What if some of the most famous online services were launched in 1959?
It’s A Small World.
The Nikon International Small World Competition first began in 1974 as a means to recognise and applaud the efforts of those involved with photography through the light microscope.
Since then, Small World has become a leading showcase for photomicrographers from the widest array of scientific disciplines.
Soap Film:
Snowflake:
Crystallized Soy Sauce:
Spiral Vessels From Banana Plant Stem:
These are just some of the entries for the 36th annual Nikon Small World Photomicrography Competition.
The winners will be announced on October 13th and you can vote for the best image HERE.

Big Beasties.
I want a macro lens.
If I had a macro lens I could take really close up,
Insanely detailed photos of beasties and they would look like this:
That would be pretty cool I think.

The Day I Saw A Rocket Take Off.
I used to have a telescope when I was a wee boy.
My Granda gave it to me.
That meant it was pretty good and cost a fair amount of money.
I used to set it up on its tripod out the back and point it up.
Iād look at the Moon and wonder like every boy should and one time I even saw Neptune through it!
It was turquoise.
Other times when it was cloudy,
Iād just aim the telescope at the nearest window in the scheme.
Wondering…like every boy should š
My Dad always told me to never look at the Sun with it and I did.
All the time in fact!
I wear glasses now.
Strong ones.
He was probably right but thereās no way of telling.
Later,
Our folks saved up and took me and my Sister on holiday to Florida.
America.
My Mum got heatstroke and couldnāt leave the hotel one day and my Sister stayed with her.
That was the day that my Dad took me to Cape Canaveral.
The John F. Kennedy Space Centre.
I was 10.
I want to write about it here because although I remember it now,
Itās fading a bit.
Like I say,
I was 10.
I remember my Dad that day, getting used to driving on the right-hand side of the road fairly quickly and I remember it being a long, early in the morning drive out to Kennedy.
– American roads.
Big long straight sun kissed highways!
I think it was a 1 or 2 hour drive but we got there and took the tour.
We stood beside rocket engine exhausts that were 50 times bigger than we were.
We saw shiny, futuristic looking dune buggyās which in actuality, dated back to when my Dad was a boy.
There were rockets and shuttles that were bigger than the tallest buildings Iād ever seen and Space suits which dwarfed the both of us!
I remember thinking:
āHow can men make this stuff!?ā
āHow do they know how!?ā
10 year old thoughts.
But hereās me approaching 30 and still asking myself the same questions.
And with 30 approaching fast,
My memory is going away even faster.
The next thing I remember is something I donāt think Iāll ever forget.
We were 4 miles away.
We had to be because thatās what they said.
4 miles away was the safest distance yāsee!
4 miles away behind a barrier.
About to watch a space rocket take off!
It wasnāt planned.
We didnāt know weād see a rocket lift off that day.
Just luck.
Right place, right time.
I remember being in among lots of other tourists and American 10 year olds (who were all bigger than me) and joining in on the countdown.
I donāt remember hearing the famous words āLIFT OFF!ā but Iāll never forget the explosion.
It was mind blowing!
The kind of thing which instantly makes you feel very small.
I had always thought that the smoke trail from a rocket would be a perfect straight line as it goes up but it wasnāt.
It was a sort of swirling reverse pattern.
Kinda like an upside down tornado.
We watched that massive man made thing blast off into the skyā¦and thatās another thing!
I thought the rocket would just gradually fade and disappear into the sky but it didnāt
Florida was glorious that day and there were no clouds.
We watched that rocket go all the way up and āpenetrateā is the wrong word.
āBreakā is the right word.
We saw the rocket break through the blue sky.
I donāt know how to describe something breaking the sky.
Itās all hard to describe and itās twenty years later but luckily,
We took photos and I recently found them.
Iāll scan them in and add them into this post in a day or two so check back.
I think Iām gonna buy a telescope again.
