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After the filament burnd out. A hole was drilled in the bulb to let the air in to let the filament burn in a few seconds.
© 2013 by Louis E. Keiner and Lesley M. Etherson.
Richard Box' artistic display of 1301 fluorescent bulbs lit by the overhead high-power lines -- just from the ambient energy surrounding the lines.
Wireless transmission (intentional) and fluorescent bulbs were both invented by Nikola Tesla.
The fluorescent bulbs of Richard Box's display, "planted" in the ground to pick up "waste emissions from the overhead power lines", are in effect acting as wireless transformers as well, providing a graphic depiction of a phenomenon that could actually shed additional light on the mode of action of these other energy devices.
Box says, "There's sound as well as light - a crackling that corresponds to the flashing of the lights. There's a certain smell too, and your hair stands slightly on end."
Though the shows are at night, when the effect can be seen best, the fluorescent tubes are lit continuously, depending on the whether conditions. The dryer the air, the more the tubes act to collect the ambient energy. Humid air acts as a conductor to ground, tending to bypass the tubes.
Richard Box' artistic display of 1301 fluorescent bulbs lit by the overhead high-power lines -- just from the ambient energy surrounding the lines.
Wireless transmission (intentional) and fluorescent bulbs were both invented by Nikola Tesla.
The fluorescent bulbs of Richard Box's display, "planted" in the ground to pick up "waste emissions from the overhead power lines", are in effect acting as wireless transformers as well, providing a graphic depiction of a phenomenon that could actually shed additional light on the mode of action of these other energy devices.
Box says, "There's sound as well as light - a crackling that corresponds to the flashing of the lights. There's a certain smell too, and your hair stands slightly on end."
Though the shows are at night, when the effect can be seen best, the fluorescent tubes are lit continuously, depending on the whether conditions. The dryer the air, the more the tubes act to collect the ambient energy. Humid air acts as a conductor to ground, tending to bypass the tubes.
from different angle. Wanted to see if we could shed some light into the screw cup. Again, only gobo'd lights reflection photoshopped out. Surprisingly, we didnt get the large window reflection, i think cause we dialed up the ambient and flash to eliminate it? not sure.
strobist: 580 EXII snooted into background from above camera at 1/8 power, triggered remotely. 2 desk lamps, gobo'd, into black background on either side of white background.
You can DOWNLOAD this one for your iPhone, iPod Touch and iPhone 4 on POOLGA: poolga.com/poolga/tanuki-out-of-service (FREE).
Richard Box' artistic display of 1301 fluorescent bulbs lit by the overhead high-power lines -- just from the ambient energy surrounding the lines.
Wireless transmission (intentional) and fluorescent bulbs were both invented by Nikola Tesla.
The fluorescent bulbs of Richard Box's display, "planted" in the ground to pick up "waste emissions from the overhead power lines", are in effect acting as wireless transformers as well, providing a graphic depiction of a phenomenon that could actually shed additional light on the mode of action of these other energy devices.
Box says, "There's sound as well as light - a crackling that corresponds to the flashing of the lights. There's a certain smell too, and your hair stands slightly on end."
Though the shows are at night, when the effect can be seen best, the fluorescent tubes are lit continuously, depending on the whether conditions. The dryer the air, the more the tubes act to collect the ambient energy. Humid air acts as a conductor to ground, tending to bypass the tubes.
Playing with the manual settings on the HX5V again. The bulb is a 60 watt incandescent and I adjusted the f-stop and exposure time so the details could be seen.
18-55II at 42 mm, f/11, 1/50", tripod, remote shutter, SB-600 on remotes, M at 1/8th, Tupperware bowl as deflector, hand held (obviously)
It almost looks like she is singing, but in fact, she's laughing or in the middle of telling a little story. Another flickr friend spotted on Sunday! What fun. A mundane trip to the grocery store (mid-snowstorm) transformed itself into a reminder of interconnectedness.
This sighting was charming flickrite cafesiren, whom I had never met before but whose photos I have enjoyed for a long time. The pal who was with me shopping asked later how I manage to recognize flickr folks. That got me wondering out loud about how we re/present ourselves online, who photographs themselves and how, and who doesn't. Identity abstracted and obscured - lots of layers there!
[project 365-27]