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Mathmos Black Astro with Orange Lava | Lava Lamp by Mathmos | Mathmos the Inventors of the Lava Lamp
Kennington Road. Some photos taken on Kennington Road. No 59 was the registered address of Crestworth Ltd. Inventors of the Astro Lamp which became an icon of its time and has transcended time to be a design icon. The Astro lamp also known as the Lava Lamp was invented by Edward Craven Walker and launched in 1963.
Fabulous! For more on the history please visit: www.flowoflava.com
1/50 sec at Æ’ / 4.5, ISO 1600, 44mm (AF-S DX NIKKOR 18-200mm f/3.5-5.6G ED VR II, Nikon D7000)
Ha! You're looking at some fail here guys. Turned on my brother's lava lamp down in Wollongong to take some snaps, after an hour it still hadn't loosened up. Came back and faced my failure 10 minutes before getting picked up to head out to dinner so I had no choice but to take some photos of a static lava lamp. Not terribly interesting, terribly fail.
"Make a photograph dominated by the color blue."
Like Tim I'm allowing myself to be distracted by Flickr (and making a pretty picture of my moo cow lava lamp) instead of working on my WDS08 presentation. So...
1. Take a picture of yourself right now.
2. Don't change your clothes, don't fix your hair...just take a picture.
3. Post that picture with NO editing.
4. Post these instructions with your picture.
And then add it to the group pool.
www.allthingsaurasglow.com | The Auras Glow lava lamp Gallery | Auras Glow lava lamps are beautiful candle powered lava lamps designed in Canada and they bubble all over the world …
Kennington Road. Some photos taken on Kennington Road. No 59 was the registered address of Crestworth Ltd. Inventors of the Astro Lamp which became an icon of its time and has transcended time to be a design icon. The Astro lamp also known as the Lava Lamp was invented by Edward Craven Walker and launched in 1963.
Fabulous! For more on the history please visit: www.flowoflava.com
Have been experimenting a lot with bulk-rolled Kodak 2383 color print film and an 85 daylight/tungsten thingy. Actually just about fixes the colors, though of course there's a couple artifacts here that aren't necessarily the film's fault.
This is a very long exposure, about 10 minutes I want to say. Had the thing wide open around 1.8 or 2.8, and definitely over-exposed. But still have some reasonable colors in here! Love the magenta shadows ha
But the 85 filter is kind of fucked, it's got some awful damage done to it's coating so wide-open introduces some very obnoxious flaring. That combined with the little LED faux-neon signs out of sight lighting the curtains up magenta and cyan. Whoops!
NOTE: I developed this in RA4 chems around 100-102f for 3.5 minutes or so, then blixed with RA4 blix for 6.5 minutes around the same temp. Using the #85 filter gives you pretty decent images that reverse more or less perfectly assuming you exposed right. Without it, the film gets a very harsh blue cast, since it expects the orange mask from a standard negative.
Came free with a $25+ purchase from thinkgeek.com - enter the code 'DISCO' at checkout! The 'lava' is really glitter, which is kind of cooler. Thought it would be lame, but it's actually kind of calming...
Teens learned how to create their own lava lamps as part of Spark a Reaction, the Teen Summer Reading Program
Kennington Road. Some photos taken on Kennington Road. No 59 was the registered address of Crestworth Ltd. Inventors of the Astro Lamp which became an icon of its time and has transcended time to be a design icon. The Astro lamp also known as the Lava Lamp was invented by Edward Craven Walker and launched in 1963.
Fabulous! For more on the history please visit: www.flowoflava.com
Kennington Road. Some photos taken on Kennington Road. No 59 was the registered address of Crestworth Ltd. Inventors of the Astro Lamp which became an icon of its time and has transcended time to be a design icon. The Astro lamp also known as the Lava Lamp was invented by Edward Craven Walker and launched in 1963.
Fabulous! For more on the history please visit: www.flowoflava.com
False colour image of my desktop lamp with an old - really old! - lava lamp in front. The lava lamp is probably 25+ years old and hadn't been switched on in about a decade. Took some warming up. Played around with tones and hues and, well, anything with a slider in the RAW processor, then played around a little more in Photoshop afterwards. Flickr's image optimisation doesn't really do justice to how it looks on my computer. Ah well.
Kennington Road. Some photos taken on Kennington Road. No 59 was the registered address of Crestworth Ltd. Inventors of the Astro Lamp which became an icon of its time and has transcended time to be a design icon. The Astro lamp also known as the Lava Lamp was invented by Edward Craven Walker and launched in 1963.
Fabulous! For more on the history please visit: www.flowoflava.com