View allAll Photos Tagged prismeffect
In this image one can see the prism effect of sunlight passing through raindrops on the glass. The “prism effect”, defined as the "refractive index of many materials (such as glass), varies with the wavelength or color of the light used, a phenomenon known as dispersion. This causes light of different colors to be refracted differently and to leave the prism at different angles, creating an effect similar to a rainbow.” Wikipedia
Vancouver, BC, Canada
This is the rainbow that never was. Refraction via suspended water droplets has produced a prismatic effect, and there's a hint of curvature, too; it soon dissipated. But not before offering up a moment of delicate beauty. From the archives - nine years ago, just down the road from where I live.
Photographed near Val Marie, Saskatchewan (Canada). Don't use this image on websites, blogs, or other media without explicit permission ©2013 James R. Page - all rights reserved.
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Do not download without my permission.
.. part of the fence surrounding the barley field across the road.
Barbed wire and wood on top of stones - that is the old way here of marking boundaries. The weather does take a toll on the wood though!
Shot here with the old Lensbaby Composer Pro in high wind, and bright sunshine.
Happy Fence Friday! 😊
My Fence Friday photos set: Here
Lensbaby "double-glass": Here
Local places of interest: Here
Across the Howe: Here
Storm Amy is headed our way today … so getting online might be difficult. Hopefully the power will remain on … but!!
What I noticed most during my visit to England are the specific chimneys on the lovely houses. Since I didn't have too much time to wander with my camera during the day, I took a couple of dusk and night photos. This one is part of my experimenting with the Cokin filter, and I think it captures the mood of the evening. :)
The best wishes to you and yours for 2021!
Thanks for all your views, comments and favourites, on my pictures. Keep it up in 2021!
cette image un peu "still life" est née...a la terrasse d'un bar, en fin d'après midi, le soleil se focalisant sur les verres...Avec un filtre polarisant, cet instant m'a semblé à retenir avec l'ombre formée !
This image a little "still Life" was born... at the terrace of a bar, in the late afternoon, the sun focusing on the glasses... With a polarizing filter, this moment seemed to me to remember!
My grandpa gave me some Cokin filters he had used in the seventies, and all I needed to do was buy an adapter ring for my lens and start experimenting. This is one of the first images taken with my new-old filter. It feels really amazing to be using the same gadget on my DSLR that my grandpa used on an analogue Praktica PLC2 a long time ago. :)
I used the Cokin multi images filter which creates a prism effect and combined it with a blue filter to achieve the cool tones. Experimenting with Cokin is a lot of fun! :)
Have a nice weekend :)
Small clock in pyramidal marble case photographed on a mirror before a black velvet background. Prism effect by mirror altered the reflected hue...which I kinda like.
Belgrade is one of the rare capitals which lies on two rivers and their Delta - the Sava and the Danube. One of my favorite parts of the city is definitely by the Sava, full of lovely river houses - mostly weekend getaways. You are so close to the city, but you can't feel that here - no cars in sight, just the calm river, greenery and birds chirping. There is an ongoing project, Belgrade Waterfront, which is supposed to enhance Belgrade's access to the rivers, by building skyscrapers at the river banks and demolishing famous charming quarters. For me, this is the real Belgrade waterfront - a relaxation from the city buzz and calm moments in nature.
This image was taken by the Cokin multi-images filter.
This weekend my friend asked me to join her and shoot a couple of pics of her riding. It was really nice since I haven't photographed horses before and wanted to experiment and have fun:) Here I used the cokin filter, but also a longer exposure for motion blur.
A sculpture with real 911s in front of the Porsche Museum in Zuffenhausen, seen through the Cokin filter.
Woodward Park .
Tulsa Oklahoma.
My Day 4-30-2018.
Sony SLT-A77MkII.
Minolta MC Rokkor PF 58mm f1.4.
Manual lens.
Its been a while since I uploaded a dandelion seed-head image, although I’m always messing with them as they are one of my fave close-up photo subjects. .
This one I have processed using filter forge ,as a plug-in to my corel paint-shop program.
I love “filter forge “ . if you've never used it check it out .
They do a free 30 day trial …....it is however massively over priced to buy , if you are not a graphic designer or graphics company ,but just an individual , who like creating images for fun,( in my opinion.)
So if you like the trial they do, but cant afford to buy it then do what I did . Be patient and keep checking their site for one of their special offers that suits your needs ( they run various offers in rotation most of the time ) I bought mine at 75% discount . Which put it down to a price I could afford
( although if id waited a few more days I could have got it 80% discount oh well lololol never mind.... sometimes you win.... sometimes you learn)
it gives you access to thousands of filters , effect, and textures.
The filter I used here was on called “Prism Effect” by inujima
Smiling Star Trail Taken the evening of 9/5/13
The effect is captured with a 3 prism repeat filter. No after effects edited in or out just camera output processed. The lens used was 28-90mm wide angle.
A star trail is a type of photograph that utilizes long-exposure times to capture the apparent motion of stars in the night sky due to the rotation of the Earth. A star trail photograph shows individual stars as streaks across the image, with longer exposures resulting in longer streaks. Typical exposure times for a star trail range from 15 minutes to several hours. This was a 6 hour exposure. About 750 frames were captured to produce the final image.
