Tuesday 4 March 2014

Where Two Oceans Meet But do not Mix



This phenomenon is simply incredible and mind blowing, when two bodies of water were merging in the middle of The Gulf of Alaska and there was foam developing only at their junction. It is a consequence of the melting glaciers being composed of fresh water and the ocean has a higher percentage of salt triggering the two bodies of water to have different densities and consequently makes it more testing to mix.

Sunday 2 March 2014

Balancing Stones Seems Defy Gravity



Grab of gravity with glue is incredibly skillful activity by achieving stunning harmony in the most magnificent rock formation. Artist Michael delicately assembled stacks, entitled balancing rocks, seem to defy gravity. Although gravity is the only glue that holds his structures together. The creative stone balancing process initially grew out of Grab's simple inquisitiveness and has since developed into what he defines as a therapeutic ritual. With great patience, a very stable hand, and a thoughtful mind, he works prudently to catch small connections between the stones' natural indentations. Some balances can apply substantial pressure on your mind and your endurance. But the test is overcoming any doubt that may arise. Check out great pictures of Michael work.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Tuesday 18 February 2014

Rooftoppers Conquered Second Tallest Building of Shanghai



Russian photographers and “urban ninjas” Vitaly Raskalov and Vadim Makhorov, actually are no guests to traveling to the world's highest towering skyscrapers and climbing them with undeniably no safety gear, have freshly conquered the 2nd tallest building in the world. The two daredevil managed to gain entrance to China's Shanghai Tower earlier this month, both ascend the 650-meter-high structure and take several unbelievable photos from their exclusive viewpoints. They took them estimated two hours to hike up to the 120th floor on foot, after which they climbed a crane mounted on top of the tower. Check out these incredible images. Source: Charismatic Planet
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Thursday 30 January 2014

Japanese Farmer Harvested World’s Heart Shaped Watermelon

Japanese people are so innovative and quality conscious as well; the best example shown by Japanese farmer Hiroichi Kimura, who has finally harvested the world's first heart shaped watermelon, after several years of hard research. When upon a neighbor's request, Hiroichi Kimura started his research about a heart shaped watermelon. After sensibly considering all the factors that affects this process, Hiroichi extremely worked hard to bring this awesome watermelon alive which happened after long process of trial and error. He said i want my customers to eat something delicious, although after managing to cultivate the melon of his dreams, he carry on to research and develop novel, innovative, delicious varieties of watermelon.






Wednesday 22 January 2014

Farmers in Japan have created pentagon-shaped fruits.



It is believed all over world, Japanes are quality conscious and very hard work nation to experiment on different idea. Similar, the iyokan citrus fruits or called “Gokaku no lyokan” were handed out as good luck charm for student in the upcoming entrance exam season in Yawatahama, Ehime. Moreover; “Gokaku no lyokan” means “sweat smell of success in exams”.  The hard working farmer Keisuke Ninomiya, Akihiro Nagaoka and Jo Kubota of Hiduchi Tachibana Club holding up Pentagon Shaped iyokan citrus fruits.


Tuesday 21 January 2014

The Stunning Beauty of High Speed Water Drop Photography

There are whole worlds out there that humans cannot foresee with the naked eye. But with potent microscopes we are capable to observe life at the microscopic and even atomic level; and with high-speed cameras we are proficient to observe proceedings that happen in fractions of a second. The genius photographer Markus Reugels focuses on the latter primarily testing with water drops. Through dizzying combinations of lighting, food coloring, surfaces liquid and solid and airstreams; Markus Reugels produces unbelievable liquid art that occurs and disappears in a split-second, but it is immortalized via his photography. Markus Reguels focuses on the fact that the pictures are not Photo-shopped and that he only uses post-production software to eliminate things like sensor dust. All colors and tones are naturally processed and the shapes and patterns are not digitally manipulated. At the end of the gallery I have included some slow-motion video to display how some of the shots are achieved along with an informative video interview with Reugels that delves deeper into his process and set up. For further details; you need to check out more of Markus’ incredible work at the links below.