View allAll Photos Tagged copperwire
I wrapped a piece of copper wire around a broomstick to make it spiral. Then I flashed the wire with an orange filter. That’s it.
Ein Stück Kupferdraht habe ich um einen Besenstiel gewickelt, um ihn in eine Spiralform zu bringen. Dann habe ich den Draht mit einem Orange-Filter angeblitzt. Das war's.
This little drop is hanging on with all the colors to party with, cause if it lets go it just becomes a drip.
For this week's MacroMondays challenge String.
For making of:
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I started with photo / video time laps.
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My husband's world. Shot wide open with the Laowa lens almost touching the toroid.
"Toroidal inductors and transformers are inductors and transformers which use magnetic cores with a toroidal (ring or donut) shape. They are passive electronic components, consisting of a circular ring or donut shaped magnetic core of ferromagnetic material such as laminated iron, iron powder, or ferrite, around which wire is wound."
~Wikipedia
This began as a black and white macro for Macro Mondays, my favorite/favourite group. But with the red light adding to the copper hue, I decided just to load this macro.
Thanks for looking
A macro shot of twisted-pair copper wires from a 300-pair telephone cable.
Developed using darktable 3.6.0
Following the Great Copper Heist of PC 3737’s telecom provider, the officer heroically embarks on a high-stakes investigation… across the street, to his neighbour’s shed.
Today
We're Here we are visiting Copper Metal (NOT a place to showcase jewlery!)
and The Police
I was just trying out different Subjects to refract into the droplets of water on my spiral piece of copper wire.
This is a photo stack of 8 images. I did the full stack of 16 images, but that just didn't look as good with everything in the shot in focus. I feel like there has to be some blur for it to be believable.
Not my favorite one of these I have done, mostly because of the flower. A rather boring, yellow dahlia. I'm having a hard time finding good flowers at the local stores lately. I miss Summer...
Shot using a Tokina AT-X 90mm f2.5 Macro lens and the Tokina AT-X Macro Extender to get to 1:1 magnification.
This is a photo stack of 20 images to create this much depth in a macro photo. Each shot with a slightly different focus point. The camera is locked down and then it is slid forward by tiny, controlled movements of macro focus slider. The copper wire sculpture is all of about 2 inches tall. The flower in the background is only about 3 to 4 inches away from the wire structure with is sitting in a bucket of water to help finish the scene.
Its hard to set this all up and everything is very small movements and if you accidentally kick a tripod leg of a light stand, everything gets changed in a big way. It can be very frustrating to work like this, but this is the result when it all comes together.
Shot using a Tokina AT-X 90mm f2.5 Macro lens and a 25mm Canon FD extension tube.
I crafted the "grass" out of strands of 16ga electrical wire. I cut a small length of wire off and pulled the individual strands out. Then I bent them over in half. Once I had enough of them, I used a hot glue gun to keep the strands all together and make a small "plant." I then bent the strands over in a gentle shape. Then it was just a matter of applying the water drops in front of a reflective background and adding light.
Pretty simple, huh?
This is a 23 image photo stack using a new tool in my kit that I got for Christmas. A macro focusing rail or "slider." With it I can make very small adjustments to the focus by moving the entire camera forward ever so slightly. These are very small adjustments with this specialized tool.
Shot using a Canon FD 50mm f3.5 SSC Macro Lens, plus the 1:1 Canon FD 25 U extension tube. Shot at full 1:1 magnification. Each image was shot @ f4.
(gets, looks, seems, is) there is an end to it, this too shall pass. The tangled mess of copper wire badly focused but the end comes out in focus.
So after almost a year of uploading more consistently on Flickr, I reached 300 followers. I am so grateful for every single view, fave, comment and follow! Thank you so much! :)
I created this photo -once again- with a mirror. Reflections are really becoming my specialization. :) I used some copper wire to make 3 times the letter 'U'. On the mirror it would form the number 300.
Lise-Laure
Another Lensbaby shot, with all my extension tubes on, experiment. Went for something colourful again. Part of a little bird sculpture thing in our garden.
Lensbaby Composer, Sweet 50 optic, f/5.6 12mm, 20mm and 36mm extension tubes.
Twisted Pair of 1.5 mm copper wires.
Macro Mondays:Connection.
Many thanks for the Comments and the Favs :-)
box, art, test tube, nuts, copper wire, assemblage, glass swizzle stick, wild turkey feathers, chain, washers, glass ball, found object
17.5"X4"X2.5"
For the Macro Mondays group. Topic: twist. A Western Union splice is a type of splice where the two wires to be joined are wrapped in opposite directions. HMM
I am on holiday away from the UK visiting my god daughter in California and this is all I could come up for this weeks Macro Mondays theme of "The Periodic Table." was some discarded copper wire. Anyway HMM and hopefully I have published it in the correct time zone..
For the Macro Mondays Theme:
Copper
Thank you very much for your time, faves and comments, it's much appreciated.
HMM
Since copper is the common component in each, I thought I would start with it.
"Brass, Bronze and Copper" Our Daily Challenge
"Brazen" is an ideal adjective for this ring since it's not only shamelessly bold, impudent, saucy, & cheeky..it also happens to be made out of brass.
I hammered a 3/4 inch strip of brass into a shape that drapes around the finger with ribbon-like folds. The sculptural details atop the ribbon have an angular modern look with with hematite chips and a strand of rhinestones.
Because of the open design of the ring, it can adjust to fit any finger from a size 6 upwards.
Standing tall, but wires disconnected, Union Pacific Railroad code lines remind us of how communications were transmitted via a trackside circuit.
Echo, Utah • Oct. 13, 2018
from Wikipedia,
"Wabi now connotes rustic simplicity, freshness or quietness, and can be applied to both natural and human-made objects, or understated elegance. It can also refer to quirks and anomalies arising from the process of construction, which add uniqueness and elegance to the object.
Sabi is beauty or serenity that comes with age, when the life of the object and its impermanence are evidenced in its patina and wear, or in any visible repairs."
On my grandmother's antique table sits this metal leaf to which I added a ring of copper wire and some river pebbles. I've been on a "wabi sabi" kick, otherwise known as "Spring Cleaning" . . .