Photo date: September 4, 2019. Photographer: Mark Mahin.
I took the photos below while photographing only ordinary drops of pure, clean water falling in front of a dark featureless background. In the first we see many orbs that all have holes.
In the next photo we see more orbs with holes:
In the next photo we see more orbs with holes:
In the next photo we see more orbs with holes:
In the next photo we see more orbs with holes:
Once again, we see a "positional bias" of the orb holes, with all of the orb holes appearing in the upper left or upper center portion of the orbs, with none of the holes appearing in the bottom half of an orb, and none of the holes appearing in the right half of an orb.
What happens when I am photographing falling water drops is that suddenly (on some days) I will start getting all of the orbs having holes. Such an effect will then persist for an indefinite number of photos: maybe five, maybe ten, maybe 20 or more. In a series of consecutive photos, all of the orbs will have holes. Then suddenly the effect will either abruptly disappear, or start to fade away (in the latter case, the holes may get smaller and smaller). Then the next ten or twenty photos will not show any orbs with holes.
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