View allAll Photos Tagged COMBINING
A galactic panoramic
This multi-wavelength image combines eight colors of near-infrared light captured by Webb with three colors of ultraviolet and visible light from Hubble. It shows — in unprecedented detail and exquisite depth — a universe full of galaxies, many of which were previously unseen by Hubble or large ground-based telescopes.
While this shot is just a portion of what will be the complete wide field covered by this Webb program, it’s already unveiling wonders. The faintest objects here are about 1 billion times fainter than what can be seen with our eyes.
Image Credits: NASA, ESA, CSA, A. Pagan (STScI) & R. Jansen (ASU).
Science: R. Jansen, J. Summers, R. O'Brien, and R. Windhorst (Arizona State University); A. Robotham (ICRAR/UWA); A. Koekemoer (STScI); C. Willmer (UofA); and the PEARLS team
Image description: This image depicts a field of hundreds of galaxies of various shapes, colors and sizes. Most are small while a handful are somewhat larger. A few stars are also scattered across the image. Some have Webb’s characteristic 8-point diffraction spikes, while others have additional spikes due to a combination of image exposures.
A huge Claas Lexion 570 combine harvester does its thing in the Staffordshire wheat fields around Elford and Portway on a warm and breezy Wednesday evening on the 1st August 2018.
Large dust clouds are spewed from the Combine - (no good if youre a hayfever sufferer!) partly obsuring the view of a DB class 66 waiting patiently at the head of Elford loop for a road West.
The 66 was working 6G45 16:53 Toton North Yard to Bescot Up Engineers Sdgs.
It left approximately 2 hours later, after I'd given up on it moving. Good job really!
We had a rare experience today - we had snow! That's something we never get on the south coast of England! It was combined with a lovely delicate pink sunrise so I grabbed my camera and went for a walk.
Annesley
Nottinghamshire
U.K.
Serptember 5th, 2023.
Harvesting on a sunny day with the temperature at 25c degrees. I hope the operator has air conditioning in that cab!
© all rights reserved by B℮n
King’s Day Dutch: Koningsdag, is the National holiday celebrated with joyful open air festivities on the King’s Willem- Alexander birthday, held each year in April in the Netherlands. King's day Amsterdam celebrations are the biggest and the most attractive. More than million people arrive to the city to celebrate this day. Street carnival, dancing and singing combined with the open air free market, selling and buying of all kinds of small objects by almost all Amsterdam citizens. Traditionally the reigning monarch portraits are on display and streets are decorated with national Dutch flags and the color of orange, the traditional color of the monarchy and the symbol of Dutch patriotism. Many any people dress up as the King or wear the King’s insignia, while almost all try to have an orange accent in their clothing. This is also the day to eat in the streets exotic food Indonesian, Surinamese, Moroccan or Turkish and drink beer or orange juice. A glass of Heineken or Amstel sold in the street will be between €2.00 and €3.00. The Dutch, traditionally the nation of sailors and merchants, celebrate their most important national holiday with selling and buying of small unnecessary objects from their households. The prices are mostly symbolic. Starting as early as 7 A.M., the whole city center becomes a street market. Most of people are selling their stuff directly in front of their house. Fun is the most important here - do not expect to buy anything of value. The tradition is to negotiate about the price and it happens, especially when children are trading, that buyer raises the price to show the playful character of this festive business.
The old area of the Jordaan, traditionally poor district of the city but now trendy Amsterdam area, becomes on the King’s Day most crowded free market area. Many folk singers are performing popular Amsterdam songs directly in the streets. A festive boat parade takes place for several hours in early afternoon, usually along the Prinsengracht canal. People dance on boats and on the shore. Sometimes some boats stop at the shore and will be willing to invite you to their floating party.
