![]() ![]() Bumping the saturation up a bit to highlight the colors reflecting in the soapĪbove is an example of the image at the top of the page completely unedited and then with the adjustments mentioned above. ![]() Using a sharpening brush on the pretty details.I use Adobe Lightroom for editing and found myself making the following adjustments to most of my photos: But it worked the best and I got in some practice!! Editing Frozen BubblesĪs with any type of editing, it is all up to you and your preferences. I had the best luck shooting MANUAL focus. Try to take photos from all around your bubble. The bubbles do last around 10-20 seconds so you have a moment to set up and get the shot. Most of my favorite shots were taken at f/7.1 and ISO 200. With a macro lens, I typically use a much higher f-stop tha I do with portrait photography. This lens works for detail shots like rings and BUBBLES, but it can also be a fun portrait lens that will give you that creamy soft compression in the background of photos. This will work best with a lens that works at close range, typically called a macro lens. The warm air inside the bubble soon seeks to escape (like a balloon deflating) and the bubble eventually collapses under its own weight. The water in between the soap is actually what is freezing. It just has to be below freezing for this to work.Ī bubble is made when a water molecule gets trapped between two fine layers of soap. The colder your solution is and the colder the air temperature, the faster your bubbles will freeze. Go ahead and set the solution outside while you get all your warm clothing on.ĭip the straw in the solution, and experiment with slowly blowing your bubbles. You do not want to agitate the solution too much. After you add the rest of the ingredients, stir SLOWLY. The warm water helps the sugar dissolve a bit and I suggest the sugar being the first thing you add. So instead, I tried out some frozen bubbles!! After you give this a try, I promise you will start looking at cold days more like opportunities to play!įirst things first, here is the frozen bubble recipe: Well… yes I would love to, but it hardly ever snows enough in Kentucky to pull that off. ![]()
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