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Artist: Rui Sasaki - Liquid An magical experience

Vitruvius illuminated by a UV flashlight.

Playing with UV and finding a tiny moth lurking in the carpet.

Early days, more UV light experimenting to be done.

An UVIVF (Ultraviolet-induced visible fluorescence) Macro photograph of the business end of a Centipede (fluorescing under 365nm UV light).

 

Ultraviolet means: "Beyond Violet", and refers to the beginning of the shorter (more energetic) Wavelengths of the Electromagnetic Spectrum of light. Beyond Ultraviolet lies X-Ray and Gamma Ray.

 

365nm UV Lighting System:

Adaptalux IR Modular Macro Lighting System.

Photographed in a Godox Lighting Tent, to ensure that all external light was blocked.

 

Martin

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Snowdrops gather remaining ultra-violet light and glow in the gloaming. For ODC, Twilight

Picture taken by the artist who painted these dolls: Puppit Productions.

While the crew set up, Emmet couldn’t resist seeing how his uniform fluoresced in the black light.

UV-light-flash Broncolor

 

f10 − 1/160 - ISO100 - UV Broncolor Flash - Nikon D800 - Carl Zeiss 50mm ZF1.4 Planar T

Opisthacanthus cfr asper, Scorpion

 

Kruger NP, South Africa

A moth caterpillar cocoon I think. Some moth caterpillars incorporate their stinging hairs into the cocoon for protection.

Tortoise beetle mother displaying parental care of larvae. She will defend the vulnerable larvae from potential parasitoids and predators all whilst herding them from leaf to leaf, which they consume with ever-growing appetites. Photo under UV light from Santa Marta region, Colombian Caribbean.

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EE Legend

-Health injury/stress levels (scale 1-10-->☠️)

👣-Translocation

⏳-time in captivity

📷 -in situ

-studio

🎨 -Use of cloning or extensive post processing

↺ -Image rotation

🎼 -Playback

Spring Polaroid week 2019

Last day - first entry

 

Using UV, invisible light that only the PO B&W film can see. I told her to think about a secret, something she would like to hide

UV light photoshoot with UV sensitive makeup.

UV-induced fluorescence of Yellow Archangel Lamium (Lamiastrum) galeobdolon; Lamiaceae.

 

Nikon D200, UV-Nikkor 105mm f/4.5 lens + extension, UV 365nm torch

The photo challenge of week 46 was REFRACTION. I tried some ideas with glasses filled with water and also with a lens ball. This one worked out best! I used UV light to get a special result. It was nice, but in Black and White it worked best.

 

When making this photo with UV light I saw the glasses I was not using at the moment, just outside the photo and they also looked nice. So I also made a dark photo of some glasses with. No refraction, but still a nice photo! Also in Black and White.

 

Group: 52 Weeks: The 2021 Edition

 

Weekly Theme: Week 46 Refraction

 

Title: Refraction

Experimenting with UV lights and different plants in my backyard at night. It's fascinating how some plants glow when exposed to UV light.

 

© COLIN MCCLEAVE

Photo from Nyungwe national park, Rwanda.

Dobles is an attempt of making portraits that show more than one layer.

 

Emulsion lift of color Impossible Project film on expired Polaroid 600 exposed with black light

  

www.urizen.es

cyanotype + coffee toning

Mioacris robusta, female ovipositing, under ultraviolet light. Sarawak, Malaysia (Borneo).

Model :Fotini Stavropoulou

Body painting : Anna Varia

UV light photoshoot with UV sensitive makeup.

Aloe vera in UV light

So there I was at a rural railway station waiting for my train onward. My pastime in such circumstances is to inspect the rail emplacements, those great habitats for wild plants and flowers that love derelict lots, sandy and stony environments.

Here's pretty Jasione montana, Blue Bonnets. The generic name is usually said to derive from Greek words having something to do with medicine, or from Jasio, the Divine Farmer, consort in Greek mythology of Ceres, the Goddess of Agricultural Plenty. Also, ἰασιώνη (=iasione) was used by Theophrastus and Roman Pliny for Bindweed (Convolvulus sepium), that pretty all-white Hedgeclimber. Ah! the fun of derivations and etymology...

I'm a bit sceptical and think more plausible the view of the Encyclopaedia Londinensis of 1811 that the name derives from two other Greek words: ἴον / ἴα, for violet, and σιός, a form of the word for God, latinised together to 'Jasione'. Thus: Divine Blue or Violet! That derivation at least would distinguish it etymologically from the name for a white flower, Bindweed.

Apparently our Very Blue flower is visible under UV-light, and this may make them more attractive to insects. I, however, saw no insects on them, and then the train began to rumble in the distance...

  

Escorpión Tityus emitiendo fluorescencia con luz UV o negra.

Scorpion Tityus fluoresce under uv or black light.

 

2015 © Jaime Culebras

Urodacus manicatus or Black rock scorpion under UV light, NSW Australia. 38 x shot focus stack with Canon 5Dsr and EF 50 F 1.8 ii on macro tubes.

UV light, shot in the israeli Negev Desert at night

Another from the light party, with UV lights and paints, using a long exposure in the low light.

A stopper from 'Depression Glass' that used Uranium Dioxide to give the glass a green colour. Photographed using UV light which causes the Uranium Dioxide to fluoresce. It might fit a few themes from the year but I went for 'In The Mirror'.

Close-up of the head of a Xystocheir dissecta millipede. Illuminated by ultraviolet light, the animal's exoskeleton glows blue-green.

 

The picture is a focus stack with 150 slices. The field of view is 9 mm by 12 mm (0.35" by 0.47").

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