When you first start looking through Wethly's flying stuff photos they are truly arresting.
There's something mesmerizing about the abstract shapes the objects make in the air.
Even Wethly herself gets surprised by how the pictures turn out.
"You take a photo of something you don't actually see, because it's happening so fast," she says.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdWhen she first started, she only used her iPhone, but soon upgraded to a better camera when people started asking for prints.
One of her goals is to start selling her work on her website.
People always ask her how her pictures turn out so crisp.
Her only advice is that you have to play around with the settings on your camera a lot.
She often uses a remote, so she can throw the object in the air and then snap the picture without needing to touch the camera.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdManon will occasionally clean out her kitchen for inspiration. She's thrown eggs...
...As well as coffee grounds and flour.
Most of the shoots happen in her backyard, which can mean a lot of happy birds.
(They especially liked when she threw spaghetti.)
She has to throw her objects quite high, or else her neighbors tall bushes will get in her shots.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdMiraculously, she's only ever broken a single glass.
Which quite frankly feels incredible when you see how many glasses she throws up in the air.
Her series of flying sand photos are some of her favorites.
Generally, she pays a lot of attention to color and texture when choosing objects.
When she's not shooting #flying stuff photos, she works as a freelance interior and graphic designer.
next slide will load in 15 secondsSkip AdSkip AdHere was Wethly's first flying stuff photo of her Puma sneakers.
If you thought that was cool, here's another amazing Instagram account