View allAll Photos Tagged bubbler...
American Bullfrog – I’m not sure exactly what’s happening here, but he’s lookin' good in a bubble beard.
Bubbles follow a street vendors cart during the 2017 Tomball German Heritage Festival in Tomball, Texas. I think they were from a "bubble gun" he was selling.
A black and white photo of a capsule of the London Eye observation wheel in London, England, United Kingdom. The photo was taken from inside another capsule, and obviously that one needs some window cleaning. ;-)
This photo was taken using an M.Zuiko 12-50mm lens @18mm.
Extreme bubble bokeh from the vintage Leitz Wetzlar Elmaron 150mm f2.8 6x6 projector lens.
Flowers in our garden.
This image shows the famous Bubble nebula (NGC 7635) and the nearby emission nebula SH2-157.
Equipment used:
TMB-92SS telescope
QSI-583ws CCD camera
Exposures:
18 x 15 min Ha
8 x 15 min OIII
4 x 15 min SII
6 x 10 min R,G,B
68 x 5 min L
Total: 14 hours
Just some glass bubbles I use to make some earrings I designed.
Here are the earrings : www.etsy.com/shop.php?user_id=5596863
Mo is curious about these bubbles in this water bottle.
Mo : Bubbly....Ehehehehe.....
Please do not use my photos or my characters without my permission, thank you.
A few weeks ago I read an article about how surface patterns on soap bubbles are analogous to weather systems. Specifically, spirals on soap bubbles look a little like the vortices of hurricanes and tornadoes.
www.telegraph.co.uk/science/science-news/10558231/Soap-bu...
I'm a long way off capturing really clear and high def vortices on bubbles yet. But it's encouraging to see this spiral existing without me having to work hard to create it.
I'd love to photograph a vortex very clearly and beautifully. Hopefully I'll manage it one day. So far, I'm just one step closer.....
P.S. The image quality is not great here. Only a few pixels to play with.
And if you haven't spotted the spiral, it is..... just above the centre of the bubble. I only spotted it myself because I have been carefully looking out for these vortices. I bet I've photographed them in the past without noticing.
Whenever I need to get some perspective on life because of personal issues or humanity's desire to inflict harm on itself or this beautiful planet, or just because I want my mind to be blown away, I visit NASA's Hubble flickr stream (www.flickr.com/photos/gsfc/albums/72157623410904809), and after just a few moments looking at the truly mind boggling images of the universe, all becomes right in Tony World.
Shortly after a dose of Hubble therapy the other evening I was washing the dishes and had just filled the bowl up with clean, frothy washing up liquid when I became transfixed by the dazzling display of an infinity of bubbles sparkling like stars in the night sky...and for once the little voice in my head didn't need to speak up to urge me to whip out my iPhone! *click*
With a quick wipe of my hands I rushed upstairs, downloaded the image and had a quick play with Levels, Contrast, Tints and a smidge of vignette, to produce my own Hubble image...or rather, Bubble image. Once again, I'm reminded of William Blake's verse, "To see a world in a grain of sand, to hold infinity in the palm of your hand...", or more appropriately for this image, Dave Bowman's famous words from '2001 A Space Odyssey', "My god, it's full of stars!".
We had some fantastic fog and frost here this morning, which has lasted all day. Fortunately, I had the self discipline to set my alarm for sunrise and sacrifice my snugtastic warm bed and lie-in – ye gods, it was hard crawling out from under the duvet! – and sort my camera gear out to take a walk along the river near to my home...bliss.
The Bubble Nebula NGC7632 (Sh2-162) and the Scorpion Cluster NGC7654 (M52) in the constellation Cassiopeia.
Equipment:
main scope: GSO 200mm reflector f=800mm/4.0
mount: Celestron AVX with Starsense
coma corrector: GPU Newton Coma Corrector
guiding: off axis guider
main camera: QHY294PRO Mono
guide camera: Starlight Xpress Lodestar
mount: Celestron Advanced VX with StarSense
guiding/control software: kstars/Ekos
filters: Baader LRGB, Baader neodymium filter, Atronomik Halpha 12nm
Total exposure time:
4200s luminance, 3000s for each RGB color, 3600s Halpha
Exposures:
35 x 120s luminance
25 x 120s each for R,G,B
10 x 360s Halpha
TEC cooling setpoint: -15°C
Processing:
Data reduction and stacking: Siril
Background subtraction and noise reduction: GraXpert
post processing: Aftershot Pro
A close up of soda water added to grapefruit concentrate. The larger bubbles are made up of loads of tinier ones.
Light Orange Gel Attachet To Flash Gun
Flash Gun To The Back Right Hand Side
Bubbles To The Front Right Hand Side
Extention Tube 65mm (13mm, 21mm And 31mm) Attached To 60mm Lens
A street artist was making big bubbles that floated through the main square of Switzerland's capital
I can now cross this off my photography "to do" list....rainbow flare!! I decided that bubbles and rainbow flare would go really well together, so I set about capturing a photo that had both. I think I went a bit overboard and find this photo to be a bit overwhelming...but it's my first attempt at rainbow flare and I was thrilled with just how much rainbow flare I was able to capture.
I probably took about 30 photos in this position and they all had little bits of rainbow flare, but this was the one and only frame that had this awesome, awesome, full on rainbow flare! WOO! In some way, this reminds me of the DreamWorks logo, with the little boy sitting on the crescent moon.
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a shot taken at the Buckingham Camera Club's practical evening during the week - created using a ring macro flash and a bubble machine in the dark - focusing was interesting to say the least :)
.... thanks to everyone who brought props along :)
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Playing in the backyard with our 15-month old reminds us to slow down and enjoy these quiet and precious moments.
Created from the hidden depths
Allowed to take a few sweet breaths
Maybe travel from there to here
Then pop ! ..... you're gone, you disappear
In some champagnes the bubbles are really beautiful, so you should choose your New Year's drink wisely
This photo was taken with the legendary Cooke Speed Panchro 75mm ser2 cine lens.
@meakarolina ❤️
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