View allAll Photos Tagged multipleexposure

Flowers at the Tucson Botanical Gardens. Multiple exposure.

Nothing is ever actually still. The very atoms that make up our bodies, indeed, the atoms in every single molecule of anything you care to mention are always vibrating, and each bond between those atoms vibrates at a certain frequency and in a certain direction.

 

Depicted here are the dancing atoms of a lovely pair of heavy horses, who thought they were resting after having a bit of a plough at the Weald and Downland Autumn Show. I suspect that the one on the right has an inkling that everything is not as it seems, whilst the one on the left is thinking about his tea.

 

"It's just not possible", I say, when The Wife asks me to stop fidgeting. "It's a scientific fact that the covalent bonds in organic molecules are not rigid sticks – rather, they behave more like springs. At room temperature, organic molecules are always in motion, as their bonds stretch, bend, and twist... ".

 

She turns, and looks at me over the top of her spectacles.

 

She sniffs, dismissively, and looks away.

 

I attempt to calm my covalent bonds.

 

---

 

15 hand-held exposures representing eleven seconds of October 5th 2019. Taken at the Weald and Downland Autumn Countryside Show.

 

Usual caveats etc.

I caved and did the super touristy thing in Santorini-taking selfies with sunsets. Here's my selfie (I'm the multiple exposure volcano)

 

**All photos are copyrighted. Please don't use without permission**

mehrfachbelichtung auf i phone mot moso app. farblich gestaltet mit pixelmator photo

Please, no graphics, comment codes, etc. in your comments - just your words.

 

Lomography Lomomod No.1, Tri-X exp 11/10

Lab developed

 

This image is protected by copyright and may not be used in any way, for any purpose, without my written permission. Please contact me if you would like to use any of my photos.

 

[24-041-007]

und meiner zeichnung in sonne und schatten. mehrfachbelichtung mit i phone

You are looking toward Seatown and West Bay in Dorset, from a vantage point close to Lyme Regis Museum. Bar the tumbled rocks of the coastal defences (bottom left) this view might be quite similar to that which the dinosaurs most likely ignored way back before they were fossils.

 

“Might be quite similar”. Probably not.

 

I imagine some Dimorphodon, perched on a rock (did pterosaurs perch?) staring out towards the far cliffs, contemplating the beauty in the patterns created by the waves…

 

Could that have happened? Probably not.

 

——

 

The ten exposures (tripod-based this time) do a grand job of showing how the current swerved around the curve of the coast.

Spotmatic, Vivitar 28mm, Fomopan 400, Rodinal 1:100

www.flickr.com/groups/468820@N21/discuss/72157603626302388/

夢(a dream)

weekly photo! 2008☆

#44★

 

Thank you for admin :-D

 

Click on the photo to view it larger.

 

In-camera multiple exposure, of objects inside and outside.

  

A modern interpretation of Alfred Sisley's 1873 classic.

This is my creative interpretation of still life photo of bunch of flowers in a vase

  

Dawn off the coast of Kaikoura and one of the first places in the world to see today's sunrise.

A big thank you to my dear friend Andrew for the inspiration and the know how, to create this three exposure in-camera multiple exposure of St.Kilda.

 

Since then they've become a little bit addictive!

After I made this image, which consists of ten individual exposures, I found myself wondering about the countless billions of creatures that have lived and died in the oceans since life first emerged on Earth. Yes, I am sometimes prone to melancholia, as you may have already noticed.

 

And what conclusion did I draw after all of that wondering?

 

That the sea is full to the brim of ghosts, that’s what.

 

If you look long enough, you can see some of them here…

1 2 3 5 7 ••• 79 80