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Saturday, April 16, 2011

An Amazing Water Picture!!!

Eau, water picture! Artist makes a splash with his amazing portfolio of liquid droplets

By Daily Mail Reporter
Last updated at 8:30 AM on 15th April 2011

They could almost be mistaken for images taken in the far-reaches of outer space, or an ultra-magnified snapshot of microscopic organisms.
However look again, for these incredible pictures are the work of artist Markus Reugels who has turned to one of the most abundant resources on the planet to create these strange and beautiful portraits - water.
The 33-year-old German artist combined water droplets with food colouring and creative lighting to make these vibrant images, which were only able to be captured with high-speed camera equipment.


Atomic: At a glance, this extraordinary image could be mistaken for a nuclear mushroom cloud... but it's a harmless splash of water amplified with a fiery-coloured light
Atomic: At a glance, this extraordinary image could be mistaken for a nuclear mushroom cloud... but it's a harmless splash of water amplified with a fiery-coloured light


An artist has caused a splash with these incredible photographs of water droplets.
An artist has caused a splash with these incredible photographs of water droplets.
Certainly not wet behind the ears: Artist Markus turned these splashes into exotic-looking flowers
The end result shows how the artist is making quite a splash with his unique works.
 
Markus drops the water on to trays, egg cups or teaspoons and snaps away as it splashes upwards and outwards, creating otherworldly shapes.
He added food colouring to the water and different coloured gels to his flashes, to create an intense glowing effect.
Endurance: Markus had to have a lot of patience to achieve some of the results pictured here
Endurance: Markus had to have a lot of patience to achieve some of the results pictured here
Endurance: Markus had to employ a bucket load of patience to achieve some of the results pictured here


By thickening the water with guar gum he was also able to alter the shape of the splashes, making some of them take on the bizarre look of something from a science-fiction film or a nuclear mushroom cloud.

The shapes, which varied from 3cm to 15cm, were altered even further by adding sugar and, by putting rinse aid in the dish, he was able to increase the height of the droplet splashes.
However, were it not for the advancements of high-speed photography, these images would not exist as they are impossible to see with the naked eye.

Ethereal: Water can create beautiful shapes but without high-speed photography it is impossible to see with the naked eye
Ethereal: Water can create beautiful shapes but without high-speed photography it is impossible to see with the naked eye


Drop in the ocean: This stunning image is just one many created by artist Markus Reugels
Drop in the ocean: This stunning image is just one many created by artist Markus Reugels
Drop in the ocean: These stunning images are just one of many created by artist Markus Reugels
 
Markus, who proudly reveals his images are free from colour and computerised manipulation, used a sensor to trigger the camera because the water falls too fast for his finger to operate the shutter.

An extremely fast shutter speed of of up to 1/16,000 per second allowed him to capture detail the human eye could never see.

Markus, from Schweinfurt, Bavaria, said: 'Water can create beautiful shapes but without high-speed photography we could never see them.

On reflection: This work - titled Double Milk Splash - resembles two toadstools
On reflection: This work - titled Double Milk Splash - resembles two toadstools



Water feature: Some of Markus Reugels' splashes look like umbrellas
Water feature: Some of Markus Reugels' splashes look like umbrellas
Water feature: Some of Markus Reugels' splashes look like umbrellas

'The shapes of the splashes are very difficult to manipulate.
'The basic shapes, such as the umbrellas and flying discs, are easy but to create the double splashes you must work very hard, have good endurance and patience.

'You must also analyse the results and test new things. The important thing is to have fun - the rest will come by itself.'


Ripple effect: Water was dropped on to trays, egg cups or tea spoons to get effects like these
Ripple effect: Water was dropped on to trays, egg cups or tea spoons to get effects like these


Eau my! Food colouring and coloured-gels are added to the water to create a glowing effect
Eau my! Food colouring and coloured-gels are added to the water to create a glowing effect
Eau my! Food colouring and coloured-gels are added to the water to create a glowing effect


Water works: The shape and height of the splashes can be altered by adding sugar and rinse aid to the dish
Water works: The shape and height of the splashes can be altered by adding sugar and rinse aid to the dish

