Category: Art

  • Featured Video Play Icon

    “Shadows in the Sky”

    This moody music video features storm chasing footage from photographer Mike Olbinski. As always, his captures are stunningly majestic. Watch closely and you’ll see everything from bulbous mammatus clouds to powerful microbursts, from horizon-obscuring haboobs to sky-splitting lightning. And if this video isn’t enough, there’s plenty more to enjoy. (Video and image credit: M. Olbinski)

  • “Fire and Fusion”

    “Fire and Fusion”

    Photographer Andrew McCarthy constructed this spectacular 300-megapixel image of our sun by compositing thousands of individual images. Sunspots, coronal mass ejections, and feathery convective swirls abound. Check out his site for prints of this and other celestial images! (Image credit: A. McCarthy; via Colossal)

  • Snowflake Still-Life

    Snowflake Still-Life

    To take these high-resolution images of individual snowflakes, Nathan Myhrvold and his collaborators built a special camera. Their apparatus keeps the snowflakes chilled despite the strong illumination cast on them. It uses a 500 microsecond shutter and focus-stacking to produce incredibly detailed portraits of these ephemeral subjects. Each snowflake’s shape is the result of the temperature and humidity that crystal experienced as it grew. Since these are natural snowflakes, no two are alike, but, with enough environmental control, it is possible to make twin snowflakes. (Image credit: N. Myhrvold; via Colossal)

  • “In Flight”

    “In Flight”

    Photographer Mark Harvey captured these stunning portraits of birds in flight. From acrobatic songbirds to soaring raptors, the images show the incredible morphology of a bird’s wing during flight. Most birds are constantly changing their wing shape to generate lift, change trajectory, and stabilize their flight. Note the separation between the flight feathers in all of these birds. Those gaps are thought help break up the birds’ wingtip vortices, thereby reducing their induced drag. You may also notice that the owls in Harvey’s photos have feathers that look a bit different from the other birds; owls have adaptations in their feathers that help damp out turbulence, which makes them quieter in flight. Prints of Harvey’s images are available on his website. (Image credit: M. Harvey; via Colossal 1, 2)

  • Featured Video Play Icon

    “The Green Reapers”

    This short film from artist Thomas Blanchard focuses on carnivorous plants and their prey. These plants — including Venus fly traps, sundews, and pitcher plants — rely on fluids both to attract and capture their prey. Plants like the Venus fly trap build turgor pressure in their cells to move and prop open their leaves. Once triggered, a mechanical release allows the fluid pressure to snap the trap closed. Sweet-smelling fluids invite insects in, only to become nightmarishly difficult to escape once prey try to unstick themselves from the highly viscoelastic liquids. (Video and image credit: T. Blanchard; via Colossal)

  • Yosemite in Winter

    Yosemite in Winter

    Waterfalls, fog, and snow wreathe Yosemite in these beautiful winter landscapes by photographer Michael Shainblum. I love how the tendrils of water and mist give you a real sense of the flow, even in still photos. Check out more of Shainblum’s photography on his Instagram and go behind-the-scenes on his Yosemite trip with this video. (Image credit: M. Shainblum; via Colossal)

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    “Beyond the Horizon”

    Shifting bubbles and psychedelic colors abound in this abstract video from artist Rus Khasanov. He provides no specifics as to the materials he uses for this video, but my guess is they likely include oil, soap, and polarizing filters. It’s a fun and funky video! See more of Khasanov’s work on his website and Instagram. (Image and video credit: R. Khasanov)

  • Stormy Landscapes

    Stormy Landscapes

    Photographer Mitch Dobrowner captures the power of major storm systems across the western United States and Canada in these dramatic black-and-white images. Misty clouds, massive downpours, bulbous mammatus clouds, and lonely landscapes abound. You can find more of his work on his website and Instagram. (Image credit: M. Dobrowner; via Colossal)

  • Featured Video Play Icon

    Making Horsehair Pottery

    Native American potter Eric Louis combines traditional and modern techniques in his horsehair pottery. Like his mother and grandmother before him, he collects local clay and pottery shards to make the slip that forms his pieces. After molding and an initial firing in a kiln, he uses wood chips to keep the pottery hot while he applies horsehair. The hair ignites and carbonizes, leaving behind distinctive patterns in the clay that create a backdrop for his etchings. See more of his finished work here. (Image and video credit: Insider)

  • “Ruin of the Tides”

    “Ruin of the Tides”

    As tides and waves flow back and forth over a beach, they erode the sandy shore. Here photographer Michael Shainblum captures the streaks and rivulets left by a falling tide. These “ruins” resemble an extensive river delta viewed from above. I love the complicated branches carved by the water’s retreat. (Image credit: M. Shainblum)