View allAll Photos Tagged experiments
here i am experimenting with coloured gels that go over my flash, this was done in my school dark room so no ambient light was captured, i think it's quite promising, it just isn't sharp because i couldnt focus in the pitch black, i just stuck it to a tripod and shot at something like f5.6, still gettingused to the depth of field of full frame cameras, it's great but not when you don't want a thin depth of field!
The Happiness Experiment and re-opening preview at the the New York Hall of Science (NySci) in Queens, New York City, New York, U.S., June 27, 2021. Photo by Andrew Kelly for New York Hall of Science
做实验可以很严谨,也可以很轻松。
做實驗可以好嚴謹,亦都可以好輕鬆。
You can do the experiment either the rigorous way or the relaxing way.
Stark Osterham led me here...
INSILICO - SOUTH / Corporate District, INSILICO SOUTH (199, 54, 1602) - Moderate
Students picking prunes in the Wagga Experiment Farm orchard.
This photograph is from an album of photographs belonging to Clive Charles Crane, Housemaster and Lecturer in Science, Maths and Book-Keeping at the Wagga Experiment Farm from at least 1913 until 1926.
CSU Ref: SA1634/6
Now referred to as the "Wise House" the house was orginally the home of lumber/cotton baron--Edwin C. Holt whot constructed the home using some of the most exotic hardwoods available worldwide. The house was purchased in 1919 by Jessie Hargrave Kenan Wise. The majority of the beautiful wood (the hallmark of the home) was recently painted over during UNCW's "restoration" of their Alumni Office. Tiger oak stair and hardwood flooring fortunately avoided wall-to-wall carpeting.
Next door, (then two-doors down) the Thomas Emerson house (then-president of Atlantic Coastline Railroad). The house was purchased in 1923 by Sarah Kenan, and was rebuilt after being gutted by fire using salvaged pieces with a fire-resistant steel and concrete superstructure. "Miss Sarah" lived there and the sisters (and family) continued to buy up real estate after surrounding buildings burned or became available otherwise, and completed an eight-nine foot prison-like "privacy wall" around the properties. The outrageously wealthy Miss Sarh lived on inside the self-imposed-deterioration of Kenan house until just before the end when some say she actually moved into the home of staff—thinking she was insolvent.--the final stages of dimentia. She finally succumbed to what many feel was lues in 1968.
Rumor has it that banking executives from New York came to Wilmington to finally settle the estate, during their visit literally millions of dollars in cash, silver, etc. was inventoried.
The homes, along with furnishings, and ancillary works of art were ultimately donated to UNCW--a public school. The university continues to spend hundreds of thousands of supposed “donations” to maintain and staff the home as a private residence for the Chancellor of this state institution—quite a perk! Occasional receptions are held in the public areas of the home, supposedly justifying the expense.
When ownership of the property moved from the Kenan family to UNCW, two cases of wine discovered in the basement vault were split between the Kenans and Chancellor Wagoner. The university’s case was finished off that summer by workers—twelve bottles of CHÂTEAU LAFITE ROTHSCHILD.
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Derived from single RAW image in Photomatix, cropped, processed, and reduced with Picassa
Experimenting with various methods of attaching nichrome to heater barrel. This one is Stove Gasket Cement + Ceramic Tape.
Largely fruitless experiments in the 1920s and 30s in detecting inbound enemy aircraft using giant concrete mirrors and bowls to reflect and collect the sound. Then radar was invented, and the rest is history.
Now referred to as the "Wise House" the house was orginally the home of lumber/cotton baron--Edwin C. Holt whot constructed the home using some of the most exotic hardwoods available worldwide. The house was purchased in 1919 by Jessie Hargrave Kenan Wise. The majority of the beautiful wood (the hallmark of the home) was recently painted over during UNCW's "restoration" of their Alumni Office. Tiger oak stair and hardwood flooring fortunately avoided wall-to-wall carpeting.
Next door, (then two-doors down) the Thomas Emerson house (then-president of Atlantic Coastline Railroad). The house was purchased in 1923 by Sarah Kenan, and was rebuilt after being gutted by fire using salvaged pieces with a fire-resistant steel and concrete superstructure. "Miss Sarah" lived there and the sisters (and family) continued to buy up real estate after surrounding buildings burned or became available otherwise, and completed an eight-nine foot prison-like "privacy wall" around the properties. The outrageously wealthy Miss Sarh lived on inside the self-imposed-deterioration of Kenan house until just before the end when some say she actually moved into the home of staff—thinking she was insolvent.--the final stages of dimentia. She finally succumbed to what many feel was lues in 1968.
Rumor has it that banking executives from New York came to Wilmington to finally settle the estate, during their visit literally millions of dollars in cash, silver, etc. was inventoried.
The homes, along with furnishings, and ancillary works of art were ultimately donated to UNCW--a public school. The university continues to spend hundreds of thousands of supposed “donations” to maintain and staff the home as a private residence for the Chancellor of this state institution—quite a perk! Occasional receptions are held in the public areas of the home, supposedly justifying the expense.