Taken with a
Canon T2i
F 4.5
47mm
ISO 400
Exposure of 30 seconds
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Do not download without my permission.
[Re-posted on the occasion of belated 'WORLD PHOTOGRAPHY DAY' on 19th August, 2014].
I never thought it would be so amazing and awe inspiring to macrophotograph the rainbow effects of spiderweb. I used my Tamron SP AF 90mm F/2.8 Di macro 1:1 lens, hand held, and it was my lifetime experience with the wondrous macro world. In a dark corner of my garden a cluster of spiderweb got illuminated by a beam of sunlight. And I couldn’t overlook the vibrant colors it created against dark background. As I kept my eyes behind the lens, I saw the web strings, merely few microns in thickness, were vibrating at all possible planes even by mild breeze. I took a series of snaps and it was how they came out……!!
I dedicate this photograph, to all my inspiring flickr friends, and well wishers…with a little poem of mine!!!
When you gave me your inspiration,
I ran miles ahead of time !
When you gave me your torch,
I never saw the darkness behind !
And when you gave me your colors,
I dared to walk on the rainbows !
And I walked on the rainbows !!!
SPIDER WEB FACT:
When natural light passes through almost transparent spider silk, it breaks into constituent wavelengths of visible colors( VIBGYOR ), thus showing a prism effect.
A spider web or cobweb is a device created by a spider out of proteinaceous spider silk extruded from its spinnerets.
"cobweb" is used to describe the tangled three-dimensional web of some spiders of the Therididae family. Whilst this large family is also known as the tangle-web spiders, cobweb spiders or weavers and comb-footed spiders they actually have a huge range of web architectures.
When spiders moved from the water to the land in the Early Devonian period, they started making silk to protect their bodies and their eggs. Spiders gradually started using silk for hunting purposes.
Spiders produce silk from their spinneret glands located at the tip of their abdomen. Each gland produces a thread for a special purpose – for example a trailed safety line, sticky silk for trapping prey or fine silk for wrapping it. Spiders use different gland types to produce different silks, and some spiders are capable of producing up to 8 different silks during their lifetime.
OPTICS
Recently, researchers have used spider web fibers (silk threads) to induce minute disturbances into propagating N-slit interferometric signals, used in optical communications. These optical disturbances are detected in the form of diffraction patterns (Duarte, F.J.; Taylor, T.S.; Black, A.M.; Davenport, W.E.; Varmette, P.G. (2011). "N-slit interferometer for secure free-space optical communications: 527 m intra interferometric path length". J. Opt. 13: 035710. doi:10.1088/2040-8978/13/3/035710.)
(Source: Wikipedia.)
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A refracting/reflecting Fresnel lens, circa 1850, once used in the Montauk Point Lighthouse.
Without numerous vibrancy slides those prisms would be clear glass. The slide really brought out the colors of the late afternoon sunlight hitting the prisms.
HSS!
.....
Nikon D700
24-120 f/3.5-5.6 lens
© alley cat photography - all rights reserved
This came up while I was testing various lenses for flare. Yashica Auto-Yashinon DX 50mm/1.7 (M42) from mid-1960s, on Sony A7R3. "Paradox and contrast, variety and change. History repeats, but it's never the same. We've got this time, we've got this rhythm, until it all comes apart, like light through a prism..." - Bruce Cockburn, from "And we danced".
What happens when the sun sets through a beveled glass door with wrought iron and chandeliers in the way to create some impressions...
Shot with a rebel XT at F5 ISO 800 10 second exposure per frame with a total stack of 480 images. Canon 28-55 Lens had a attached multi-image star prism creating the 3 north star points.
Backyard startrail with a repeating filter
Canon T2i
28-90 mm lens with a spiratone Ser VII repeating filter (prism)
F 4.5
ISO 400
35 seconds
Total of 440 frames
Light reflecting off of vehicles on the street strikes our vintage hall tree mirror upon opening the front door of the house. This is what was projected onto the wall on the opposite side. Flaws in the mirror produced some of the jagged lines and small prism effects.
"Rightward from the famous "only good" photograph of Armstrong on the lunar surface, with the plus-Z (ladder) strut on the left and the jettison bag underneath the LM, between the plus-Z strut and the minus-Y (south) strut."
Above per the ALSJ.
Hi, I'm Karen A. Scofield, this is my work, it is copyrighted -- my photos may not be used in any form without my written permission.
This is actuallly a retake photo of jewelry I made several years ago (and still have; I don't wear it, I just was unable to sell it).
A Karen A. Scofield original. :)
light.ball🌳☀️🔮 📷🌳🌳
getting creative with a glass ball and light… creating a ‘prism 🌈 effect’ with orbs as captured in the photograph.
the glass ball seemingly inverts the surrounding landscape. is that because we are upside down or because a parallel universe is upside down? hmm.. (js)
photo captured out at murrell park on lake grapevine.
📷EXIF
1/800 seconds
f/2.8
ISO 100
14mm
⚙️Gear
Nikon D810
Nikkor 14-24mm (f/2.8)
Lee Filters Polarizer
© Cathy Neth #beEpic
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