View allAll Photos Tagged soaps
One of my soap films (taken with the new camera) which has appeared on a few websites and newspapers this week including the Daily Mail, London Metro, Yahoo News and The Daily Record (see in the Comments below for some of the links)
The inner circle which I use for these photos measures 18mm. This latest series of shots are of tiny areas within that ring.
This bubble was hanging on for dear life from the soap dispenser. The least I could do was shoot it.
My passion for opal stones has made these soap bubbles irresistible to me.
This is one of the cheapest projects I have ever done, a little water, washing up liquid and glycerin. Add to that a flash gun, a round diffuser and some black cloth then snap away. You don't even need a macro lens, your kit lens will do. For further information go to www.digital-photography-school.com/how-photograph-sheer-b.... and join the addiction.
First time I've tried using Zubbles - I bought some in blue recently as I wondered if they've give a different effect under a macro lens. The mixture is extremely thin and watery and starts off with brilliant colours which unfortunately only last for a few seconds.
I used my usual tiny frame (a child's 'bubble wand'). The diameter of the inner circle (which contains the soap) measures 18mm. There is another shots in the Comments.
The patterns and colours are natural apart from being brightened in Photoshop - and I have removed the outer, ugly, plastic frame too (very little of it was showing up anyway) and the dark bubbles at the bottom.
For anyone interested in this type of photography, please feel free to join the Soap Films group and add some photos!
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You can also find me on:
RedBubble / Twitter / Qype / Firth of Clyde / Around Scotland
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Nasty caked clump of soap. Needed to use knife to pry it out. This is a semi-new dishwasher...semi-about to meet its Maker after the Hammer, dishwasher!
Sometimes color can be very well hidden and need a bit of effort make them to pop put. Under the right light also a "common" soap bubble can show all the color of the rainbow.
One of my soap films (taken with the new camera) which has appeared on a few websites and newspapers this week including the Daily Mail, London Metro, Yahoo News and The Daily Record (see in the Comments below for some of the links)
The inner circle which I use for these photos measures 18mm. This latest series of shots are of tiny areas within that ring.
One of my soap films (taken with the new camera) which has appeared on a few websites and newspapers this week including the Daily Mail, London Metro, Yahoo News and The Daily Record (see in the Comments below for some of the links)
The inner circle which I use for these photos measures 18mm. This latest series of shots are of tiny areas within that ring.
For Utata's Iron Photographer 121 the elements are as follows:
1 - soap
2 - something sharp
3 - lighted by a flashlight
Another of the shots from the other night. I used my usual tiny frame (a child's 'bubble wand'); the diameter of the circle measures 18mm.
The patterns and colours are natural apart from being brightened in Photoshop and the ugly plastic outer ring removed..
For anyone interested in this type of photography, please feel free to join the Soap Films group and add some photos!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
You can also find me on:
RedBubble / My Husband's Photostream / Twitter / Qype / Firth of Clyde / Around Scotland
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The 2022 Soap Box Derby in Columbia, Missouri. Photography by Notley Hawkins. Taken with a Canon EOS R5 camera with a Canon RF24-70mm F2.8 L IS USM lens at ƒ/5.0 with a 1/50-second exposure at ISO 400. Processed with Adobe Lightroom CC.
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©Notley Hawkins. All rights reserved.
My passion for opal stones has made these soap bubbles irresistible to me.
This is one of the cheapest projects I have ever done, a little water, washing up liquid and glycerin. Add to that a flash gun, a round diffuser and some black cloth then snap away. You don't even need a macro lens, your kit lens will do. For further information go to www.digital-photography-school.com/how-photograph-sheer-b.... and join the addiction.
This one, and two in the Comments, were left over from the other night. I wasn't going to include them but here they are anyway! ;-)
(Colours and patterns arising naturally from the interference of reflected light rays from the front and rear surface of a thin film of water and soap held in a tiny frame - a 'bubble wand'. The inner circle which I use for these photos measures 18mm. These shots are of tiny areas within that ring)
If it is cold enough, a soap bubble freezes within a few seconds. Adding some sugar to the dish soap helps to create the beautiful crystal pattern.
My previous photo shows the same bubble a few seconds earlier:
Several months ago, Matt and Sophie gave me a lovely soap made by Lush! In it's original form it's like a multicoloured sausage and you use it either as soap or shampoo - however you desire! But I found that once it's in a steamy bathroom it just kinda melts!! I put it in this old bath-shaped soapdish, but in the end had to put it in a large container cos it went everywhere!! This is my favourite Lush product - all gone now cos it's so versatile! Here's a lovely description of it from the Lush USA website:
"Our biggest Fun bar means you can see double (or triple or quadruple) rainbows without waiting for the rain to end. Turn these seven colors into anything you like, admire your handiwork and then when it's time to clean up, lime and grapefruit oils will help cleanse skin, while vanilla soothes and softens."
Colours and patterns arising from the interference of reflected light rays on a thin film of water and soap held in a tiny frame (a 'bubble wand'). The inner circle which I use for these photos measures 18mm. I removed the ugly plastic surround to the ring in Photoshop and the colours are slightly brightened - otherwise the soap film is entirely natural.
One from this afternoon, using some fabric conditioner this time (Co-operative 'Pure and Gentle' brand!) which gave a completely different effect from the soap I used yesterday.
Sony Alpha 100 SDLR camera with Cosina Macro 100mm lens; 1/125 sec at f/11 (ISO 200). No flash - lit by an office type angle-poised lamp.
Anyone interested in this type of photography, please feel free to join the Soap Films group (link below) and add some photos soon!