RGB Water Droplets

Canon 20D, Tamron 90mm macro, f/32 3.2 s
For the photo group's water assignment I laid an RGB monitor on
its back with the screen facing upward, and shot water droplets
on a white area of the screen. The droplet magnifies the red(R),
green(G), and blue(B) pixels, with the specific pattern created
depending on the size of the droplet, the depth of field, and
the plane of focus.
The 3 images presented in this post show some of the effects that
can be obtained.
The image above was created with a fairly large water droplet,
something on the order of 1 cm diameter. A mosaic of enlarged
but undistorted R, G, and B pixels can be seen in the center
of the droplet, surrounded by elongated pixels nearer the
droplet's edge.

Canon 20D, Tamron 90mm macro, f/29 3.2 s
This image, made with a smaller water droplet, shows a large
central G pixel surrounded by smaller R and B pixels, and so
forth, receding into a starburst pattern.

Canon 20D, Tamron 90mm macro, f/32 4 s
In this image the center is occupied almost entirely by a single
blue pixel, with a piece of green pixel also showing. Surrounding
the central pixel are distorted red and blue pixels, with R, G,
and B pixels receding in rows into the distance toward the edge
of the droplet.















