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Project 365
2014/03/03-246/365 Bubble 泡泡
這是洗衣粉的泡沫拍出來的畫面,
用吸管往泡沫水裡吹吹,
一個個透明清亮的泡泡不斷的冒出來,
一圈又一圈連成好大一個泡泡世界!
不過,泡泡消失的速度也超快,
所以拍的時候會覺得許多圈圈是模糊滴,
因為它正快速的消失不見中。。
加上閃燈及旁邊電視畫面,
泡泡呈現好多色彩,
但~有些亂!對吧!!
試了好幾張,覺得就讓它亂吧。。
因為我原本想拍大泡泡中的旋轉世界,
可是怎麼吹都不容易吹成大泡泡,
暫時先放棄。。以後再繼續玩!哈哈…^0^
Bubbles + cloudy sky = effect I'm quite pleased with!
Thanks so much for helping to get me to #8 (!!!!!) in Explore everyone :D
What a fun "We're Here" day to play. Terrible time trying to figure out which bubbles to post! My wonderful assistant Caitlin and I spend a good hour bubbling and laughing in the back yard!
This is a real bubble, NOT a Photoshop creation. There are very small adjusts to light levels, but just to make up for underexposure - which I needed to get a bit more speed and depth of field.
When a bubble flies over your head you get a panorama view.
Lots of snow!
I found a shaded tree to get the all-important dark background. Nature provides!
This shot's growing on me. I was kind of annoyed that I didn't get strong iridescent patterns, but then again it makes for clearer reflections as it is. Photography gives you things like that - you don't always get what you ask for.
Great that this made Explore on the 7th Jan 2010. I'm on a flickr roll at the moment, with my Reflection Perfection shot having been on the flickr blog too.
Yongnuo YN560 camera right. Yongnuo YN460, camera left. Both at mid power. Triggered by Yongnuo RF-603. Black background.
I'm not wild about this picture overall, but I had to post it because the arrangement of bubbles looks just like a dragonfly head. No?
'One Bubble Off' is a term Ironworkers use for things that are not quite level. When big things are not level they can tip or fall when being hoisted. Iron and steel things that tip or fall generally lead to stuff getting crushed. That is frowned upon.
I just couldn't resist a little break from the South Africa series.
Yesterday afternoon, Joyce, my sister in law (Jaydot), came to introduce our day-care-doggy: Tara.
Just the day before she had sent me an email with a link to the Flickr central stream about frozen bubbles. As it was freezing some 5 degrees we decided to give it a try. It didn't work very well as it just wasn't cold enough. (although it sure fèlt cold enough!). The bubbles only fogged over a bit before bursting, but we had great fun trying to capture them before that. It isn't easy!! This one was taken with the telephoto lens against the dark background of the forest. It reflects me, doggy Tara and sunset over the meadow in front of our house.
Try it!! It's great fun!
Macro of detail from Marangoni effect of alcohol/water mixture on oil with added dyes. The primary droplet is approximately 3 mm in diameter.
In the large view you can see the reflection of me taking the picture, as well as my house, and some other things.
PLEASE FAV or COMMENT - thank you 😊
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Read my story:
I blew a little bubble inside the main bubble. The little bubble then fell through the bottom of the main bubble, and put this shock through the bubble. Caught the moment nicely!
How to best describe it? It like a bubble convulsion! A major bubble wobble!
I wouldn't have guessed that this process would cause all those droplets in the air. I suppose it must have!
I'm actually surprised at the sheer amount of shock that goes through a bubble when it convulses like this. I've photographed bubbles popping, and it's more of a disintegration of the surface than an explosion. Or so I thought. Sometimes I could swear that the droplets from a bubble seem to also jump out like an explosion. In this shot the convulsion seems to act a bit like an explosion, as is kind of evident from the droplets firing outwards. Those droplets actually reward close viewing, so feel free to look at the large and full size images.
I often get asked for the details/stats for these shots. You can find them in the EXIF, but the critical stat is probably that it's 1/500th of a second. Not incredibly fast, but fast enough to show you something you wouldn't see with your naked eye. I love 1/500th for bubble shots because the droplets look like streaks. Go much faster and the droplets become a smaller part of the shot.
Yep! Nice!