Otherworldly: The image of a globe is captured in this picture while there's something distinctly science fiction about the creation on the right
Otherworldly: The image of a globe is captured in this picture while there's something distinctly science fiction about the creation on the right
Otherworldly: The image of a globe is captured in this picture while there's something distinctly science fiction about the creation on the right

Monday, April 11, 2011

My baby saved my life

My baby saved my life: Mother's deadly bone marrow disease is cured by pregnancy

By Lucy Laing
Last updated at 12:26 AM on 10th April 2011

  • Mother-of-three was told people with her condition only had a life expectancy of two to five years
Enlarge   My hero: Ms Marton with her son Jason, who provided a miraculous boost to her immune system during her pregnancy
My hero: Ms Marton with her son Jason, who provided a miraculous boost to her immune system during her pregnancy

When Anna Marton was given just two years to live she was devastated.

She had been diagnosed with a deadly bone marrow defect, which doctors said couldn’t be cured.


Then she unexpectedly fell pregnant and doctors warned that giving birth could kill her - but she was determined to carry on with the pregnancy.

It was a decision that has miraculously ended up saving her life - as her baby son Jason has CURED her of the condition.


It has baffled doctors - but in Februrary,  Anna was finally given the all clear from the disease and can now live a normal life.


‘Jason really has been my miracle cure,’ said Anna, who lives with partner Tony Harman, 41, a kitchen fitter.


‘Even the doctors couldn’t explain it - it really is a miracle - and that's what I call him. 

There was no medicine to treat me - but my own baby cured me.’

Anna, 39, who lives in Rhu, near Glasgow, was diagnosed in February 2009 with myelofibrosis, a bone marrow defect that affects the body’s ability to produce red blood cells.

She had been suffering from unexplained bruising for several months before, which she at first put down to helping out on her local farm.
‘I just kept finding these bruises all over my body,’ she said. 


‘The slightest knock would turn me black and blue. I couldn’t really understand why it was happening, as I never remembered knocking myself.


‘At first I thought it was my outdoors lifestyle - I ride horses and help out on the local farm, so there is plenty of opportunity for knocks and bangs doing all that outdoors work. But then my gums started bleeding and I notcied cuts and bruises weren’t healing properly, so I thought that something might be wrong, and I was feeling exhausted all the time too.


‘I had the tests done at the haematology department of the local hospital so they could take a bone marrow sample.
'Tony came with me to get my results. It was the day before my 37th birthday and as soon as I saw the consultant’s face I knew immediately that it wasn’t good news.'

The test results revealed the devastating news that she had myelofibrosis, which meant that her body was no longer able to produce enough red blood cells. 

The rare condition was difficult to treat and the consultant told Anna that most patients don’t live more than two to five years after diagnosis.

‘I was absolutely devastated,’ admitted Anna, who has two other children Arran, 18, and Annabel, 13. 

‘It just seemed so surreal and I couldn’t really take anything in. It was only when I left the hospital that the reality of what the consultant had said hit me and I just burst into tears. I just kept thinking that I wouldn’t see my children grow up. I just couldn’t stop crying.’

Miracle: Jason's mother feared she would not get to see her son grow up, but was given the all-clear in February
Miracle: Jason's mother feared she would not get to see her son grow up, but was given the all-clear in February

There was nothing the doctors could do except monitor her condition and prescribe steroids to boost her blood count.  A bone marrow transplant was possible, but it only had a very slim chance of working.

She said: ‘The whole family had to have flu jabs and keep away from me if they had a cold or infection as my immune system was so low.  

'Without a cure for this disease, even the slightest knock or cut could lead to me having to go to hospital. I was terrified. I couldn’t go riding any more in case I fell. And every time my gums started bleeding I worried that I would bleed to death.
‘I had to spend most of my time indoors so that I didn’t come into contact with anyone.’

She didn’t want to tell her children about the fact that she could die, as she didn’t want to upset them.
‘I explained to them that doctors couldn’t cure my condition but that the worse case scenario was that I might need a bone marrow transplant,’ she said.
‘I didn’t want them worrying that they were going to lose me.’

Then in April 2009 she may the most remarkable discovery that she was pregnant.

‘I had missed a period and I put it down to my illness. I went to see the doctor and he agreed that it was probably due to depression and stress about my diagnosis,’ she said.

