@@atiger74393rd don’t have green bubbles 4th don’t be broke 5th Samsung is like the lowest quality of phone if you don’t care about the apple on the back
This is a pretty creative idea ! Off course the quality is questionable but it's resourceful to make a lens out of water. If the conditions are good, you should be able to have a pretty good water drople, although sticking just a single lens is never quite a good idea. Edit: Fun fact, one of the first microscopes ever invented used a water droplet as the only optical component. (Im mentioning the Leeuwenhoek Microscope, approximately 1600)
@@concernedcitizen9101 because it's a one lens only and i suppose the shape of the droplet makes it look the way it does. It probably has something to do with the fact that the focus range is small and the further part of the droplet that is more away from an object is blurred, thus causing the effect (its my hypothesis)
@@photonik-luminescence you know even if you put droplets on other lenses it wont have any changes right? cause you have the item as close to the main lens and off-screen to the other lenses
GERMS: WE ARE HERE BRO Edit: *THOSE WHO THINK THAT THIS IS A JOKE THAT MAKES NO SENSE, LET THEM SEE THE VIDEO CAREFULLY TO UNDERSTAND* STILL NO ONE UNDERSTOOD WHAT I MEANT 😭 Edit : Simply, *IF U SEE CAREFULLY, THERE IS A VERY SMALL PLACK POINT IN THIS HAND AFTER THE ZOOM , THAT'S*
I always used to do this in school since I was a little kid. Id be at my desk with my head on the desk tired and id be yawning, eyes would water. A tear drop would form and hang down from my pupil since my head was face down on the desk. All of a sudden I could see the individual grains of wood and my fingerprint ridges crystal clear.
Isnt it more about the curvature of the drop than the size, yes smaller size would have a greater volume to surface tension ratio making it more round but you could try to put hydrophobic coating around the lens sides and have a very round droplet
I mean the with lens makers formula calculating focal length via the "radius of curvature" of these droplets , if its small size it will have a smaller radius of curvature which in fact reduces the focal length and thereby as P=1/f power increases
I like how this comment and the replies triggered some interesting (and somewhat silly) math discourse, when the real problem I see this suggestion posing is the clarity of the water drop once you use hydrophobic powder to create the super round droplet lol. Correct me if I'm wrong, but if you were to actually try this, the droplet would be way too cloudy from the powder for practical use, no? You'd be unable to see anything you're magnifying with clarity ^^;
After some digging, damn, you're right. Some camera companies distorted the word for marketing purposes, but some like Nikon still call them "micro lens"
Pretty good idea but try messing with the curvature of the water droplet since the angle of incidence and refracted is really what makes a macro lens zoom in
@@aliyah9any phone with a wide fov lense should do the trick, I have the s23 ultra and using the 0.6 zoom I can focus on the fingertips like on the video
@@Boostiverse u do realize that the s21 ultra can zoom up to 100 times and still have 1080p quality while the latest iphone can barely do 10 and have 1080p 💀💀 stop making a fool of yalls self 🤣🤣
@@graesontheyapper you have no idea what you’re talking about, iPhones record 4K 60fps on all the cameras, if Apple could make a ton of zoom work well then they would also have it, and they wouldn’t fake it like Samsung where it adds an overlay on the moon 😂
btw bois, i work with cameras and electronic stuff, and i can definitely say that the microscopes that use water *dont directly have water on the lenses.* the water in usually in a small glass container. Getting water on your camera isnt a good idea, and it definitely isnt for prolonged periods of time. This is common sense, but apparently nobody is educated to know that water damages electronics.
Glass and water molecules are both polar, so they attract. This is the same reason why if you try to pour water out of a glass too slowly, it dribbles down the side and makes a mess.
This is pretty cool! I used to do this when I was a kid, with a feature phone my parents had. I had lots of fun doing this with clothes, I could see fibres inside the individual fibres 😅
I have the only production phone that has a microscope camera built in, Oppo Find X3 Pro... The photos of just day to day objects are fascinating, especially fabrics, seeing the intricate weve etc
Antoni van Leeuwenhoek made a microscope with this technique in the 17th century getting up to 275x magnification compared to the at the time standard of 30x, this opened up peoples understanding of the microscopic world, very cool
Incase you're wonder how smaller droplet increases magnification, it increases the curvature, hence the focal length is changed, and so is magnification changed... this forms a plano-convex magnifying lens... hence algular aperture is one of the most important factor, which is also changed... I won't be surprised if someone scientist out there wants a relationship between viscosity, surface tension and angular aperture if you make a water droplet lens lol
As long as the droplet is small enough to be a drop and not a meniscus then the size of drop wouldn't matter. The contact angle of a liquid on a surface is determined by a difference in chemical potential and does not change based on size.
