Saturday, January 31, 2009

Coriander Seed Balloon Ascension



I love how this looks like a balloon ascension, from below, just after the children have released their balloons to the sky.

These coriander seeds were so much more beautiful than I had expected them to be. With the gentle wavy fluting around each seed, their detail is delicate and subtle.

I think the alterations I made to my lighting setup for this shot helped to really make this photo stand out too. In this photo, and some others I will post soon, I have a light source above and below the subject, and catch a bounce off some side reflectors as well. The amount and quality of light in a photo tends to determine its success, often much more than framing, composition, color, focus, etc.

In this case, it definitely worked out well, I think.

Send me your suggestions for something tiny that you'd like to see big.

Monday, January 26, 2009

I Eye Captain.



So this one is kinda creepy, I know. Yes, it's my eye.

This is actually the third macro shoot I've done to try and get a good photo of an iris. There are all sorts of neat little folds and details in that muscle that makes up the iris, I wanted to capture it. This picture turned out to be more about the reflections and the overall eye instead.

I've shot my own eye twice, and once Sarah volunteered. But she didn't care much for the claustrophobia-inducing closeness of the lens, and it was a quick shoot. I will try to bribe her to do it again, because I saw something really interesting in the differences between our irises.

Besides the basic color differences (me brown, her green), my irises as you can see above, sort of look like thick dough. Alternately, Sarah's green irises looked like thousands of wavy green threads arranged radially. The difference is very interesting. I'll post a comparison in the future.

In other eye trivia, the eye's lens is the only place on our bodies which is not oxygenated by blood, rather, it gets oxygen directly from the air. Contact lenses have micro perforations in them that allow the air to still contact enough of the eye to keep it healthy. This is one reason why cleaning your contacts is important, to keep those tiny holes from clogging up.

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Friday, January 23, 2009

A Forest of Toothbrush Bristles



Toothbrush bristles, looking like otherworldly bottom-of-the-sea creatures that feast on plaque.

The white cruddy stuff on the tips of the bristles is dried toothpaste. That's what I'm telling myself. Come on, I can't post a clean, fresh, new toothbrush... a used one is so much more fun.

I haven't looked at other toothbrushes, but I would imagine that they too have rounded bristle ends, for comfort. These look rubbery and thick in the photo, but I assure you that these are the standard, regular old thin plasticky bristles just like on your toothbrush.

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Wednesday, January 21, 2009

Balls of Steel: tiny, but still imposing



The ball of a ball whisk. The dealeos at the end of a thing like this.

I don't know what kind of specialized mixing and whisking this type of whisk is used for. I have scrambled eggs and whisked hollandaise with this whisk. I imagine it's good for things that need connective blobs squished apart (like eggs), and the inertial velocity of the metal balls helps break that up?

I am particularly surprised at the detail of the scratches all along the surface of this subject. And the chasms and deformations, stained with either old food particles or rust... I swear it looks clean and gleaming and sanitary from a normal perspective. But close up, this approximately 5mm steel ball looks like something out of The Running Man.

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Monday, January 19, 2009

Ice Flows, or Maybe Not



Time for another ice photo. I know Sarah (my wife) is tired of these, but it's because she's been seeing them for years. So I discount her opinion on the ice photos as biased.

I was intrigued by the way this one turned out, as it looks like bubbles being poured from a very transparent pitcher. In fact, these bubbles were trapped in the ice in that formation making them appear to be in motion. This is one of the reasons I love shooting the ice, these photos can reveal something sculptural and familiar (christmas ornaments, chandeliers, a sunrise, insect eggs, etc.) among the abstract patterns and random currents of the freezing ice.

I'll post one that looks like fish swimming upstream sometime soon, for all you ice fans out there.

Send me your suggestions for something tiny that you'd like to see big.

Sunday, January 18, 2009

Dried Bay Leaves, in need of anti-aging cream



In keeping with the spices and seasonings theme, here is a photo of the underside of a dried bay leaf. I hadn't expected so much detail to be visible, and I'm quite impressed by what we can see at this level of magnification.

You can see an enlarged section of the bay leaf below. This is blown up to almost a 1:1 pixel ratio to what was captured by the camera. See what I mean about sharp lines being nonexistant in the tiny world?

I've figured out my magnification level, in case anyone was interested. My hacked-together lens setup is getting me roughly 6x magnification from what we see with our eyes. Now, keep in mind, that number is related to the sensor size in my camera, meaning that the lenses are enlarging the subject 6x from reality and that is the image I snap with my camera. So the 800 pixel wide images you see here in my blog (the enlargement directly above not included) at roughly 175mm (depending on your computer's display) are about 8x the size of my camera sensor.

This puts the true enlargement of my photos here on the MorningMacro at 19.4x the size they are in real life.

Send me your suggestions for something tiny that you'd like to see big.

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Liquid Crystal Displays, up close and personal



I had shot the LCD on my laptop (above) to see what the pixels look like. As expected, each pixel on your and my display are composed of three components, a red, a green and a blue, which together make white (when all are on), black (when all are off) and every color in between (at least to the human eye). You can also see how dirty my screen is. Gotta clean that.

To my surprise, the components that make up each pixel are vertical rectangles, as you can see. I don't know much about LCD pixel configurations, but I was also intrigued by the way each pixel component appeared to be comprised of a long piece and a short piece. This could simply be a visual affect of some sort of circuit overlay that makes them appear to be two pieces. They also have very real little shapes, with an angled corner. Interesting.

Curious, I took some shots of other LCDs around. Below is a closeup of the display on the back of a pocket digital snapshot camera. You can see the pixels are smaller, and more square, though they still appear to be segmented in some way. You can also see that the designers of this display below weren't as concerned with the "squareness" of the visual pixel created by the combination of the three colored components. The red, green, and blue together make a long rectangular pixel rather than a square one. Also in this example, there is evidence of some visual distortion due to the anti-glare coating on the screen, which was not present on the laptop example above.


