photo drawing
Images below were made using a 35mm camera adapted to use a pinhole aperture instead of a glass lens. They were printed in a darkroom then scanned. An image editing program was used to draw over the images.
The range of light visible to the human eye is a tiny slice of the electromagnetic spectrum. Radio waves, xrays, ultraviolet frequencies, for example, are invisible to the unaided eye. Cosmic rays, gravity waves, and charged particles from the sun are also present but not visible.
I've often wondered what it would be like to see these along with our normal vision. Afterall, they completely surround us. Below is a visualization of this desire. A filling of the sky above with the unseeable.
The range of light visible to the human eye is a tiny slice of the electromagnetic spectrum. Radio waves, xrays, ultraviolet frequencies, for example, are invisible to the unaided eye. Cosmic rays, gravity waves, and charged particles from the sun are also present but not visible.
I've often wondered what it would be like to see these along with our normal vision. Afterall, they completely surround us. Below is a visualization of this desire. A filling of the sky above with the unseeable.