1、多彩泡泡,multi-coloured soap bubbles,Swiss photographer captures the fleeting moment when multi-coloured soap bubbles wobble into life - then burst By Rob Waugh PUBLISHED: 14:07 GMT, 10 July 2012 | UPDATED: 15:59 GMT, 10 July 2012,Photographer Fabian Oefner captures mysterious objects that look like vis
2、ions captured by the Hubble space telescope - but theyre in fact ordinary soap bubbles, wobbling into life for a precious few seconds before they pop. Oefner used a sugar funnel to blow up the mixture from an ordinary childrens pot of bubbles. Oefneer had to use a special lighting rig to give his im
3、ages their peacock-like colours, With this series of images, I was trying to capture the beauty of these short-lived sculptures, which consist of 99% air and actually do not have any colour at all.,Photographer Fabian Oefner captures mysterious objects that look like visions from the Hubble space te
4、lescope - but theyre in fact ordinary soap bubbles,Oefner explaisn Most of us remember playing with soap bubbles in our childhood, when we were fascinated by the colours of them and therefore even more disappointed when the bubble all of a sudden disappeared again.,Fabian, a 28-year old art photogra
5、pher from Zurich, was inspired by memories of blowing bubbles as a child,With this series of images, I was trying to capture the beauty of these short-lived sculptures, which consist of 99% air and actually do not have any colour at all, says Oefner,Talented Fabian Oefner made it his mission to capt
6、ure the short-lived beauty of bubbles at the point of bursting,Fabian, a 28-year old art photographer from Zurich, was inspired by memories of blowing bubbles as a child, but put scientific principles into place to get the required results. He explains: Most of us remember playing with soap bubbles
7、in our childhood, when we were fascinated by the colours of them and therefore even more disappointed when the bubble all of a sudden disappeared again. With this series of images, I was trying to capture the beauty of these short-lived sculptures, which consist of 99% air and actually do not have a
8、ny colour at all. But in the series he calls Iridient the challenge was in lighting the subjects to make them visible to the camera and then capturing the split second before they popped. Fabian explains: There are two major challenges, when taking images of bursting soap bubbles. One is how to ligh
9、t the bubble, so that its colours become visible and second is obviously to capture the right moment. A soap bubble is made of a thin film of water, on which soap molecules gather on both sides. The vibrant colours, that bubbles are famous for, are created by the reflected light hitting the surface
10、of the bubble. This effect is called iridescence, a phenomenon that is also visible on the wings of the morpho butterfly or on the tail feathers of a peacock.,Oefners results look like shimmering space objects or even otherworldly transparent creatures,Oefner says, With this series of images, I was trying to capture the beauty of these short-lived sculptures, which consist of 99% air and actually do not have any colour at all.,