View allAll Photos Tagged Splash
one of my results !
hope u like it <3
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- NIKON D7000
- Macro 90mm Tamron
- SB900
- ISO 400 - F/6.3
- Edit : lightroom & Photoshop
#FlickrFriday
#Splash
A coffee mug hits the sink. Lots of water was injured in the making of this image.
Sigma DC 18-200mm f3.5-6.3
Big Splash of incoming tide after first Sunrise of 2024 at White Rock Beach, Killiney, Dublin, Ireland. Low tide was half hour before sunrise.
Waves splashing against the rocks at the Dana Point Marine Conservation Area, Dana Point, California.
foto clichê de flickr, mas sempre tive vontade de fazer. :)
não tá dos melhores, mas to treinando!
Decided to learn how to do water drop photography this weekend. What I learned is this: take 200 pictures and maybe one will turn out okay. I'm sure glad I didn't try this stuff back in the film days! (P.S. No Photoshop tricks here, just a regular water drop and a drop of food dye caught at the right moment.)
Sunset cloud filled sky above wind swept waves tossing across Lake Ontario and splashing against the shore.
(SEE LARGE)
These are photos of milk drops splashing into milk containing food coloring. For information on the setup, see the description in the similar recent photo.
One Lencarta Superfast 600 behind a heavyweight Translum screen, wearing an Aputure Fresnel attachment to create a radial gradient. I use this rather than a grid as it allows me to control the fall-off for a given size of spot, plus, unlike a grid, which blocks and absorbs the light around the edge to create the fall off, a Fresnel lens focuses the light towards the centre - so you keep almost all of the light, just in a different pattern. This becomes important for motion freezing work like this as you need to keep the flash output low: these IGBT controlled lights reduce their output by shortening the duration of the flash. The SF600 is on 5.5 here - ie only half a stop above minimum power, so the flash duration will be in the 1/10000th of a second region.
Massive splashes created by massive waves yesterday at Shore Acres. See how small the people on the rock on the right are in comparison to the splash. The lookout area is 65 feet above the water, so you can see how crazy high the splash really is! It was also beautiful how the setting sun illuminated the water.
There is always that person that likes to splash those people that are chillin' in a controlled manner...people floating somewhere between half wet and half dry. I am the chillin' type. So if I get splashed, be prepared to be submarined.