When ownership of the property moved from the Kenan family to UNCW, two cases of wine discovered in the basement vault were split between the Kenans and Chancellor Wagoner. The university’s case was finished off that summer by workers—twelve bottles of CHÂTEAU LAFITE ROTHSCHILD.
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Derived from single RAW image in Photomatix, cropped, processed, and reduced with Picassa
14/03/2012
Also #64 (Bottle(s) or Jar(s)) for 112 Photos Challenge
Today I spent some time following the instructions given here to try and make fairy lights.
This is the best result I got (and is edited). I dont know whether perhaps I needed the thicker glow-sticks rather than the ones I have, or what, but this was nowhere near as easy, or as effective, as pinterest made it out to be... Just so you know. Also: Squeezing the insides of the glowsticks out is darned hard work!
msh0114 #8. When it`s a jar
MSH1222: 3. Something Glittery
The Happiness Experiment and re-opening preview at the the New York Hall of Science (NySci) in Queens, New York City, New York, U.S., June 27, 2021. Photo by Andrew Kelly for New York Hall of Science
Head: Lilac resin Large Moona
Body: Blue resin CoCo/BonBon
It fits!! I quite like this combination of the Moona head on the fat fairy body!
Makes a nice little Gnome and would look fabulous in NS, green resin or tan!!
Now referred to as the "Wise House" the house was orginally the home of lumber/cotton baron--Edwin C. Holt whot constructed the home using some of the most exotic hardwoods available worldwide. The house was purchased in 1919 by Jessie Hargrave Kenan Wise. The majority of the beautiful wood (the hallmark of the home) was recently painted over during UNCW's "restoration" of their Alumni Office. Tiger oak stair and hardwood flooring fortunately avoided wall-to-wall carpeting.
Next door, (then two-doors down) the Thomas Emerson house (then-president of Atlantic Coastline Railroad). The house was purchased in 1923 by Sarah Kenan, and was rebuilt after being gutted by fire using salvaged pieces with a fire-resistant steel and concrete superstructure. "Miss Sarah" lived there and the sisters (and family) continued to buy up real estate after surrounding buildings burned or became available otherwise, and completed an eight-nine foot prison-like "privacy wall" around the properties. The outrageously wealthy Miss Sarh lived on inside the self-imposed-deterioration of Kenan house until just before the end when some say she actually moved into the home of staff—thinking she was insolvent.--the final stages of dimentia. She finally succumbed to what many feel was lues in 1968.
Rumor has it that banking executives from New York came to Wilmington to finally settle the estate, during their visit literally millions of dollars in cash, silver, etc. was inventoried.
The homes, along with furnishings, and ancillary works of art were ultimately donated to UNCW--a public school. The university continues to spend hundreds of thousands of supposed “donations” to maintain and staff the home as a private residence for the Chancellor of this state institution—quite a perk! Occasional receptions are held in the public areas of the home, supposedly justifying the expense.
When ownership of the property moved from the Kenan family to UNCW, two cases of wine discovered in the basement vault were split between the Kenans and Chancellor Wagoner. The university’s case was finished off that summer by workers—twelve bottles of CHÂTEAU LAFITE ROTHSCHILD.
__________
Derived from single RAW image in Photomatix, cropped, processed, and reduced with Picassa
The lutradur has been burnt back to the resist using a heat gun. I always do this outside due to the danger of inhaling the fumes.
I don't know if I am going to use this in my current piece, but I just want to see how heavy the text looks using this technique
Connectivity and readymade practice : experimenting, manipulating and combining daily life objects in order to attempt, to force or to mystify a workable connection between them, at least to make it visible and/or possible. This exercise is to be considered as a warm-up, a first step towards a further installation or project.
New media art course at Erg, Brussels.
"The crew" headed back to our old highschool to experiment in a partial vacuum. We showed up randomly without notice but our chemistry teacher was more than happy to help us out, going so far as to let us lock up his classroom when we were done. The results were quite conclusive: lifters don't work even in a partial vacuum, which rules out an anti-gravity effect which ufo buffs try to argue is the effect which is seen at normal pressure.
The cheapest adapter rings available are very good material for experiments with a lathe and producing totally new objective+camera combinations...
& here's the same tree from today; but shot in the visible light spectrum.. What i've done with this shot is a little bit different.
first I took 2 sets of exposures; 5 shots in each, pretty standard (5d2 + FD 35mm f/2.8 tilt-shift lens). But one set I shot using a ND1000x filter attached; which meant I could get silky smooth water from 5 second exposures. Then I took another set without the filter attached, so I could keep the clouds looking nice & chunky & not streaky from a long exposure..
Then I blended both these images to come up with this. What do you think? can you notice what i've done, or does it look ok to you?
Students are conducting a hands-on science experiment in a classroom, using lemons and oranges to explore concepts in a practical way. The atmosphere is lively and engaging.