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Olympus OM-1 50mm f1:1.4 lens & extension tubes - Fuji Superia 100

lightbulbs, vintage radio vaccuum tubes, polymer, brass, copper, anodized aluminum, swarovski stones

 

Filament in an incandesent bulb

I just started a print too low and made the back-pressure my 3mm filament buckle, double over and wrap all the way around the drive gear until the setscrew threads failed.

The filament of an incandescent lamp, viewed through a 10 micrometre "mesh".

 

2008:Y.I.P.

73 of 366

Barrow Hill with my friend Ken. Another visit and a new set of images.

This is a section of a rather large discarded bulb on the edge of the coal ramp.

set-up: 1/2 sec exposure time on glow stick (in the dark, w/o flash) exhibiting more or less random motion

 

the original picture was cropped, desaturated, inverted and several copies were made with various gradient maps. these images were then overlaid with the use of layer masks.

 

the photoshopping was inspired by akimota's shot flickr.com/photos/yeahyeahwhatever/3040149238/

A post & beam assembly with old wiring and a 1900-era (repro) loop filament bulb.

Found this on the street today on my way back to hostel from the department. Anyone know the name?

electrical currents need not apply.

Thistle seeds are on the move - unfolding and waiting for the wind before they fly. A wonder of natural engineering.

 

IMG_15994, 30%

Not yet tested on a print.... filament moves like butter through it though.

toothbrush head (lighting>head on)

* * * * * See it Large please * * * * * *

 

Who add comments is sexy!!:o)

The filament of a lightbulb taken at 1/2000 sec; f:11; and ISO 100

Hydrogen alpha image of the sun. Image originally taken in greyscale before processing with Photoshop. I've added some notes to a couple of features I saw on the disk. I am not sure if the small scale details are real features or artificial due to noise or JPEG artifacts.

 

Location: College Point, NY

Camera: Nikon Coolpix 995

Telescope: Coronado Hydogen Alpha PST

Eyepiece: 18mm

Exposure: 1/60 second

Christine - 19.5 SW Merino,

4.2 oz (#1)

A friend of mine challenged me to get the exposure set for the filament of a lightbulb itself, this was the most impressive of the few attempts that I made.

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