View allAll Photos Tagged bubbles
Strobist set-up: Einstein 640 with blue gel subject right and up at 45 deg. Triggered with Cybercommander.
See this image for photo details and a wider view.
I added two more light frames that I'd missed in the earlier stack. This gives 14 frames (ISO: 800) - total exposure: 2 hr 20 mn 29 s for this custom rectangle. I used a 3x custom rectangle with 2x drizzle option in DSS.
Stacking done in DSS. PP with AIP4WIN. A series of curves applied to bring up the features.
Pentax K10D camera used, ISO 800, no in-camera Noise Reduction
Stellarvue SV4 telescope with flattener at prime focus
Baader Moon and Skyglow filter
Guiding with Stellarvue ED70 with Orion Starshoot Autoguider.
Trukid Bubble Podz( www.trukid.com/collections/featured-eczema-products/produ... )originated the day Jennifer Adams Bunkers, a mother of six, found two of her children using her wrinkle cream and realized that a concoction used to zap crows’ feet probably wasn’t suitable for young skin. In researching children’s products available, most were unhealthy and full of nasty chemicals, or smelled “yucky,” according to her kids.
Bubbles are always fun! My niece is visiting from Montana for a few weeks and I love having her here. There is something so fun and heartwarming about watching a kid play with bubbles because they are genuinely entranced and amused for hours.
To Quote the movie Knocked Up- "I wish I liked anything as much as my kid likes bubbles."
Found this on a kids sientist webcite Blowing Bubbles:
Indoors or outdoors bubbles can be lots of fun to play with. They can be little bubbles or huge gigantic bubbles, but they all do the same thing....they float softly in the air until something magically pops them!
What are bubbles? David Winsemius, MadSci Admin from The Mad Scientist Network gives us the answer:
"Bubbles are films of a solution stretched around some kind of fluid, usually air. The film that is easiest to make is a soap (or detergent) in water solution. The the film has thickness and an inside and an outside. Soap and detergent molecules are long thin molecules with many hydrogen atoms that attract each other. They have an electrically charged end that is attracted to water. The soap bubble surfaces have the soap or detergent molecules arranged so that they line up side by side. In the middle of the film is a water and soap solution."
I took a picture of this bubble and loved the reflection in it. I went into Topaz and added the star effect on the sunlight.
Dropping a vitamin C tablet into a glass of water.
This is the only photo I managed - the next second, there were bubbles everywhere!
This dolphin was trained to blow bubbles according to hand signals.
Minnesota Zoo - Apple Valley, MN
Someone blowing a bubble for the Monthly Scavenger Hunt Group.
This was supposed to made using bubble wrap to trap various bits and pieces. I tried that and did not like it, so I used bubble wrap as a stamp!