In Pictures: High-res snowflake camera captures magical imagesPublished2 February 2021Image source, Nathan Myhrvold / Modernist Cuisine Gallery, LLCImage caption, “Snowflakes are a great example of hidden beauty. Water, an incredibly familiar thing to all of us, is quite unfamiliar when you see it in this different view." - Nathan Myhrvold, photographerImage source, Nathan Myhrvold / Modernist Cuisine Gallery, LLCImage caption, Only a few millimetres across, snow crystals present a challenge to film due to their size and fragility.Image source, Nathan Myhrvold / Modernist Cuisine Gallery, LLCImage caption, With a subject as delicate as snowflakes, time, temperature, weather conditions and equipment are extremely important for a photographer.Image source, Nathan Myhrvold / Modernist Cuisine Gallery, LLCImage caption, Photographer Nathan Myhrvold spent about 18 months designing and building a custom snowflake camera so that he could photograph snow crystals.Image source, Nathan Myhrvold / Modernist Cuisine Gallery, LLCImage caption, To keep the snowflakes from melting or vapourising too quickly, the microscope has a cooling stage, giving Nathan more time to capture his images.Image source, Nathan Myhrvold / Modernist Cuisine Gallery, LLCImage caption, These photographs were shot on location in Alaska and the Northwest Territories, Canada. Some of the best snowflakes Nathan found were at temperatures between –26 to –29 °C. Chilly!Image source, Nathan Myhrvold / Modernist Cuisine Gallery, LLCImage caption, The camera is paired with high-speed LED lights to reduce the heat they release and increase the speed at which a photographer can capture the image. The camera has a minimum shutter speed of 500 microseconds. That's pretty quick!More on this storyAmazing photos from Duchess Kate's lockdown projectPublished11 June 2020Check out this beautiful city of ice and lightsPublished2 January 2019