A beaded bracelet has the same effect. If you look really closely, you can see a close up of the top part of your eye. You can slightly close your eyelid to show the eyelashes and see how close it actually is. Pretty fascinating if you ask me.
That’s actually pretty damn cool you can turn your phone into a diy microscope basically . I would’ve never thought of that but I’m also not a photographer.
i did this with my tear, i discovered it in my 6th standard after math class while crying my head down i noticed the texture of the text book was crazy clear, nobody understood me then but now the do the same😅
How to get even smaller droplets: use a hydrophobic surface. Put water on it. Use a hydrophobic knife and cut the droplet. Only hard part is transferring that droplet on the camera
This is a really neat concept and im not trying to be a downer here but with modern samsung flagship cameras you can get very similar amounts of zoom, like seeing individual fibers or skin cells. Still gonna try it to see if i can get an even closer look.
They're was a biologist that found out that if he placed a droplet of oil on the end of his microscope, he could see a lot clearer and closer than just the standard, out-of-the-box microscope
The water droplet only works on base models of iPhone such as 13, 14, and maybe 15. For other models like 13 pro or pro max and such, you don’t need a water droplet
ive never tried this but in theory, could you use a syringe for a smaller droplet also using mineral oil. the more viscous fluid would have more stability and better surface tension?
When I was younger we were poor couldn’t afford glasses when I needed to see the board I would yawn and tears would come out and I spread them across my eyes with my eyes lids and for a couple of seconds I would be able to see the board 😂
Pretty cool to remember that they actually use water for some microscope
1st: get a phone
@@mrabidkarray2nd: Get a Samsung because the camera have macro while Apple don't
@@atiger7439you probably have a Samsung, right?
@@atiger74393rd don’t have green bubbles 4th don’t be broke 5th Samsung is like the lowest quality of phone if you don’t care about the apple on the back
@@user-iw8dt2zb1z4th- Don't be like this guy who lives under a rock and last he saw a Samsung phone was in 2011
This is a pretty creative idea ! Off course the quality is questionable but it's resourceful to make a lens out of water. If the conditions are good, you should be able to have a pretty good water drople, although sticking just a single lens is never quite a good idea.
Edit: Fun fact, one of the first microscopes ever invented used a water droplet as the only optical component. (Im mentioning the Leeuwenhoek Microscope, approximately 1600)
Why is the quality questionable?
@@concernedcitizen9101 because it's a one lens only and i suppose the shape of the droplet makes it look the way it does. It probably has something to do with the fact that the focus range is small and the further part of the droplet that is more away from an object is blurred, thus causing the effect (its my hypothesis)
@@photonik-luminescence Why does putting the droplet on one lens only decrease the quality?
@@manasgupta304 because at that scale, the foccus range is small and the far side of the droplet may induce a blur, thus making it the way it looks.
@@photonik-luminescence you know even if you put droplets on other lenses it wont have any changes right? cause you have the item as close to the main lens and off-screen to the other lenses
Bro got that 0.01% germs 🗿
moles*
@@arta.xshaca r/whoosh
@@arta.xshaca*germs
bros still using the chad emoji in 2024😭😭
@@pekokkklmfaooo gottem
Introducing water droplet macro lens
Innovative as always..
Lol
Water drop sold separately
£799
@@mendmywings7238 replacement drops for $999
@@mendmywings7238 Hahaha, absolutely!
Our prices have never been higher!
GERMS: WE ARE HERE BRO
Edit: *THOSE WHO THINK THAT THIS IS A JOKE THAT MAKES NO SENSE, LET THEM SEE THE VIDEO CAREFULLY TO UNDERSTAND*
STILL NO ONE UNDERSTOOD WHAT I MEANT 😭
Edit : Simply, *IF U SEE CAREFULLY, THERE IS A VERY SMALL PLACK POINT IN THIS HAND AFTER THE ZOOM , THAT'S*
Is bro acoustic?
