View allAll Photos Tagged pipette
When the patient loves his disease,
how unwilling he is to allow
a remedy to be applied
(Pierre Corneille)
Buckhorn Plantain Paint
This local application makes an effective remedy for the treatment of insect bites
Recipe:
100 ml pure Alcohol (pharmaceutical quality)
A handful of Buckhorn Plantain leaves
Leave in a dark pharmaceutical bottle for 3-4 weeks (store in a dark and cool place)
Refill into a little dark dropping or spraying bottle
and apply some drops on and around the bite
Partial Dropping Bottle and Pipette: 1” x 1 ½ “
Taken 06.10.2018 and uploaded for #MacroMondays #Remedy
ƒ/2.8
4.5 mm
1/4 Sec
ISO 500
”A Droplet about falling off the Pipette ….”😄
Size : ½ "x ¼ “ excl. neg. space
[Dedicated to CRA (ILYWAMHASAM)]
Macro taken March 2 and Uploaded for the groups
Macro Mondays #LiquidDroplets
and
😄 Happy Macro Monday 😄
Gigaset GS 290
ƒ/2.0
3.5 mm
1/195Sec
ISO 111
A collection of wine bottles spotted with some sciencey equipment -- pipette, flasks and beakers behind the bottles, with a view of the d'Arenberg vineyard beyond.
Shiny wine tasting glasses with pipette and measuring cylinder seen against background of vineyard outside the window.
I don't know what you are, I don't know what you do... Some serum stuff made by Boots the Chemists. I think it has to be applied to a body part, possibly the face, but I am not sure on that. Anyway, its a white fluid with sparkly bits in it. It comes in a rather small bottle with a dropper, so I suspect it is very potent stuff. Amazing what mysterious stuff you can find in a bathroom.
I decided lit with blue and green against a black backcloth might give it a sinister laboratory feel. Small folding mirror immediately behind the dropper. Whole scene just under 1 inch across and Doctor Jekyl's secret is now out.
The pipette of a bottle of skin serum found in the bathroom cabinet. I secretly hope that it might turn back the clock a bit. It's probably more likely to come across a swarm of flying pigs. Still, I like the look of it in macro and it fits the bill for this week's 'Bathroom' theme.
Not what I had in mind when I started shooting. I used a pipette to make ink droplets, and wanted to write the word "drop" in Braille on a CD. It actually worked, but I rather prefer the blurry version where only the bokeh of those pinpoints of light on the droplets is sharp. But with no drops clearly visible, I had to come up with something else for MM's pool, so for the fun of it, and to get a real drip / droplet, I played around with the ink, inkwell, and the dropper. It was a really shaky affair, because I was kneeling in front of the camera, operating it with my right hand, and holding the pipette / dropper in my left hand to make the droplets / drips. Of about 70 shots only a few turned out fairly sharp ;-). One droplet made with red ink looked like a little face or skull, but I decided on this one, because by pure chance I had hit the shutter button in the exact moment when the droplet / drip started to fall. Those funny blurry lines you can see are ink splashes, I suppose, because I've noticed that the ink splashed around everywhere when I made the drops. I'm glad I had the UV filter attached ;-).
Size of the inkwell's neck: 3 cm / 1,1811 inches
Thank you for your kind comments, I appreciate every single one, and your faves!
A Happy Macro Monday, Everyone!
Meine eigentliche Idee war, das Wort "Drop" in Braille-Schrift auf einer spiegelnden Oberfläche (CD) mit Tintentropfen (mit einer Pipette) zu schreiben. Das klappte auch gut, aber es gefiel mir die unscharfe Variante, bei der nur das Bokeh der Lichtpünktchen auf den Tropfen scharf ist, besser. Aber: keine sichtbaren Tropfen, kein geeigneter Beitrag fürs "Drips, Drops and Splashes" Thema. Also habe ich mit der Pipette und den Tintenfässchen ein bisschen herumprobiert. Eine recht wackelige Angelegenheit, weil ich vor der Kamera kniete und mit der linken Hand die Tröpfchen machte, und so wurden von gut 70 Aufnahmen auch nur wenige scharf ;-). Ein Tropfen sah sogar aus wie ein Gesicht, aber ich habe mich dann für dieses entschieden, weil ich per Zufall just in dem Moment auf den Auslöser drückte, als der Tropfen herunterfiel. Diese hellen Linien sind wohl Tintenspritzer, weil beim Tröpfchenmachen überall kleinste Spritzer herumflogen. Wie gut, dass der UV-Filter immer auf der Linse ist ;-)
Vielen Dank für Eure tollen Kommentare und Faves!