‘But something just kept nagging me in the back of my mind and a week later I went to buy a pregnancy test. I didn’t tell Tony about it because I was so sure that it was going to be negative.

'But then I did the test and up came two blue lines on the stick. I just kept staring at it, I couldn’t believe that it was actually positive. I had to do another test before I was actually convinced I was pregnant. I told Tony and the children and they were all thrilled.’

Ultrasound scans revealed that Anna's baby was thriving despite doctors fears it would worsen her condition
Ultrasound scans revealed that Anna's baby was thriving despite doctors fears it would worsen her condition
But the midwife at her GP practice was concerned and initially warned her that she could suffer fatal bleeding during the birth. But she was determined to go ahead with the pregnancy.

‘At first I thought there was no hope and that I was doomed, said Anna.
‘But then one of the doctors at the hospital said they would do everything they could to support me and they could give me drugs during the labour to try and stop any bleeding.
‘I just had to put my trust in the doctors and hope for the best.’

Anna’s pregnancy progressed smoothly and at each scan she could see her baby was thriving.
‘He kicked a lot and moved around, which was so reassurring,’ she said.
‘And at each scan I could see him growing well which was a relief.’
Baby Jason was born in November 2009, weighing a healthy 6Ib2, after just three hours labour.

‘It was such a relief when I finally held him in my arms. The doctors had told me they couldn’t carry out a caesarian operation as it was too risky to me as I could have bleed to death if anything had gone wrong, but luckily the labour went smoothly and Jason was born naturally. 

The doctors had been on standby ready to give me blood transfusions, but it turned out they weren’t needed as it was such an easy birth.

‘As soon as I’d given birth and he was in my arms I looked down at him and it was hard to think that I probably wouldn’t live to see him grow up. it was just devastating to think that he wouldn’t remember me.’

But then in February last year, 12 months after her initial diagnosis, something amazing happened.
Anna went back to hospital for a check up and it was then that doctors made a remarkable discovery. There was no sign of the disease.

Doctors then sent the bone marrow samples to 25 different doctors just to check the results, but they had all agreed it was clear.
‘I couldn’t believe it, and neither could anyone else,’ said Anna.  

‘Just a year ago I’d been given just two years to live. And now I was being told that the disease had completely gone from my body. It was unbelievable.’

‘The doctors had never seen a case like it before, and they told me that somehow, the pregnancy hormones had helped my body heal itself.’

Pregnant women produce an increased amount of the male hormone androgen and some studies suggest this can make symptoms less severe.  

But unbelievably, in her case, it had provided a complete cure.

In February she went for a final check up, and the results were still clear. There is no sign of the disease returning, and she can now live a normal life.

‘Everyone was baffled, but now thankfully I can just get on with being a mum,’ said Anna.  

‘My baby healed me - and to me, that's a miracle - and when he’s old enough I will tell him how he saved my life.’

Amazing picture

Up to his old ant-ics: Photographer snaps amazing picture of insect carrying petal back to its nest

By Daily Mail Reporter
Last updated at 12:51 PM on 11th April 2011

This hard-working ant balances a huge yellow petal above its head as it marches along on its hind legs.


The 1cm-long insect carries food and flowers left for him by photographer Andiyan Lutfi under a mango tree near his house.


The red ant used the material to build a nest before queuing with other workers to quench his thirst on water droplets caught on an over-hanging branch.

The hard-working ant balances a huge yellow petal above its head as it marches on its hind legs back to its nest
 
The hard-working ant balances a huge yellow petal above its head as it marches on its hind legs back to its nest 

Andiyan, 36, snaps away as the ants go about their day-to-day lives in Cibinong Village, Indonesia.
He said: 'I observe the amazing behaviour of the ants under the mango tree almost every day.
'I like to take photographs of the ants to show how extraordinary they are. They can work well as a team or as individuals.


'The ants take leaves or whatever else there is under the tree and make a nest out of them.'These photos show a male ant biting into a yellow petal I gave him and taking it to their nest. They will bite into anything I give them.


'The female, or queen ant, usually stays in the nest.'  The red ants, known locally as Rang-rang, live in colonies where each has their own role as either worker, drone or queen.


The colony is so important to the creatures that they would sacrifice themselves to protect their home.

 

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