Observing the cat and squirrel jump looks like so common in everyday life. However this is an amazing change in a split second art.
Photographer Kim Taylor's use of animal lovers an unusual length of time to capture the motion of birds, insects and other animals. Using a special technique called locomotion photography, the images look amazing and have impressive detail.
Interestingly, this 78-year photographer equipment is specially-made equipment that is designed to perpetuate the subject in a split second and give effect to 'strobe' stunning on camera.
The combination of strobe lighting and fast moving subjects produce multiple images in one frame. Initially, the technique used legendary British photographer Eadweard Muybridge in 1870.
"I'm wearing homemade equipment. Need a high voltage (3500 volts) and capacitor are very heavy to store this energy. The results, fixtures with three flash heads which can be constantly 'blinks' and produced nine flash at various levels, ranging from two per second to 500 per second, "said the man.
Before becoming a photographer, he is a biologist at the Ministry of Overseas Development and the Ministry of Agriculture. Grandfather was claimed never to take formal photography class.
from: dailymail.co.uk
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