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This is the first picture we took. Notice how it is too bright and not in perfect focus. |
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This picture gave us a nice image of the water droplet before it hit the eye, however, there is a hot spot on the left side of the eye. |
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The background in this picture is too visible, but notice the cool effect of the reflection of the eye in the water droplet. |
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This picture is one of our favorites. You can see the beams of light entering the water droplet. Another cool effect is how the green part of the eye is illuminated because the flash unit was on top. |
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This is one of our first nice pictures that caught the splash in its later stage. |
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The neat part about this picture is that you can see part of the bulb and part of the splash. |
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This was one of our mess-ups. There is not sufficient lighting, but this was one of the many error we corrected while working on the project. |
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This picture is nice, but a little too dark and has some visible and annoying hot spots |
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This picture has part of the splash in focus and part of it not in focus, which leads to the illusion depth |
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This is one of the pictures we got in the latest possible stages of the splash. It has some some hot spots on the right side. |
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This picture is nice because you can see the oval shape of the droplet. |
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Notice the brilliant illusion of depth and speed created by the different types of blurs on the small droplets of water flying away. |
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This was another picture that we took that was too small. |
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This is probably the best shot we took. We experimented with cropping it here. |
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This is a shot as the drop hits the eye. The splashing water looks "sharp," and almost more like shockwave. |
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This is another cool shot where you can see the splash and the bulb at the same time. |
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