Op Koningsdag kleurt Amsterdam oranje! Veel mensen dragen oranje kleding en de straten en grachten kleuren dan ook helemaal oranje. Op straat, op de grachten en in de parken worden de leukste openluchtfestiviteiten geboden voor jong en oud. Amsterdam kleurt, net als de rest van Nederland, elk jaar op Koningsdag oranje. Op de uitbundigste feestdag van het jaar viert iedereen feest en zet daarmee de koninklijke familie in het zonnetje. Tijdens Koningsdag is het op de grachten van Amsterdam erg gezellig, maar ook erg druk. Met de vele liveoptredens en dj's tijdens Koningsnacht en het enorme aantal evenementen, vrijmarkten en kinderactiviteiten op Koningsdag hoeft niemand zich te vervelen tijdens het grootste straatfeest van het jaar. Zoals het een ware handelsstad betaamt, is Amsterdam de plek bij uitstek om te handelen en te onderhandelen. De vrijmarkt is een uitgelezen kans voor alle Amsterdammers om hun tweedehands spullen op straat of in het park te verkopen en is hiermee een van de grootste vlooienmarkten ter wereld. Ook op de Amsterdamse grachten is het op Koningsdag een groot oranje feest. Duizenden versierde boten varen over de grachten en zorgen vaak voor een gezellig oponthoud. Op een boot Koningsdag vieren is natuurlijk het allerleukst, maar vanaf de kant en de bruggen deel je net zo goed in de feestvreugde. De Prinsengracht raakt overvol met boten. De dansmuziek weergalmt van de boten af. Er wordt op elke boot lekker gedanst en sommige gaan helemaal los. Wat een feest toch, één groot gekkenhuis!! Voor grote straatfeesten zijn de Jordaan, de Wallen, de Nieuwmarkt en de grote pleinen de beste plek. Bewoners en cafés hebben muziek en drank op straat en u loopt van het ene straatfeest naar het volgende.
A short lived dry spell and the sun peeping through the clouds at sunset. F14.0 to burst the sun. Handheld for a couple of shots to blend. Not recommended...tripod makes it much easier but had to compose on the flip screen above my head as the sun was sinking too fast for me.
Combine and tractor near McBaine in rural Boone County Missouri by Notley Hawkins Photography. Taken with a Canon EOS 5D Mark IV camera with a Canon EF16-35mm f/2.8L II USM lens at ƒ/4.0 with a 14 second exposure at ISO 100. Processed with Adobe Lightroom 6.4.
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©Notley Hawkins
"I see them. Buzz droids!"
Built for Grid Wars IV, an awesome challenge to combine TRON and Star Wars. I had so much fun building this and my other entry!
Make sure to check out the additional photos!
This model features folding wings, retractable (functioning) landing gear, opening/complete cockpit that holds a figure, and detachable corrupted buzz droids. It's very strong and entirely swooshable/playable.
My buddy Noah over at h2brick and I decided to have a bit of a challenge since both of us decided to do the same ship. Comment which of our versions of this iconic ship is your favorite! His model: www.flickr.com/photos/145675635@N03/45153937664/in/contacts/
I had a lot of fun with the challenge of building my favorite Star Wars fighter. I decided to brick-build the wings, since I find that plates and tiles just don't do it justice. I tried many different slope combinations to get the right angles (cheese slopes, generic slopes, etc.) but eventually ended up using a bunch of these that I recently got. Maelven was a big inspiration in nailing down the scale and shaping of the wings!
Enjoy! Good luck to all the entries!
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Through the creations that I build, I hope to inspire other young (or perhaps older) LEGO builders to unleash their inner creativity. We all need a positive way to express ourselves, so let's allow LEGO to be an extension of us. Your creativity belongs to you, and nobody can take that away. Build what you want to build, and how you want to build it.
There's nothing like guilt combined with a sneaky ultimatum to drain love and destroy a relationship.
- Personal comic proyect
- Technical combined illustration
- Realized with: Pencils, Pilot G-tec-c4, warecolor and Photoshop CS3
My hubby took this photo of Table Rock State Park and I applied the tilt shift to it. I love tilt shift!!!!! What do you think?
p.s. Tilt shift gives images (or parts of images) a miniature effect. I love to try new things.........mix things up a little. :0)
After combining with the QAEX in Gilberton and holding for the NRFF at EMX, the Mountain Job drifts into Tamaqua to end their day at the yard.
