Showing posts with label Microscopic Images. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Microscopic Images. Show all posts

24 December 2013

Recreational Drugs Visualized

Right after years spent getting work done in well-known Berlin clubs, professional photographer Sarah Schoenfeld will be the first individual to admit an astute awareness of the one of a kind effects of recreational drugs. Just after watching the hedonistic habits of ravers, she made a decision to take a range of mind-altering substances and put them straight onto developed photo negatives.

Sarah Schönfeld squeezed drops of various legal and illegal liquid drug mixtures onto negative film which had already been exposed. Each drop altered the coating of the film. Much like the effect of some of these substances on humans, this can be a lengthy process – sometimes one that can barely be stopped. 

Cocaine

Caffeine

Crystal Meth

Ecstasy

Adrenaline

Heroin

Ketamine

LSD

Magic

Orphiril

Speed
Valium

21 September 2011

Nikon Competition Photomicrographs

A micrograph or photomicrograph is a photo taken by using a microscope or equivalent gadget to show a zoomed image of an object.
Small World is certainly the class leading community forum for presenting the wonder as well as sophistication of existence as viewed through the light microscope. For more than thirty years, Nikon has honored the worldwide greatest photomicrographers that come up with very crucial scientific contributions to life sciences, bio-research as well as materials science.
Listed below we offer you pictures from the photo contest "The Nikon Small World Competition", Enjoy !

"Jonas King, Anopheles gambiae (mosquito) heart"

"Hideo Otsuna, 5-day old zebrafish head"

"Riccardo Taiariol, Wasp nest"

"Honorio Cocera-La Parra, Cacoxenite (mineral)"

"Yanping Wang, Crystallized soy sauce"

"Paul D. Andrews, Telophase HeLa (cancer) cells expressing Aurora B-EGFP (green)"

"James Nicholson, Orange Fungia (mushroom coral), live specimen"

"Stephen Lowry, Spiral vessels from banana plant stem"

 "Ralf Wagner, Divaricatic acid from Evernia divaricata (lichen), recrystallized from acetone"

"Charles Krebs, Ichneumon wasp compound eye and antenna base"

"Gerd Guenther, Soap film"

"Marie Andersson, Anopheles (mosquito) eye"

"Edward Leighman Gafford, Recrystallized sulfur"

"Laurie Knight, Turbinate eyes of male mayfly"

"María Prado-Figueroa, Human brain sections"

"Lars Bech, Trazodone, alpha-estradiol 7256a"

8 August 2011

Microscopic Images of Alcoholic Drinks

All of these impressive photos of alcoholic beverages under a microscope uncover the elements that make up some of our preferred tipples. Similar to photos of snowflakes, each and every beverage is unique, while observed below when zoomed about 1, 000 times under a high tech lab microscope. Created by United States company Bevshots, these are available as artworks for potential buyers which recognize the concealed beauty of alcoholic beverages. Catching the small elements that define most popular drinks such as vodka, pina colada and Chablis.
"What you can see in the magnified pictures are the crystalised carbohydrates that have become sugars and glucose, " described Lester Hutt, 35, the founder of Bevshots.
He describes, "Each image was created by using a pipette of each particular drink and squeezing a drop onto a slide. Then the droplets are allowed to dry out and the slide is placed under the microscope and a picture taken. "
It will take approximately 4 weeks for the alcohol to dry up entirely in the airtight container, and the complete procedure may take around 3 months.

Vodka and tonic


Whiskey


Vodka


Tequila


Sake


Pina Colada


Martini


Dry Martini


Champagne


Red wine


German Pilsner


inevitable Coca Cola


You may also like: Nikon Competition Photomicrographs