Source: strain
Frozen bubbles are super awesome, each one completely unique with ice crystals growing on their delicate surface, so beautiful and fragile. Artist and photographer Cheryl Johnson has been spending the winter experimenting with photographing frozen soap bubbles and the results of her efforts are absolutely stunning.
“When you blow soap bubbles outdoors in the winter at temperatures below 15°F, they freeze! Beautiful crystals of ice form on their surfaces, beginning at the bottom, and expanding until they cover the whole bubble. Each bubble is unique, the pattern of crystals is always different … just like snowflakes.”
Visit Cheryl Johnson’s Facebook page for a detailed description of how to shoot frozen bubbles and to check out more of her own marvelous frozen bubble photographs.
[via Twisted Sifter]
(via monere-lluvia)
Source: archiemcphee
Breathtaking Frozen Lakes, Oceans And Ponds, That Look Like Art
Lakes and ponds might look nice, but the cold of winter just elevates them to another dimension. Freezing water creates an astonishing variety of patterns: from jagged lines or frozen bubbles to perfect snowflakes with every imaginable shade of blue, green and white.
Via: boredpanda
(via musetensil)
Source: asylum-art
Frost-covered trees are seen at the Essigberg near Kassel, Germany on January 30, 2012. (Uwe Zucchi/AFP/Getty Images)
(via naturalpalettes)
Source: fotojournalismus
Source: softwaring
The Spirit of Winter
A collection of winter photos shot between 2012-2014 by Finnish photographer Mikko Lagerstedt.
(via moreanimalia)
Source: behance.net