@@FreedartmonkeVr sure
@@FreedartmonkeVrit's called a fockin joke
@@kameroos a joke that makes zero sense
@@FreedartmonkeVr germs are small and the macro lens smzoomed in a lot get more common sense or get a sense of humor
Samsung users: we already have that
iphone has macro too but this makes it more macro
@@cain.74 i just tried the oppo macro today and i am gonna be honest as an apple guy that camera made me wish i have a oppo
Samsung macro , heck even the normal camera with zoom shows the ridges of fingerprints easily
Macro != zoom
Samsung users always gotta tell everyone how great the Samsung is
I always used to do this in school since I was a little kid. Id be at my desk with my head on the desk tired and id be yawning, eyes would water. A tear drop would form and hang down from my pupil since my head was face down on the desk. All of a sudden I could see the individual grains of wood and my fingerprint ridges crystal clear.
i'm about to sit in that position until my eyes water so i can experience this thank you
Isnt it more about the curvature of the drop than the size, yes smaller size would have a greater volume to surface tension ratio making it more round but you could try to put hydrophobic coating around the lens sides and have a very round droplet
I mean the with lens makers formula calculating focal length via the "radius of curvature" of these droplets , if its small size it will have a smaller radius of curvature which in fact reduces the focal length and thereby as P=1/f power increases
@@naveen.v4734 yes, but that wasn't the question
@@amansavant707Great information though
@@naveen.v4734 thats if the radius is fixed which isnt guaranteed
I like how this comment and the replies triggered some interesting (and somewhat silly) math discourse, when the real problem I see this suggestion posing is the clarity of the water drop once you use hydrophobic powder to create the super round droplet lol. Correct me if I'm wrong, but if you were to actually try this, the droplet would be way too cloudy from the powder for practical use, no? You'd be unable to see anything you're magnifying with clarity ^^;
Its so fascinating that the word macro is now used for what used to br micro, i.e. you look at small things through a microscope
After some digging, damn, you're right. Some camera companies distorted the word for marketing purposes, but some like Nikon still call them "micro lens"
Cheapest homemade Macro-Lens, pretty cool.
Priceless actually
@@akm74usexcept for the phone worth more than a grand
@@akm74usthe phone?
@@bedlesspro8591 buddy micro lenses doesn't include phones lmao
@@akm74usWhy priceless?
Okay but the first eye was actually so pretty. 😭
And the other eye, and his hand were good too.
That orange ring is actually from a genetic mutation or disorder, I only know since my eye looks exactly the same as that eye
Pretty good idea but try messing with the curvature of the water droplet since the angle of incidence and refracted is really what makes a macro lens zoom in
I'm glad my phone has a microscope option/feature on the camera
what phone do you use?
@@aliyah9 I use oppo reno7 4G
@@aliyah9any phone with a wide fov lense should do the trick, I have the s23 ultra and using the 0.6 zoom I can focus on the fingertips like on the video
iPhones also have one, and it works way better than this
@@estebanodyeah his phone has a 0.5 lens
You can try using a micropipette to pipette even smaller droplets accurately
Smaller doesn't really get any better once you hit a certain size, and it seems like he already hit that size.
@@MsHojat You are right, but I think it would still be interesting to see how it looks.
He can also experiment with different liquids of different density, it would be interesting to see the effects.
I love the idea of having a little kid with a big heart
The first scene is literally me putting on contact lenses
For me a person with glasses if I get water on them I can see the micro organisms on my glasses
😂😂
For real?!?!
@@Vixrixityno
@@techforever1970 I’m thinking it might, MIGHT, be possible but very unlikely
@@Vixrixityno, unfortunately 😂 that would be Absolutely, 100.00% impossible
Samsung having a Macro Camera on there phone the whole time..
Fr Samsung is so much better than apple, and I have apple
His iphone has it too lol
Iphones have macro cameras for like 5 years now
@@babybird1138 Let's not forget the fact that Apple did not make a phone that turns into improvised explosive device on it's own.
@@babybird1138only 5? Wow
haven’t seen this trend in years lol
bro fucking made the emergency microscope
Holy that just zoomed in like crazy. Did you use the phone zoom aswell or just the water drop
Just the water drop 😬
@NicolasGrant damm
Edit: ima try it with my phone
samsung: "look at what they need to mimic a fraction of our power"
Iphone has a macro mode , what are you on about 😂
Samsung users always acting superior while not actually knowing what they’re talking about
@@Boostiverse u do realize that the s21 ultra can zoom up to 100 times and still have 1080p quality while the latest iphone can barely do 10 and have 1080p 💀💀 stop making a fool of yalls self 🤣🤣
@@graesontheyapper you have no idea what you’re talking about, iPhones record 4K 60fps on all the cameras, if Apple could make a ton of zoom work well then they would also have it, and they wouldn’t fake it like Samsung where it adds an overlay on the moon 😂
@@Boostiverse 💀💀💀💀💀💀💀 what abt the iphone 3 then??
