View allAll Photos Tagged explosion
For Round 17 of 'Get Pushed', I was paired with Marie Sharp, whose beautiful photostream
is full of beautiful owls and macros of the lush nature surrounding her. Such a treat!
Marie gave me a one-word challenge - 'EXPLOSION!!!'
I absolutely loved this idea. So much in fact, that I returned the same one-word challenge
right back to her!
It's very interesting to see our different interpretations.
This was done with diet soda and mentos, and some very nervous girls who were expecting the explosion to be much higher and more dangerous than it actually was. A couple days later we managed to get the explosion much higher, but the settings were different so everything was blurry and I preferred this one because of the face paint and expressions of the girls.
Thanks Marie Sharp, I really enjoyed this one!
Como si un meteorito se hubiese golpeado contra este lugar. Puede que una explosión le diera esta caprichosa forma. Quizás escenario de una lucha de titanes, dirimiendo el futuro del universo. Tal vez enclave olvidado de civilizaciones ya perdidas en el transcurrir del tiempo. O simplemente el capricho de la naturaleza, que no se cansa de mostrarnos su belleza y lo frágil que puede llegar a ser...
Punta de Juan Centellas. Icod de Los Vinos. Tenerife. Spain.
Still painting with whats left of the stash..Instead of buying paint I have to put in gas. Painting this type of style is kind of like one of them cooking shows, my old lady watches, where they have to cook with all kinds of crazy weird ingredients and make something delicious. Pesa the chef like Raekwon.
An explosion of colours during a great sunrise over Lake Ontario is coupled with a Superior mirage, where steam and cloud image are visible directly above the horizon.
Glad to have captured this great weather phenomenon here in Toronto!
(January 28, 1986) The bright luminous glow at the top is attributed to the rupture of the liquid oxygen tank just above the SRB/ET attachment. At this point, Challenger is completely engulfed in a firey flow of escaping liquid propellant.
Credit: NASA
Image Number: S87-25390
Date: January 28, 1986
A summer thunderstorm arriving like a freight train.
The lighter colored clouds in the foreground were moving so fast it almost looked like a slow motion explosion, a strong gust of wind hit as soon as the clouds reached were I was standing.
Fascinating experience, I think I missed my calling as a storm chaser!