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Manchester
Leica M3, 35mm f2 Summicron and Rollei Retro 400S, semi-stand developed in Rodinal 1+100 for 1 hour, 3 inversions at 30 minutes.
or: Bubble Week, Day Seven
The small tragedy behind this shot is that we lost the tree in our backyard last week (hence the stump). It was an elm, and succumbed to Dutch Elm Disease. We had an arborist/tree removal company come and put it out of its misery. Now we have a big stump and no shade. Sigh.
my sister underwater
the two of us spent hours in the pool playing with the new underwater digital camera. she actually took this shot.
i used photoshop for selective color on the bubbles and picnik for the remaining enhancements.
This was another choice for an image to post to the Macro Mondays group for the weekly theme; Bubbles.
Wow it's been so long since my last upload (June 2012...). Weather has been wet and humid in Sydney lately, and this is a shot of my car windscreen with the raindrops casting reflections of the surrounding trees.
Vivid Sydney 2013 is just around the corner and I will be attending ;)
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At Fermilab, there's an old bubble chamber mounted on display as an industrial art piece. So, I snapped a few pictures on a bright sunny day of this very shiny bubble and got exactly what you'd expect: specular highlights all over the place.
This is one of my first cracks at an HDR photo, generated using qtpfsgui on Linux from a single raw photo. It's very noisy at the original size, but I rather like the effect at smaller sizes; it seems fitting, given the subject. In the background on the left, you can see the geodesic dome, another interesting (but somewhat less photogenic) building at FNAL.
Edit: Amazing what a little time spent with software can do. www.getpaint.net/'s noise reduction is really quite good.
I'm forever blowing bubbles
Pretty bubbles in the air
They fly so high, nearly reach the sky
Then like my dreams they fade and die
This was a very challenging challenge! Frustrating. Exhausting. Addictive. I learned a lot and know what I'll do differently the next time I try this. My biggest problem was lighting and focus. The fact that I don't have a lot of photography equipment also hindered me. My kitchen table was a mess! I would have liked to have taken the project outside for better lighting, but we've had nothing but rain and wind. So the virus isn't the only thing keeping me inside!
It's the simple things in life that matter, Maggie spent some time yesterday hunting down some wild bubbles in our yard, but it looks like she might be the one being hunted...
Bubble fun last night in the backyard! AVON bubble bath rocks, it doesnt kill the grass...LOL!
Created with fd's Flickr Toys.
There's street art, and there's art in the street. These clear acrylic bubbles on the cobbled street of Duxton Hill are... well, I'm not sure which category they belong. What I do know is that they're part of a pop-up art trail around the area, but the whole meaning of these things is largely left up to you.
One thing that has amazed me is that they've been on the street now (it's a pedestrian-only road) for a week now, and:
1. they're not broken or cracked
2. they're clean, no fingerprints from curious passers-by
3. they've not been marked by any of the legion of stray cats that wander the area.
So what kind of art is this? I guess that depends on the beholder, but right now, I'm digging these weird bubbles.