Einen schönen MM und auch sonst Montag für Euch!
Whisky and Water for Macro Mondays theme 'Goes Together Like'.
Although many people prefer to take their whisky 'neat' (without water), there are many more that find the addition of just a few drops (or even just one drop!) of water can have the effect of enhancing the whisky. Too much water (or indeed ice) will dilute the whisky too much. The physical-chemical properties of the whisky surface is altered by the water, resulting in an 'opening up' of the whisky, enabling more subtle and complex notes to come through.
The Scottish Gaelic word for 'whisky' is uisge-beatha, which translates as 'water of life'.
My first ever attempt at doing something like this!
I got myself a cheap glass pipette with a rubber bulb from the chemist, a bit of food die and a pyrex lunch box, and got cracking.
I did use a remote shutter release so that I can time the release of the drops.
The most challenging thing I found is that I couldn't attach the pipette to anything. as it was quite small and delicate, so my hand would move a bit in and out of the focal plane, so it was bad. But I have designed myself a pipette holder now, next time I must be able to consistently get the drops to be in focus.
Disappointingly, not once did the second drop hit the rebound one and cause the mushroom or umbrella to form, but I learnt later that it needs more control than human hands to achieve that.
So, all in all, I'm quite pleased, I think.
Pipette n'était pas un chien comme les autres. Certes, il aimait les longues balades et les caresses derrière les oreilles, mais sa passion, c'était le journal.
Chaque matin, dès les premiers rayons du soleil, il se précipitait vers la porte d'entrée, ses grands yeux brillants fixés sur la boîte aux lettres. Avec une agilité surprenante, il sautait, attrapait le journal du bec et le déposait délicatement aux pieds de son maître.
Ce rituel était devenu une tradition dans la maison. Pipette avait commencé par un simple jeu, apportant des jouets ou des bâtons. Mais très vite, il avait compris que le journal était l'objet qui suscitait le plus de joie chez son maître. Et quel plaisir il prenait à le voir sourire en le voyant arriver avec sa précieuse cargaison !
Les voisins étaient amusés de voir ce chien si dévoué à sa tâche. Certains lui laissaient même de petites friandises en récompense. Pipette était devenu la mascotte du quartier, le petit facteur à quatre pattes qui savait toujours apporter un peu de gaieté.
Un jour, le facteur fut en arrêt de travail. Pipette, inquiet de ne pas voir son ami, se posta devant la boîte aux lettres, l'air pensif. Il semblait comprendre que quelque chose n'allait pas. Mais quand le nouveau facteur arriva, Pipette l'accueillit avec la même joie qu'à l'accoutumée, montrant ainsi que son dévouement ne se limitait pas à une seule personne, mais à la mission qu'il s'était donnée : apporter le journal chaque matin.
Et ainsi, jour après jour, Pipette continuait son travail, apportant non seulement des nouvelles, mais aussi une dose de bonheur et de tendresse à ceux qui l'entouraient.
°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°°
Pipette wasn't like other dogs. Sure, he loved long walks and belly rubs, but his true passion was the newspaper.
Every morning, as soon as the first rays of sunlight peeked through the curtains, he'd race to the front door, his big, bright eyes fixed on the mailbox. With surprising agility, he'd jump, grab the paper in his mouth, and gently drop it at his owner's feet.
This ritual had become a tradition in the household. Pipette had started with simple games, bringing toys or sticks. But he quickly realized that the newspaper was the object that brought his owner the most joy. And what pleasure he took in seeing his human smile when he arrived with his precious cargo!
The neighbors were amused to see such a dedicated dog. Some even left him small treats as a reward. Pipette had become the neighborhood mascot, the little four-legged mailman who always knew how to bring a little cheer.
One day, the human mailman was on sick leave. Pipette, worried about not seeing his friend, stood in front of the mailbox, looking thoughtful. He seemed to understand that something was wrong. But when the new mailman arrived, Pipette greeted him with the same joy as always, showing that his dedication was not limited to one person, but to the mission he had given himself: to bring the newspaper every morning.
And so, day after day, Pipette continued his work, bringing not only news, but also a dose of happiness and tenderness to those around him.
credit : Dog photography Awards - Sophia Hutchinson (photo) et Pdf (texte et traduction)
____________________________________________________PdF________
Softly the silent tears of the faerie cascaded down her cheeks in rivulets before dropping onto the leaf of a rose. Here they pooled until they formed three droplets of different sizes.