Water droplets can actually be used for a microscope, pretty cool! Samsung users already have a macro camera on their phones.
btw bois, i work with cameras and electronic stuff, and i can definitely say that the microscopes that use water *dont directly have water on the lenses.* the water in usually in a small glass container.
Getting water on your camera isnt a good idea, and it definitely isnt for prolonged periods of time. This is common sense, but apparently nobody is educated to know that water damages electronics.
How did the droplet stay on the phone when you put it facing down?
Glass and water molecules are both polar, so they attract. This is the same reason why if you try to pour water out of a glass too slowly, it dribbles down the side and makes a mess.
Water sticks to stuff
And plus, gravity is weaker than the force holding em together so yea
skull
I love the part where you explained what a dropper was
It’s my best work
Its a pipette
love the part where google search has been a thing for 26 fucking years
Can we just admire the first girl’s eyes? I’ve never seen eyes look that cool….
Macro? PRETTY macro? THATS MICROSCOPE!!
One time I did this I I think I got it to microscopic levels💀 I could see like individual bacteria cells or something idk😭 it was kinda crazy
cap
@@Kamikazi_YT un-cap😤
@@adamnaamani-rz6yi shi mb
Some single-cell organisms are so large that they're visible to the naked eye. You're still not at micro-level, but it IS a whole new world.
@@Uthael_Kileanea no its real cuz he uncapped
Iphone:diy macro water droplet
Samsung:has macro since 2019
apple has had the macro lens since the iphone 13, its not that deep
@@tomfooIeryzI phone 13 made date:September 24 2021
Can y’all stop bringing android to every video? This video ain’t even promoting iPhones 😭
Look at phone its iphone@Harname-zs8dw
when i was a kid, they used to call this trick "fish eye"
How come these "trends" only appear in videos that you find once and then never again
The algorithm is watching us...
Try using the Macro mode on the camera + droplet
This is pretty cool! I used to do this when I was a kid, with a feature phone my parents had. I had lots of fun doing this with clothes, I could see fibres inside the individual fibres 😅
This trend is around 15 years old.I remember doing this on my old Nokia.
It’s fun seeing this making a comeback.
That is mind-blowing!! love the channel and what you are doing you are underrated for what you do
Wait wouldn’t it be micro not macro? I’m kinda confused.
Macro makes things bigger, like zooming in. I suggest you watch his Macro Lense series, it’s brilliant
I have the only production phone that has a microscope camera built in, Oppo Find X3 Pro... The photos of just day to day objects are fascinating, especially fabrics, seeing the intricate weve etc
This explains why I can see microorganisms when there's a very small droplet on my eyelashes! This is so cool!
why not put it on an actual macro lens and see atoms
You cant just use a regular macro lens to see atoms
did u skip school today
@@ApplezzMapping bro it’s a joke
one of the few tiktok trends that's not embarrassing
this was literally a trend in 2019, but kinda happy someone bring it back
Antoni van Leeuwenhoek made a microscope with this technique in the 17th century getting up to 275x magnification compared to the at the time standard of 30x, this opened up peoples understanding of the microscopic world, very cool
The eye shot is cool ngl
Maximum possible precise:
1. Use a syringe.
2. Link a phone screen to a computer. Which mean the phone can goes way less shaking.
As an optometrist I use +15 diopter lens as a macro lens to take a pic of a mosquito.😂
Incase you're wonder how smaller droplet increases magnification, it increases the curvature, hence the focal length is changed, and so is magnification changed... this forms a plano-convex magnifying lens... hence algular aperture is one of the most important factor, which is also changed... I won't be surprised if someone scientist out there wants a relationship between viscosity, surface tension and angular aperture if you make a water droplet lens lol
I have a default option on my phone that does that. Like take microscopic pictures. Its really cool. And its clearer than whats shown in the video
that is so cool nice work
Thats sick. I never thought you'd be able to see between finger prints using a phone camera.
