I wonder would a good, sharp needle and thread make for good mounting for a soft object like this? Thread the needle, pass it right through the strawberry and the secure the thread on something above and below. As long as the strawberry doesn't slide down the thread (hopefully a strawberry is light enough friction would hold it in place!)
I glue mounted the strawberry on three nails and used pins to secure it.
I have to think about your idea.. I don't think friction would be enough to hold it in place.. it would probably be hard to knot the top onto something too, as that's where the light is: https://i.imgur.com/vIjw6pc.jpeg
But I'm always experimenting with the mounting, thanks for the inputs.
Assuming that the person that did this has not tried that. If you look at the setup photos, the grape is resting on a couple of nails. This suggests that many different things have been tried.
It was mounted at the bottom.. and I can't quite reach it with my camera. Might have to try some two pass way.
I wonder would a good, sharp needle and thread make for good mounting for a soft object like this? Thread the needle, pass it right through the strawberry and the secure the thread on something above and below. As long as the strawberry doesn't slide down the thread (hopefully a strawberry is light enough friction would hold it in place!)
Anyway, very cool splat, fair play
I glue mounted the strawberry on three nails and used pins to secure it. I have to think about your idea.. I don't think friction would be enough to hold it in place.. it would probably be hard to knot the top onto something too, as that's where the light is: https://i.imgur.com/vIjw6pc.jpeg
But I'm always experimenting with the mounting, thanks for the inputs.
Mount it on a needle/skewer, it should let you capture it in one pass.
Assuming that the person that did this has not tried that. If you look at the setup photos, the grape is resting on a couple of nails. This suggests that many different things have been tried.
How about green screen + rotate the strawberry on a skewer
Gaussian splat casualty. The bottom looks like partially missing from the reconstruction.
When you cut the splat in half, result is either fuzzy fog or sort-of fibrous crystals. As depicted here.