The theme for "Smile on Saturday" for the 22nd of July is "three droplets", where three droplets should be captured in the photo – no more and no less. For me, this was much harder than it sounds, for in order to create these three droplets on the back of a fallen rose leaf, I had to spray it with water from a spray bottle. Then I used the tip of a tissue to wipe away all the little droplets until I was left with only three. It was only after I was chatting to a friend on the telephone just after I had taken the photograph that she suggested I should have used an eye dropper to create the droplets! Now why didn’t I think of that? I must confess that I don’t have a pipette or eye dropper in the house, but I could have gone up to the high street pharmacy and bought one! Oh well!
I’m still happy with the outcome using my Württembergische Metallwarenfabrik (WMF) Art Nouveau calling card tray from the first decade of the Twentieth Century. It features a beautiful and sinuous woman standing over it, and it is her face and shoulders that feature in this image. I hope that my efforts were worth it, that you like my image for this week’s theme, and that it makes you smile!
Württembergische Metallwarenfabrik (WMF) was originally called Metallwarenfabrik Straub & Schweizer and was opened as a metal repairing workshop. Through mergers and acquisitions, by 1900 they were the world's largest producer and exporter of household metalware, mainly in the Jugendstil, or Art Nouveau style, designed in the WMF Art Studio under Albert Mayer, sculptor and designer, who was director from 1884 to 1914. In 1880 after Metallwarenfabrik Straub & Schweizer merged with another German company, it was renamed as the Württembergische Metallwarenfabrik. WMF acquired the Polish metalware factory Plewkiewicz in Warsaw in 1886, which then became a subsidiary of WMF around 1900. During this period, the WMF employed over three and a half thousand people. In 1890 they acquired the Kunstanstalt für Galvanoplastik München, which specialized in electrotyping and electroforming of statues and statuettes for buildings, fountains, tombstones, and gardens; this became the Abteilung für Galvanoplastik (Galvanoplastic Division) of WMF. In 1900, WMF acquired Albert Köhler's famous Austrian metalwork company AK & CIE, who produced and distributed WMF items under their mark to the Austro-Hungarian market until about 1914. WMF purchased Orivit AG, a company known for its Jugendstil pewter in 1905, followed a year later by the purchase of the Orion Kunstgewerbliche Metallwarenfabrik, another German metalware company. WMF continued to use the goods from the acquired companies on their own markets, and conversely, they produced and distributed their objects under their acquired companies brands. WMF still exists to this day, and produces mostly stylised cutlery.
Connect with ((Krature)) on primfeed!
New ((Krature)) release at Anthem in their Gatsby round.
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✨ Single pack texture HUDs change pearl color and cigarettes
✨ Fat pack texture HUD changes all the above and the stick color with exclusive textures
✨ All versions have a HUD to change the colors of the ashtray.
✨ 299L single packs
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It's been a while since I uploaded a 'flipped' shot (well, a few days actually) so here's one of the Light Tunnel at Kings Cross Station. I thought it was a suitable Sci-Fi image to celebrate the release of the new Star Wars film........
Definitely somewhere I'd like to return next year to take more shots, I just need to remember how to find it again given we wandered around for a while before stumbling upon it.
Seen in Explore, no.378, 14/12/15.
Click here for more of my 'flipped' images : www.flickr.com/photos/darrellg/albums/72157627889661743
From a Kings Cross Press Release : "A new tunnel, with integrated light wall, opened yesterday at King’s Cross. The 90m long tunnel, which has a LED integrated light-wall running its entire length, was designed by Speirs + Major and delivered by The Light Lab. The tunnel itself has been designed by architects Allies & Morrison and links St Pancras International and King’s Cross St Pancras Underground stations to the new public spaces, restaurants, offices and homes at King’s Cross.
Commuters were treated to something a little different on Monday morning, as the tunnel was open to the public, with commuters able to enjoy the debut light installation called Pipette. The dedicated art work on display was created by Miriam Sleeman (The Cross Kings) and Tom Sloan (Tom Sloan Design) and is designed to evoke the colourful tapestry of King’s Cross through a tranquil yet animated design."
My Website : Twitter : Facebook : Instagram
© D.Godliman
This is a bubble tip anemone from my reef tank. It has split twice since I got it so now I have 3 of them. This is the "mother colony". They are a nice coral to work with but they do require individual feedings regularly in order for them to keep their size. I spot feed these reef roids and frozen omnivore food several times a week. Their tentacles will actually wrap around the pipette during feeding.
I've been uploading Oxford images for a couple of weeks now having been clearing a backlog but for the next few days I thought I'd take a break and add a few images I seem to have passed over earlier in the year, starting with this fisheye shot of the 'Light tunnel' at Kings Cross Station, taken during this years Photo24 event.
Definitely somewhere I'd like to return next year to take more shots, I just need to remember how to find it again given we wandered around for a while before stumbling upon it.
