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Thursday, March 18, 2010
Wednesday, March 17, 2010
Stunning High-Speed Liquid Photography!
Stunning High-Speed Liquid Photography!
Liquid Art & droplet photography
It takes great skill (and good high speed photography equipment) to create such frozen-in-time compositions, revealing the inherent energy, the dynamics of flowing water and the beauty of it all! Some artists substitute water with more viscous liquids, producing even more lava-lamp-like effects. But often just playing with coloring and light is enough to make an effective picture. In this article, we will try to cover a large variety of stunning high-speed liquid photography.
Luiz Luxvich makes startlingly clear images of splashing water
This master from Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, has a good presence on flickr, so make sure to check out the rest of his colorful creations.
(images credit: Luiz
Luxvich)
Amazingly, water looks simply great without any added coloring, like in these shots from the French photographer:
Liquid Sculptures of Martin Waugh
Martin Waugh at
Liquid Sculpture is perhaps the most famous
artist in this "sub-genre". His works are described as full of "fun, whimsy and wonder". The full gallery is
here, and it is exceptional.
Water Kiss!
Not mercury, not ice - just water... splendid water:
Woke up one morning, saw this thing crawling toward me across the sink... decided to go to sleep some more -
Suspended...
(images credit: Irene Muller)
For more great examples of colored drops high-speed photography we're going to recommend this flickr
group. The following photographs, though, we've received without any credit, so please let us know if you recognize them:
Monday, March 15, 2010
Deepest Part of the Ocean
The Mariana Trench is located in the Pacific Ocean, just east of the 14 Mariana Islands (11″21′ North latitude and 142″ 12′ East longitude ) near Japan. As you probably already know, it is the deepest part of the earth’s oceans, and the deepest location of the earth itself. It was created by ocean-to-ocean subduction, a phenomena in which a plate topped by oceanic crust is subducted beneath another plate topped by oceanic crust. Fact-The Amazing Creatures: |