Brightfield illumination has been one of the most widely used observation modes in optical microscopy for the past 300 years. The technique is best suited for utilization with fixed, stained specimens or other kinds of samples that naturally absorb significant amounts of visible light. Images produced with brightfield illumination appear dark and/or highly colored against a bright, often light gray or white, background. This digital image gallery explores a variety of stained specimens captured with an Olympus BX51 microscope coupled to a 12-bit QImaging Retiga camera system and a three-color liquid crystal tunable filter.
- Amphibian Skin
- Bacteria
- Bald Scalp
- Bracken Fern
- Cerebrum
- Lycopodium
- Ductus Deferens
- Epididymis
- Fern Spores
- Frog Epithelium
- Frog Muscle Tissue
- Pigmented Skin
- Hemlock Leaf
- Horsetail Strobilus
- Cerebral Cortex
- Immature Testes
- Keloid Scar Tissue
- Cardiac Muscle
- Cerebellum
- Hyaline Cartilage
- Graafian Follicle
- Mammalian Kidney
- Smooth Muscle
- Mammalian Testes
- Marchantia Liverwort
- Oleander Leaf
- Optic Nerve
- Palmar Skin
- Pine Needle
- Pine Stem
- Plantar Skin
- Prostate Gland Old
- Prostate Gland Young
- Columnar Epithelium
- Salamander Liver
- Columnar Epithelium
- Thyroid Gland
- Zamia Stem