View allAll Photos Tagged refraction
Got to this one a bit late and only had a few shots at it before the sun went out (down).
I'll get a better one next time - maybe with some garden details.
'Sun and Refraction' On Black is so much better.
SOOC, no crop.
Please, no multi-group invites and graphic in comments! Thank you!
© All rights reserved
Please do not use this image without my permission!
© All rights reserved
aug.09 / Mariastein Kloster -switzerland.
783 / 81 / 314 / 1 gallery
macro /crop from a spiderweb dew in a tuja hedge.
~ love to share with you a r e f r a c t i o n i just saw in one of my fotos~
enjoy these glistening diamonds with me !
Refraction: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Refraction
happy tuesday for every one of you.
thanks for your faves, comments,invites and awards.
In the Valley of the Ten Peaks, the gorgeous turquoise waters of Moraine Lake display their incredible blue hues from the refraction of light on rock flour; silt that has eroded from the nearby glaciers.
This is a combination of a crystal glass bowl full of colourful glass beads illuminated from below. A glass containing water and cooking oil was placed on top of the glass beads with the camera lens positioned inside the glass to take a 1:1 macro shot.
** As ever dear Admin/Mods CrAzY Tuesday group: If this photo is not remotely acceptable even if viewed from a very high altitude with the wind blowing from the North I fully and completely agree not to enter into any complaint whatsoever either written, verbal, in-person, in-dreams or in any way that might result in causing unwanted stress to yourselves or family pets :)
1:1 Macro
Canon PowerShot SX430 IS
f/4
1/50
4.3 mm
ISO 100
Dedicated to RHC (ILYWAMHASAM)
Happy Crazy Tuesday!
There seems to be some wish to see it the other way up. Personally I don't really think it works. The point is that it is a refraction and so upside down, and one gets away with imperfections. This one is definitely not perfect enough.
BUT -- for those that insist --- farm1.static.flickr.com/165/349177838_f1e38c2d16.jpg
Or larger -- farm1.static.flickr.com/165/349177838_f1e38c2d16_o.jpg
CC December Rainbow Game - Purple
I originally shot this for Macro Mondays group, but I can't guarantee the negative space meets the size restrictions.
Abstract refraction of the Oculus train station reflecting off the Millennium Hotel in downtown Manahattan.
____________________________________________
allen Besuchern und Freunden meines Fotostreams ein herzliches Dankeschön für eure Kommentare und Kritiken, Einladungen und Favoriten.
all visitors and friends of my photostream, a heartfelt thank you for your comments and reviews, invitations and favorite
I grow these flowering plants, so much fun to have outside in the summer months! Reminds me of the tropical Islands!
After the heavy rain, drops were everywhere on the petals. Just a matter of getting focus with an interesting background!
Some benefits of cold weather... I really liked the fact that the angle of this shot allowed for refraction of both the light background and the blue sky above.
I have seen so many fantastic refraction shots here on flickr I though I would give it a try, took so many shots from different angles and to be honest I failed miserably, but after all the time i put into trying to get a Refraction shot thought I would post the best of the bad batch LOL
Sorry posting and running, will be back to catch up on your streams this evening
better on B l a c k M a g i c
A real gem in the night sky, this globular star cluster is M13 (13th entry in Charles Messier's catalogue of deep sky objects), the Great Hercules Cluster in the northern hemisphere sky. It is visible to the naked eye as a fuzzy patch of light under a clear, dark sky. Located about 25,000 light-years away from Earth, this globular cluster is made up of several hundred thousand stars and occupies a region of space that measures around 150 light-years in diameter. The stars of M13 are about 12 billion years old, an age comparable to the age of the Universe itself (about 13.7 billion years).
Look at it with a small telescope and the view is filled with countless sparkling stars. With larger telescopes and in deep exposures the tremendous number of stars becomes evident. One can only imagine the view from a hypothetical planet around a star close to the center of M13, a night sky filled with thousands of stars brighter than the brightest stars in our own night sky.
The faint 12th-magnitude galaxy NGC 6207 can be seen below and to the left of M13. It is a spiral galaxy located about 40 million light years away that appears by chance close to M13. Between M13 and NGC 6207 lies another smaller and fainter galaxy - IC 4617, which is more than 10 times farther away than NGC 6207. Can you spot it?
Telescope: Orion EON ED 80/500 refractor
Mount: Modified Vixen Sphinx (NexSXW)
Camera: Canon EOS 20Da
Light frames: 28 x 3 minutes (total: 84 minutes), ISO 1600, Daylight WB, calibrated with darks
Guiding: Skywatcher 80/400 refractor, Skywatcher Synguider autoguider
Date & Location: 3/5/2019 - Chalkidiki, Greece
Processing: DSS 4.1.1, Adobe Photoshop CS6 with Astronomy Tools Actions Set (spikes added to the brightest stars)