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General Photography
Macro
Water droplet
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<blockquote data-quote="grandpaw" data-source="post: 257338" data-attributes="member: 8635"><p>Seems to me how I did it for anyone wanting to try this is like this. </p><p></p><p>Clear glass bowl with water in it.</p><p>Speedlight with blue gel or blue cellophane over flash head outside of a large glass bowl or small fish tank pointed toward the water to give the water a blue color.</p><p>Baggy suspended over bowl with pin hole in bottom to create drips about two inches apart.</p><p>Shot from top.</p><p>I need to add that you need a tripod and you need to prefocus in manual focus where the droplets are hitting the water.</p><p>Watch the timing of the droplets and shoot away.</p><p></p><p>In my picture that I have already posted, what you are seeing is one drop that has hit the water and the next drop on it's way down.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="grandpaw, post: 257338, member: 8635"] Seems to me how I did it for anyone wanting to try this is like this. Clear glass bowl with water in it. Speedlight with blue gel or blue cellophane over flash head outside of a large glass bowl or small fish tank pointed toward the water to give the water a blue color. Baggy suspended over bowl with pin hole in bottom to create drips about two inches apart. Shot from top. I need to add that you need a tripod and you need to prefocus in manual focus where the droplets are hitting the water. Watch the timing of the droplets and shoot away. In my picture that I have already posted, what you are seeing is one drop that has hit the water and the next drop on it's way down. [/QUOTE]
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General Photography
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Water droplet
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