More of my photos from the 24 hour Nikon / Advanced Photographer Magazine event : www.flickr.com/photos/darrellg/sets/72157655092530841
From a Kings Cross Press Release : "A new tunnel, with integrated light wall, opened yesterday at King’s Cross. The 90m long tunnel, which has a LED integrated light-wall running its entire length, was designed by Speirs + Major and delivered by The Light Lab. The tunnel itself has been designed by architects Allies & Morrison and links St Pancras International and King’s Cross St Pancras Underground stations to the new public spaces, restaurants, offices and homes at King’s Cross.
Commuters were treated to something a little different on Monday morning, as the tunnel was open to the public, with commuters able to enjoy the debut light installation called Pipette. The dedicated art work on display was created by Miriam Sleeman (The Cross Kings) and Tom Sloan (Tom Sloan Design) and is designed to evoke the colourful tapestry of King’s Cross through a tranquil yet animated design."
My Website : Twitter : Facebook : Instagram
© D.Godliman
Weekly camera club theme - Real Close Correctly guessed by André De Kesel .
Magnetic goop known as ferrofluid
Ferrofluid: When magnets go nano
For this I used a pipette, ferrofluid , petri dish and lots of paper towels.
Coloured lights.
A ferrofluid is a liquid which becomes highly magnetized in the presence of a magnetic field. The distinctive ‘spikey’ shape of a magnetized ferrofluid is caused by the need to find the most stable shape in order to minimize the total energy of the system, an effect known as the normal-field instability. The fluid is more easily magnetized than the surrounding air, so is drawn out along the magnetic field lines, resulting in the formation of peaks and troughs. However, the extension of the ferrofluid is resisted by gravity and surface tension.
The more complicated explanation is all about nanoparticles. Back in the 1960s, experiments in chemistry showed that ferrofluids could be created and stabilized — a discovery actually made by NASA while searching for ways to control liquid fuel in the weightlessness of space.
Okay, but how does the ferrofluid magically transform into spikes and those crazy hedgehog shapes?
Think of it as a very careful chemical balancing act involving many different forces all hitting a sweet spot. Imagine that you apply a magnetic force to a ferrofluid, say, through a permanent magnet you have lying around
Ref: Tyler Lacoma
Ferrofluids are also the focus of current scientific research and have the potential to be used in many medical applications. In magnetic drug targeting for example, where drugs could be enclosed by ferrofluid and, once injected into the specific body area requiring treatment, a magnetic field could be applied to keep the drugs in this target area. The localization would limit exposure to the rest of the body and enable the dosage level to be decreased, reducing the adverse side effects experienced by the patient
Safety in the use of Ferrofluids and Magnets is recommended.
Do not leave anything else magnetic near your work area and keep mobile phone away
pipettes of lurid colour
bland bands of popcan pallor
in my coldly ichtyous mind
an ample and calorific find
now here i repose at sea improper
a red snapper come a cropper
(from: Ditties and Doggerels by FF Whitamore)
Bought a pipette, finally... :-)
The drops are water, colored with food dye. Lense used: 50 mm f/1.4 with spacer rings.
Thanks for making this Flickr Explore #311!
EXIF data | Tutorial for this image | Brother of this image | facebook | twitter
These are two splashes coming out of one pipette! Looks like two brothers! Whoa!! =D
The red color is because i put a red paper under the transparent tank... no photoshop!
I don't know why, but I have a Coca-Cola feeling when I look on this image! LOL
Strobist info: Canon Speedlite 550EX from the front.
Have a nice day!
#4 on Explore 24th March and appeared on Explore Page, Thank You
Use this image without my permission is illegal, please contact me before!
Please do not post any badges and invitation pictures into your comments, your words are much for me... Thanks
impressions @ Witches' Kitchen
Full handmade! Left hand pipette with ink, right hand remote shutter release. No trigger shit. Just quick reaction and lots of attempts! ;-)
Voigtländer 90 mm F3,5 Apo-Lanthar SLII, METZ Mecablitz 48 AF-1
More Splishsplash and other gimmicks in album "FLUID"
A shot from my first visit to the 'light tunnel' between Kings Cross and St. Pancras Stations. It's not very easy to find but well worth seeking out.
Click here for more colourful shot : www.flickr.com/photos/darrellg/albums/72157603588716047
From a Kings Cross Press Release : "A new tunnel, with integrated light wall, opened yesterday at King’s Cross. The 90m long tunnel, which has a LED integrated light-wall running its entire length, was designed by Speirs + Major and delivered by The Light Lab. The tunnel itself has been designed by architects Allies & Morrison and links St Pancras International and King’s Cross St Pancras Underground stations to the new public spaces, restaurants, offices and homes at King’s Cross.
