View allAll Photos Tagged bubbles
When I poured this glass of club soda for lunch, it seemed to be particularly bubbly. Myself, I am not feeling particularly bubbly today. Nice juxtaposition, I guess. Plus, I seem to be on a circle theme for my first week of Project 365.
Quick play with the macro lens and some bubble solution, need to set the softbox up really so can light the whole bubble but given me some ideas to try.
The bubbles were a masterstroke. The kids were having a great time, running around blowing bubbles uninhibited, occasionally pausing to bob around to the music.
Karma Devenny, 2, poses for a picture on her father, John Devenny's,
shoulders while standing in a flurry of bubbles in at the Kids' Zone
area of the Ribfest 2005 at Vinoy Park on Sunday. Her mother,
Jennifer Devenny, was taking the photo.

Southbank on a Sunday heaving with a sea of people, and many forms of entertainment, here are some serious bubbles. A lot of smiling faces, waiting for the next batch of bubbles.
NOT SO BUBBLY LITTLE ONE
This precious little guy is named Bubbles. He is 6 weeks old. Someone saw him fall and called in. His two back legs are not functioning, and hence he is not able to walk. It doesn't look like anything is broken, but we are doing an x-ray to make sure. After the x-ray tomorrow, we will start to do physical therapy. We are going to bring in a huge bathtub for Bubbles to swim in.
Mystery bubbling on the seashore
When I saw the ‘bubbling’ on the shore on Autumn (Thursday 18th November) I knew what it was – certainly not methane bubbles from decomposing seaweed. The bubbles were, if you look, not gas/air but liquid. These effects are typical of water flowing from a height above the seabed/seashore emerging through the sand (see graphic). My daughter and I dive off of a saltwater lagoon called Widewater, near Shoreham in Sussex. This body of water is higher than adjacent beach and seabed. When the tide goes out the lagoon ‘leeks’, its water draining through its bottom and the beach to emerge further out as a mysterious bubbling effect. The same occurs along the Essex coast where sandy deposits sit over clay. At this junction water draining through the sand meets the impermeable clay and drains under the beach to emerge further down – bubbling up.