View allAll Photos Tagged Fiber
just because
Ooooh, it works for the looking close on Friday theme of “festive lighting” - up close!!
... sunken in extreme bokeh ... taken with a Zenit Helios lens
Germany. Macro of optical fibers. Inside Illumination with bright white light. The cylindrical fibers seam to be constricted due to extreme bokeh. Sony A7II (ILCE-7M2) with e-mount adapted multicoated (MC) lens Helios 44M-4 58/2. Sony full-frame in body image stabilization ON. ISO 400. f/2. 1/60s. Wide-open shot. Manual mode.
If you are interested in an image with this camera/lens combination ... here it is --> Sony A7II - ZENIT MC HELIOS-44M4 58mm1:2 . Additional equipment used for this image of the optical fibers: Teleconverter C-AF 2x Teleplus MC7 and a focussing helicoid.
Feel free to visit my albums. All my old lenses can be found there.
Genunine "in camera" shot.
Obtained through camera movements.....just an abstract :-)
on Explore #343 on Tuesday, November 4, 2008
The fiber holding this Burn Weed seedpod is so thin that at first glance it looks as if nothing is there. If you look very closely you may be able to just barely make out the hidden fiber. The fiber is obvious in the center right the and lower left of the picture.
Weaving created by Arounna Khounnoraj and the frame is hand made by her husband John Booth. I have a couple of her art pieces and several of her bags. Their website is www.bookhou.com
Our Daily Challenge: MULTICOLOR
This cloth is orange, coppery, blue and there are thin stripes of red and yellow. So it very well fits the theme multicolor.
Strands of rope are woven together to provide support for one end of a rope hammock.
FAVORABILITY: this photo represented 38% of 30 faves on 7/31/2022.
The Jute stalks stay submerged in water for 20 days. When jute stalk is well retted, after loosening the fibers, the fibers are washed with water and squeezed dry.
Joshua Tree National Park, California
The crown of a yucca plant against a granite outcropping. Note the mass of tough fibers splitting off from its leaves. The native American tribes used these fibers for pretty much everything for which you can imagine using fiber. Sandals, cloth, belts, baskets, ropes, and mats were all woven from yucca fiber.
IMG_4204 2024 10 10 file
Fiber Art by Agnes Stadler
1. A Lesson in Macroeconomy (Big Fish, Little Fish)
2. Hydra - Greece
"In Transit - Destination Unknown" exhibit
Leslie Powell Foundation Gallery - Lawton, OK
Fiber-optic thing-a-ma-jammer used to simulate the use of wire wool... Taken at long exposure...
**Disclaimer** : No persons were burned, scarred, maimed or otherwise during the making of this still.
(though I had suffered some rotator cuff inflammation and soreness immediately after the shot.)