Commuters were treated to something a little different on Monday morning, as the tunnel was open to the public, with commuters able to enjoy the debut light installation called Pipette. The dedicated art work on display was created by Miriam Sleeman (The Cross Kings) and Tom Sloan (Tom Sloan Design) and is designed to evoke the colourful tapestry of King’s Cross through a tranquil yet animated design."
My Website : Twitter : Facebook : Instagram : Photocrowd
© D.Godliman
This huge iron pipe has been hanging around the railyard in Milpitas, California for at least a dozen years, giving me lots and lots of photo ops since 2011.
Here, just a couple of years ago, I have finally managed to capture it in the act of giving birth to baby pipes (pipettes). A joyous occasion.
I need to get back out there and check on the growing family.
This was a small home project. Actually it is a cup full of M&Ms and I put a glass plate on top of it and placed some drops with a pipette. Will upload another version where the focus is the drop and not the reflection WITHIN the drop. Hope you enjoy it! :)
The #MacroMondays #TheBlues theme
A small uplit glass of water in a darkened room with blue dye added by a pipette
A shot from my 2nd visit to the 'light tunnel' between Kings Cross and St. Pancras Stations. Actually finding it was a bit easier this time.......
Click here to put a bit more colour in your life : www.flickr.com/photos/darrellg/albums/72157603588716047
From a Kings Cross Press Release : "A new tunnel, with integrated light wall, opened yesterday at King’s Cross. The 90m long tunnel, which has a LED integrated light-wall running its entire length, was designed by Speirs + Major and delivered by The Light Lab. The tunnel itself has been designed by architects Allies & Morrison and links St Pancras International and King’s Cross St Pancras Underground stations to the new public spaces, restaurants, offices and homes at King’s Cross.
Commuters were treated to something a little different on Monday morning, as the tunnel was open to the public, with commuters able to enjoy the debut light installation called Pipette. The dedicated art work on display was created by Miriam Sleeman (The Cross Kings) and Tom Sloan (Tom Sloan Design) and is designed to evoke the colourful tapestry of King’s Cross through a tranquil yet animated design."
My Website : Twitter : Facebook : Instagram : Photocrowd
© D.Godliman
"....In flight it lunges slowly
as if it were not meant
to be airborne, its legs
tight outriggers, mouthpiece
a curved pipette
drawing and discharging
the gray-blue sky...." John Kinsella
Ibis: any of about 26 species of medium-sized wading birds constituting the subfamily Threskiornithinae of the family Threskiornithidae (order Ciconiiformes), which also includes the spoonbills. Ibises range in length from about 55 to 75 cm (22 to 30 inches). They occur in all warm regions except on South Pacific islands. They wade in shallow lagoons, lakes, bays, and marshes and use their slender, down-curved bills to feed on small fishes and soft mollusks. They They fly with neck and legs extended, alternately flapping and sailing. Ibises usually breed in vast colonies, building compact stick nests low in bushes or trees and laying three to five eggs, usually dull white or mottled with brown.
Glass pipettes for sale at flea market in Rowley, MA.
Please do not use any images on my photostream (save for those with a clear Creative Commons license) without my permission. For more information on using my images, please see my profile page.
...just your standard molded, plastic, sterile, disposable 1-0.2 ml pipette tips, racked and ready to go...
136 / 366
Storm in a Gin Glass
Injected blue paint and milk into a glass of water, using a pipette, to try and capture some cool effects. This was my favourite. Lit from behind through a diffused sheet.
This is the amazing LED light tunnel, which links St Pancras International and the Underground to London King's Cross Station. The installation is called Pipette, is 90 metres long and is one of Europe’s longest light walls. The LED lights can emanate the full RGB spectrum. The effect is a subtle and beautiful moving light show. Unfortunately, I only saw the day time effect, but I would love to return to see the full evening display.
marketplace.secondlife.com/p/SO-HIGH-SUNTROY-SOFT-DRINKS-...
Country of Origin: Japan
Alcohol content: 3%
"Horoyo," 12 types of assorted drinks.
Comes with Pipette and Drinks Texture Change HUD seperately. Enjoy
Caution : Persons below legal limits years of age are legally prohibited from purchasing and consuming alcoholic beverages.
"The walls we build around us to keep sadness out also keeps out the joy."
Today I have bought a pipette to experiment with water drops in macro photography. It is great how such a small piece can add a complete other dynamic and mood to a photo.
Visit www.hatcatphotography.com for my portfolio