View allAll Photos Tagged Explode,
Explode Into Colors plays Feb. 5, 2010, at Subterranean in Chicago. My review and photos are at: www.undergroundbee.com/2010/02/explode-into-colors.html
A length of thin tungsten wire being vaporized (or sublimated) by the discharge of two large capacitors. I had to make a pinhole mask for my camera because the explosion is so bright, that I couldn't stop down the lens enough. Camera: Pentax 6x7 200mm lens.
Storm clouds, with the setting sun behind them, approaching Gloucester. We had a torrential downpour about an hour later, but I was nice & dry in the pub, which of course was not dry!
Hi....this is the last surfing shot. :-)
The image was taken back on the main beach in smaller surf.
I snapped this surfer.....as he turned off the face....exploding out through the back of the wave just in time before it closed out.
Thanks for visiting and we trust everyone is about to have a great week ahead. Cheers D&J.
I've seen bullrushes with their cylindrical brown seed heads as well as those which have already exploded, but never before one which is in the process of exploding. Taken at Mill Lake in Abbotsford. BC (09-02-11-4486)
Seems like a gas explosion, Just the roof blew off because the shutters were locked,
thankfully no injuries, House was locked all up.
I arrived with the firemen, didn't hear a thing!
Once the BBQ was over the next day we decided to shoot some beer! Bagged up and shot with a Nikon and an Airwolf!
I had a lot of fun with my little camera on my walk today, spinning around whipping it up over my head. The camera is limited in range of apertures, so they weren't perfect, but they were fun
Close to the Limmat in Zurich I've found these lights, obviosly created by some crazy designer, hanging outside of an exclusive shop.
Brothers were shooting guns today, and I had the idea to take a picture of the pop can they were about to shoot exploding. This is the result.
The lake in these lovingly tended grounds surround the estate’s many acres. It’s interesting to peer through these rushes to watch what is happening with the resident population of waterbirds - a bit like peering through gaps in the curtains. Around this time of the year the bullrushes start to explode and their wooly interiors spread and get caught up in neighbouring rushes.