View allAll Photos Tagged Explodes
© Mark Watson.
dont try this at home, it is dangerous. bulb was shot with a .22cal gun air pellet. frozen with a strobe and taken with a panasonic FZ50.
entrance was the right and the exit was the left.
I've not done any actual camera rotation photography in a while so tonight's evening walkabout with a camera soon put that right.
Shot in one photographic exposure, this is a cool architectural water feature located outside Sheffield's main railway station rotated 8 ways.
The clouds came over the tree tops in an explosive manner providing a beautiful cloud fashion show against a deep blue sky. Used spot metering on the brightest point in the cloud to enhance the contrast. Taken while out meandering off the pavement outside of Truckee CA
My second time vacationing to Florida, and this time it was a far better photographic experience. Visited a lot of landmarks and attractions.
My very first stroll on a wildlife expedition, nothing extensive, just a walk around the resorts nooks and crannies. I absolutely loved the atmosphere of looking beyond my field of vision for the shot.
I released the shutter (unknowingly) just as Jack's head struck one of the pincushion flowers scattering the petals everywhere.
Tried a little light painting with a black fiber optic tool from Light Painting Brushes and a hand forged Skull sculpture from McMurry Forge. Shot with a Sonar SX-70 on a tripod with Polaroid Originals color film.
The stained glass windows of Chartres Cathedral are some of the most extensive and beautiful medieval windows to survive anywhere. Dating from as early as the 1140s AD, with most of them from 1200-50, there are about 170 Chartres windows
© Mark Watson.
taken with a Flash controller from, www.makezine.com/flashkit/
and a panasonic FZ50.
it was shot from the top straight down with a .22 airgun pellet.
Pinyon pines can "explode" into flames (black mushroom cloud lower right) when they reach a high enough temperature.
Above Holbrook Junction during the Tamarack Fire, Thursday, July 22.
Explore #337, 10/10/08.
The seeds look like they were popping off the apple, but they were just loosely attached.
I love the way these lorikeets use their feet just like we use our hands, especially when they stop eating and look down on their food. They remain perfectly balanced while standing on one leg and don't teeter at all.
The background in this shot came out in a really nice gradient, which you might need to view on black in order to see. This effect was straight out of the camera, not produced in post-processing.
Small cove at Houghton Bay, Wellington south coast. The combination of tide-level and size of the rocks caused this wave to "explode" like fireworks! See detail.
Exploding Cataracts.
D'aithin luach saothair pionós a bhí ag fulaingt freagrachtaí go raibh na súile a bhí faofa ag fáiltiú do roghanna a bhí ag comharthaíocht oícheanta saighdiúirí,
Ungläubige Mauern heidnische Gräber ungeduldige mysteriöse Schäden begrabene Schreine Gotteslästerungen Betrug versiegelte böse Gräber unter Teufelsplänen,
άγνοια χάνοντας τους εχθρούς συμβουλές δαίμονες συσφίγγοντας τάφους γέφυρες γλώσσες πλησιάζοντας φίδια προετοιμασμένα εγκλήματα διασκορπίζοντας σιωπηρές μισθώσεις,
moeilijke stappen vechten blinde tricks begrudged leiders knielende medelijden snijdende deksels eenzame denken cruciale slepen transformerende bezienswaardigheden brute woorden,
HILARITAS de poetica urgente periculo potius quod moralis auctoritate illa spinosa artes perturbare,
特定の法律を取り戻す命令判決棄権狂った年の反抗的なフォーム容赦ない戦争徘徊するビジョン狡猾な勝利の頑固な目爆発するビジョン.
Steve.D.Hammond.
Pretty Pink Tuesday. Well for me anyway :)
Just home from my shift. So no time right now. It is called post and run.
I spent a week with a wonderful, talented group of people filming a documentary on the Northern Lights for NHK, the Japanese public television network. We were able to make it only as far north as the Arctic Circle, and though we had a uniformly great time, we struggled with deep cold, powerful blizzards and a generally shy and quiet Aurora, until here ... around 2 AM on the morning of March 1, we were rewarded far beyond anyone's expectations.
This was the beginning of a truly astonishing Auroral storm ...