View allAll Photos Tagged macroliciousness
oct.08 © All rights reserved
660 / 73 / 227
read the article here : lightworker.com/beacons/2009/2009_02-EndofSeparation.txt
# ice begonia bud opening!
happy scarlet sunday to us all !
Thanks Everyone for the visit and comments as well as faves and awards and invites .
(the next 2-3 days i am in the hands of dentist and chirurg..so do not wonder if i am slow in catching up ..have a good time every one)
.
356 views / 69 faves / 213 comments
A few final shots from my quick visit to Seattle. Hope you enjoyed the Northwest as much as I did. :)
Thank you all for your feedback & favs!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
© Steven Brisson. Do not use without permission.
One of my attempts to Macro Monday’s theme party. I liked the layout, a little bit like knolling, and the free space to the right. At first I wanted to delete the photo, with the partial circle to the right, but after a second look this makes the photo from just photo a small eye catcher.
But it does not meet the size requirements
Actually the sweets are two time Toffifee and 2 x MON CHERI, the underground is a small bamboo shelf turned to side with an opening to take the paper placed inside out.
Stack for Macro Mondays, as defined as pile or heap of items placed one on top of the other with at least three single elements. And since I have a small bag full of them, for one of the last Macro Monday challenges, why not use them again.
Crown caps stack from different brands of beer, stacked on top of each other, is less simple then it looks, the just break down fast, by mechanical movement or minor shocks.
Feel free to leave comments and constructive feedback. No P1/C1 or seen in group and similar.
Dragonflies are my most favorite insect due to their adorable and curious personalities. They actually love getting their photos taken and seem to smile with a funny cheesey smile and usually a cocked head.
So this took me pretty much all day to figure out how to do and make it work.
Again, playing around with a bit of science here. When a drop of water falls into a fairly deep pan of water, the water first goes way down and then like a rubber band, it springs back up because of the surface tension and sends the drop of water, or in this case milk with a bit of food color in it back up into the air, but what happened here was two more drops of water were falling down directly in line with the first one and impacted into the column of water and milk rising upward and caused these beautiful splashes of water.
I don't own one of those fancy and expensive water drop/splash kits that times everything out for you.
I did this all manually. First, I start with a two second shutter delay to get my hands in the right spots. Then the camera is set to a two second exposure which gives me time to do all the other things. The plunger gets pressed, drops come out, they fall, hit the water and I fire the flash trigger. The flash unit is off to the right side and set to a very small bust, 1/128th power. This is also a very fast burst of light and so it stops all the motion of the splash.
The colors in the background is the reflection of a shiny piece of art paper reflecting a small, adjustable LED panel light onto the waters surface..
Shot using a Tokina AT-X 90mm f2.5 Macro lens.
THANKS GOD IT IS FRIDAY !!! Enjoy the weekend !
Photo Info: taken after a drizzle that afternoon of Jan. 6, 2009 @ the foot of MCUFDTMF Grotto are planted with peanut plant with leaves collected a glistening marble like water droplets. I returned to my LC to get my camera (Nikon D80 + Nikkor VR18-55mm + reverse ring + KFC DIY diffuser) and captured that scene.
Explored Jan 9, 2009
~Author Unknown
Things I ♥ Month Continues! I know it's not Food Month anymore, but the thing is...I still love food...a lot. Plus, we have plenty of leftovers. :)
Chocolate Crumb Cake: While I might not be a total chocoholic, if the chocolate is surrounded by scrumptious marble cake? Divine and MINE.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
© Steven Brisson. Do not use without permission.
this spider was trapped in a sticky paper flytrap. removing him was tricky without breaking its legs.
~Hank Ketcham
Food Month Continues! Admit it--this looks like the bestest bowl of breakfast cereal you could ever possibly imagine. You don't even need milk! Sure, you'll need 9 fillings at the dentist this year alone, but still...they're yummy (but only for about 3 minutes...then it's like chewing a rubber band).
Gumballs: As for swallowing gum, if what my Mom told me was true when I was 6 years-old, I presently have 1,236 pieces of gum sitting in my stomach. Oohhh. Tummy-ache.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
© Steven Brisson. Do not use without permission.