p.2 #2 · Water , Flowers and Color to Brighten the Day
Fabulous photos in terms of composition and colours. I have experimented with changing the surface tension of water for other experiments, but never for photography.
p.2 #5 · Water , Flowers and Color to Brighten the Day
LordV wrote:
Wonderful stuff
Brian V.
thank you Brian
---------------------------------------------
johnohio wrote:
Classic Birdie !! Always a joy to view A nice change from feathers and fur ( and I love feathers and fur ). Voted
John
Much appreciate the kind words and the vote John, thank you
---------------------------------------------
douter wrote:
You most assuredly saved the best for last, Birdie!
Douglas
Thanks Douglas ! Could not duplicate that if my life depended on it !
---------------------------------------------
Erictator wrote:
When I see a vision like this come to life Birdie, it makes me feel like a caveman making handprints on my cave walls in comparison. You have a gift.
Eric
Oh Eric, you are far to generous with these words !
---------------------------------------------
RustyRus wrote:
Very Cool!!! Nice photos here
Thank you. very much
---------------------------------------------
SoFoFo wrote:
Not only did the colors brighten my day, but also the slump busting advice to do what you love.
You hit a home run here and got my vote. Well done birdied
Thanks so very much ! Glad you liked them.
---------------------------------------------
e6filmuser wrote:
Spectacular and the third one seems to be done in oil paint.
p.2 #13 · Water , Flowers and Color to Brighten the Day
I love how you use a flower(s) as the background in these images that is pretty creative, something more than just documenting what is in front of your camera. Well done.
p.2 #14 · Water , Flowers and Color to Brighten the Day
These are simply incredible! I love the detail.
When you say "I pulled out the water drop kit and macro lens," can you describe what you consider a water drop kit? Or really, what goes into making these photos?
Flat body of water, colorful background, even lighting, I'm assuming. Are these shot with a 100mm f/2.8 macro lens? Camera on a tripod manually prefocused at a certain point, then just shoot a ton of drops? What else am I missing from the process?