifted off from the Murray river and was still holding quite a lot of water in the feathers.
Thanks for all your faves and comments everyone!
I really appreciate them!
Website www.wimvanbezouwphotography.nl