In the next example below, I've shot the pixels of our LCD TV, which you can see are much larger (detail isn't as important on a TV since you sit further away) sending much brighter light out to the viewers than the smaller pixels do. You can also see that the these big honkin' pixel elements are "divided" in halves, though again this could be a visual effect of having some sort of circuit overlaid on the pixels.

Also, the anti-glare coating distortion is much more prominent on this example than on the previous one. The distortion looks oddly similar to compression artifacts or distortion induced from extreme up-sampling of an image (which this is not). But I assure you, this was absolutely in focus, and you are seeing the image as untainted by post-processing as possible. All three of these LCD pixel images are the same aspect ratio and crop factor, meaning they haven't been changed in size relative to eachother in any way.

Now I expect all three of my readers will be squinting at every display around them for the next few days, trying to see what's in there.


Send me your suggestions for something tiny that you'd like to see big.

Wednesday, January 14, 2009

Superpost: 6 Seasons in Macro



I've shot some spices and seasonings to compare their makeup. It's interesting seeing differences that aren't immediately apparent with the naked eye. For instance, the pepper above is gnarly and big. Being a dried berry of the pepper plant, it's skin is similar to that of the dried wrinkly berry from the previous post. Though smaller, blacker, and crispier.

Below is a look at more seasonings. See how the sugar and the salt are composed of completely different kinds of crystals? The sugar crystals are prism-like and often well formed little geometric shapes. Whereas the salt is sort of chippy, like chipped ice or something. Try rubbing the two between your fingers separately, and see if you can feel the difference in their structures. The sugar may feel more rolling, and the salt may feel more slippy, like all those tiny plates sliding against eachother. The difference is very subtle with such small forms, however.

I've also posted a shot of cinnamon, which, according to this report, is one of the 10 best foods for your health that you're not eating. I, of course, am eating it because it's freaking delicious on toast. Just not every day.

Also further below are red pepper (ground cayenne) and crowd-pleasing curry.











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Monday, January 12, 2009

When planet-sized dried berries attack



This photo is from the same bunch of berries you saw in the January 5 post, "Dried Berries." You can see the effect of stacking my lenses and combining them with the macro filter on my camera, which I mentioned last post.

This berry looks like a planet compared to the previous berry post where the bunch resembles, well, red meatballs. The dust (those little hairy things) is even more apparent in this shot than the previous one. I've found shooting tiny stuff that there is dust absolutely everywhere. It sometimes takes a little more work than you expected to get a clean shot with no dust.

I've read that dust is made up of clothing and furniture fibers, dead skin cells (we shed them like snakeskins in a wood chipper) and insect parts. Fly eyes, dead mites, etc... Apparently pillows double their volume of dust mites every year. I might have made that up.

Send me your suggestions for something tiny that you'd like to see big.

Mimi's wool winter cap



Today, I adapted my lens by "stacking" another lens with it in order to gain greater magnification. This is the result.

I had been capturing an area about 22mm wide with my previous setup. Now I'm getting about 8-9mm (with a little cropping due to an unfortunate vignette effect).

This is a shot of the fibers of Mimi's winter cap up close. I think that large white line is a dog hair, courtesy of Dash. What you find as you look at smaller and smaller things, is that there are no sharp and hard lines. Everything is a rounded edge at some lower limit, and it sometimes makes for difficult edge clarity in a shot like this.

These fibers appear to be oval, and semi-translucent, making them show up less sharp than I would like. Though this could also be an undesirable effect of my stacked lens which would not be present in a far better lens.

EDIT: OK, so I have an edit to this one. Not only was I wrong about the material (it's acrylic), but I was wrong about its ownership (it's Violet's). The hat, however, is still actually blue-green.

Send me your suggestions for something tiny that you'd like to see big.

Friday, January 9, 2009

Streaming tap water, captured in high-speed



Another type of photography that fascinates me (there are so many!) is high-speed photography. In this case, I've shot a macro semi-high-speed photo of water streaming out of the tap.

What I found with this shot was how the stream of water was completely filled with bubbles. And it seems like such a strange idea that water moving so fast from the tap could be so filled with bubbles. And they look so big too! So diamond-like and sparkly.

If I didn't know what this was, I would never have guessed that it's simply tap water.

Send me your suggestions for something tiny that you'd like to see big.

Wednesday, January 7, 2009

More Ice Bubble Ornaments



This is one of the earlier ice photos that really inspired me to explore tiny things more and in greater detail. I found these bubbles and reflections so abstract and beautiful, I couldn't stop looking through what I'd captured.

I love the geometric light reflections in this shot, and the ridiculously ornamental bubbles (only a millimeter or less each) were fascinating in all their bizarre organic shapes.

Send me your suggestions for something tiny that you'd like to see big.

Monday, January 5, 2009

Dried Berries



As we're packing up the Christmas decorations, I noticed how dry the branches of berries had become. Some of them dried back to a reddish-brown. Others, like these, dried a bright red.

I like the intricate wrinkling of the berry skin that developed as the moisture receded from the berry's innards.

Send me your suggestions for something tiny that you'd like to see big.

Saturday, January 3, 2009

Giant Sucking Sound



Mimi wanted to see her straw up close, so I shot this while she was eating. I think it's kind of abstract and modern in a way. My composition could have been better, I wasn't thinking about that at all when I shot the image.

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Friday, January 2, 2009

Goodbye Christmas



Putting away Christmas decorations, I took a couple parting shots of details on our items. These are the tiny clear beads which are adhered to the side of a wax pine tree candle to make it shimmer.

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