You can use different oils and polymers to increase the viscosity or surface tension helping keep the buble tight and in place.
As long as the droplet is small enough to be a drop and not a meniscus then the size of drop wouldn't matter. The contact angle of a liquid on a surface is determined by a difference in chemical potential and does not change based on size.
this is almost exactly how immersion lithography, which makes the really tiny features of chips even possible to make, works
A beaded bracelet has the same effect. If you look really closely, you can see a close up of the top part of your eye. You can slightly close your eyelid to show the eyelashes and see how close it actually is. Pretty fascinating if you ask me.
Next video: I put my phone in the ocean and looked into another galaxy!
That’s actually pretty damn cool you can turn your phone into a diy microscope basically . I would’ve never thought of that but I’m also not a photographer.
My phone looking at me like : You know i have a macro setting inside the camera app right?
BRO THIS WOULD BE SO COOL IF FUTURE PHONES USED WATER FOR ZOOM
LESS PIXELATION!!!
I mean, it's like the same concept as oil immersion for microscopes
I'm into it
i did this with my tear, i discovered it in my 6th standard after math class while crying my head down i noticed the texture of the text book was crazy clear, nobody understood me then but now the do the same😅
How to get even smaller droplets: use a hydrophobic surface. Put water on it. Use a hydrophobic knife and cut the droplet. Only hard part is transferring that droplet on the camera
Germs on his hand be like: YOU ARE NOT ALONE BRO
Why it made my nose tingle like he was trynna touch me 😂
This is a really neat concept and im not trying to be a downer here but with modern samsung flagship cameras you can get very similar amounts of zoom, like seeing individual fibers or skin cells. Still gonna try it to see if i can get an even closer look.
I remember doing that on a playground some years ago, and recently on chemistry lessons when I was bored...
used to do this when phone cameras couldnt take a picture of a diode clear enough.
They're was a biologist that found out that if he placed a droplet of oil on the end of his microscope, he could see a lot clearer and closer than just the standard, out-of-the-box microscope
You can also use a lab capillary tube to make an even smaller drop
My phone already has a macro lense lol
hypothetically speaking if you can cut that water droplet with a hydrophobic knife you can get an even smaller droplet and get a bigger zoom
I love macro photos i took some and their so beautiful
this has already been a trend yearsss ago, I’m suprised a lot of ppl didn’t know that this worked lmao
*I finally understand what they were doing*
Now that's a really good trend
You didn't have a theory you have a hypothesis.
Finaly a challenge that doesnt involve either property damage or bodily harm
This was done sooo many years ago as a TikTok trend. I’m surprised it’s going viral again.
Bro used the sanitiser that kills 99 percent of germs 💀
This is goat of camera man peoples 🔥🔥🔥💯💯💯🤫🧏🗿
this was a trend back in 2018-2019
I figured this out 14 years ago, but never shared it.
Use more glass layers for more droplets in a row for more macro
The water droplet only works on base models of iPhone such as 13, 14, and maybe 15. For other models like 13 pro or pro max and such, you don’t need a water droplet
If you get the water drop just right on your phone screen, you can see individual pixels.
that one speck of dust just got exposed by a drop of water 💀
ive never tried this but in theory, could you use a syringe for a smaller droplet also using mineral oil. the more viscous fluid would have more stability and better surface tension?
Thanks for the biometrics
Should have used scrcpy to take the shot, would have made alignment way easier as you don't need to mess with the vibrations
It felt like I got water in my own eye
Androids have super macro lenses that looks even better
Fun Fact: This also happens to people with glasses. When i get my glasses wet i can see my eyelashes and sometimes skin mites.
Have done this in 2020❤️
Good old days
To this day I have no idea which lense out of the three lenses is being used
When I was younger we were poor couldn’t afford glasses when I needed to see the board I would yawn and tears would come out and I spread them across my eyes with my eyes lids and for a couple of seconds I would be able to see the board 😂
but hey, that’s just a theory, A GAME THEORY
With samsung you can just say cheese or capture, or just use your s pen so you aren't touching the screen to take the shot and then it's not so shaky
As someone who is a connoisseur of videos where fluid flys at the lense. I didnt know this.
it’s actually about the radius of curvature (lens-maker equation) the lateral mag is proportional to 2R or something? I can’t quite remember
Use a higher index of refraction liquid for more "macro" effect
Yep the ✨water dropping thing✨