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Photo by Emyano Mazzola
Instead of bringing professional underwater cameras to work, photographer Nathaniel Stern made his own modified equipment with desktop scanners, battery packs and other computer components.
The photographs in his series, ‘Rippling Images’, are an experimental and blurry mix of rippling images that exposes the colorful underwater marine life.
Fixing the image-capturing device to his torso, he dives below the surface to take photographs underwater.
In some of his photographs, the reflected and scratched surfaces of the plastic covering on his device merged with the scenery, giving a unique, alternative view of what lies beneath the water.
Amazingly, the details of the corals reefs in one of his photographs are quite clear—you could not have guessed that it was taken with his Frankenstein-esque “camera” .
See more of Stern’s mesmerizing work below.








[via PetaPixel, Images by Nathaniel Stern]
Photo by Emyano Mazzola
Instead of bringing professional underwater cameras to work, photographer Nathaniel Stern made his own modified equipment with desktop scanners, battery packs and other computer components.
The photographs in his series, ‘Rippling Images’, are an experimental and blurry mix of rippling images that exposes the colorful underwater marine life.
Fixing the image-capturing device to his torso, he dives below the surface to take photographs underwater.
In some of his photographs, the reflected and scratched surfaces of the plastic covering on his device merged with the scenery, giving a unique, alternative view of what lies beneath the water.
Amazingly, the details of the corals reefs in one of his photographs are quite clear—you could not have guessed that it was taken with his Frankenstein-esque “camera” .
See more of Stern’s mesmerizing work below.
[via PetaPixel, Images by Nathaniel Stern]