I opened a container of yogurt that had been sitting too long, and was surprised to see that
(a) it was completely covered by a layer of mold filaments,
(b) there were some water drops on the surface of the mold, and
(c) most of the water drops would just roll around like they were on an oiled surface.
OK, so maybe (a) and (b) were not all that surprising, but I surely did not recall having noticed (c) before. The water drops simply were not wetting the surface.


Reading a little about this phenomenon, I was also surprised to learn that the water repellency is apparently due to specialized proteins, not lipids. See the discussion of "hydrophobins" at https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrophobin .
Shot with two undiffused Jansjo lamps, one in front and one positioned above and behind the subject, so as to focus light through the foreground drop. Canon T1i camera (APS-C), Canon EF 100mm F2.8 L IS USM macro lens plus 1.4X teleconverter, at about 1.4:1 overall.
This is an aperture stack -- just one focus point, but varying aperture from f/4 to f/32 nominal (roughly f/8 to f/64 effective), then treated as a focus stack using Zerene Stacker PMax plus a little retouching from individual source frames to clean up specular reflections. ISO 100, shutter speed from 1/30 to 1 second.
Curves adjustment in Photoshop, an S-shaped curve to bring out the texture of the mold.
--Rik