This German Built Combine is seen hard at work in a Wheat Field near Patrington in East Yorkshire ..
Knoxville is a city in the U.S. state of Tennessee, and the county seat of Knox County. The city had an estimated population of 186,239 in 2016 and a population of 178,874 as of the 2010 census, making it the state's third largest city after Nashville and Memphis. Knoxville is the principal city of the Knoxville Metropolitan Statistical Area, which, in 2016, was 868,546, up 0.9 percent, or 7,377 people, from to 2015. The KMSA is, in turn, the central component of the Knoxville-Sevierville-La Follette Combined Statistical Area, which, in 2013, had a population of 1,096,961.
First settled in 1786, Knoxville was the first capital of Tennessee. The city struggled with geographic isolation throughout the early 19th century. The arrival of the railroad in 1855 led to an economic boom. During the Civil War, the city was bitterly divided over the secession issue, and was occupied alternately by both Confederate and Union armies.Following the war, Knoxville grew rapidly as a major wholesaling and manufacturing center. The city's economy stagnated after the 1920s as the manufacturing sector collapsed, the downtown area declined and city leaders became entrenched in highly partisan political fights. Hosting the 1982 World's Fair helped reinvigorate the city, and revitalization initiatives by city leaders and private developers have had major successes in spurring growth in the city, especially the downtown area.
Knoxville is the home of the flagship campus of the University of Tennessee, whose sports teams, called the "Volunteers" or "Vols", are extremely popular in the surrounding area. Knoxville is also home to the headquarters of the Tennessee Valley Authority, the Tennessee Supreme Court's courthouse for East Tennessee and the corporate headquarters of several national and regional companies. As one of the largest cities in the Appalachian region, Knoxville has positioned itself in recent years as a repository of Appalachian culture and is one of the gateways to the Great Smoky Mountains National Park.
The data above was taken from the following website:
Inspired by the combiner mechs like Voltron or Megazord, i decided to build my own with five mecha dragons.
It took me 3 mounth and 3413 LEGO bricks to achieve this 45cm tall mech.
Each dragon's heads is a cockpit where you can fit a minifigure.
You can see the transformation in this video : www.youtube.com/watch?v=mNZnmCw0gvY
A double exposure of the St Johns Bridge, taken with my Holga camera as I rode across the bridge, no I wasn't driving. The fun thing about double exposures, holga, and windshield shooting is that with any of them you never quite know what you are going to get. Combine all three of them together and the results are even more unpredictable. It is this unpredictability that I am particularly drawn to. This is a vision not even my imagination would have created, yet my $25 dollar plastic camera did. Amazing.
This particular photo by the way is dedicated to a good friend, with whom I recently had a discussion with about subpar photography. They are a big fan of this bridge so hopefully they like this shot too. But these sort of discussions can drive me a bit mad at times. Especially considering I hold their photography in very high esteem. They have a wonderful vision of this world, and a true passion for seeking out and capturing the magic of it. Seeing someone of such ability fail to realize in their own work their ability for causing the rest of us marvel is a travesty. Our photography is what we make of it, nothing more and nothing less. It truly troubles me to see someone whose photography could be something more, make it something less.
Photography is such an incredibly subject business. You take a soulless metal and glass device that has no opinion, thoughts or feelings...in other words, bias, and you use it to capture something as unique and undefinable as one's own vision. There is no way to be able to quantify this. It is what we believe it to be. I do not like to think of good pictures or bad pictures. To me, a slightly out of focus shot of some 40 year old man from the 1950's may be boring (it often isn't) but to that man's granddaughter who is seeing it 50 years later, it is priceless. Maybe this shot of the bridge, which I find intriguing and mysterious, might bore or confuse another. How can one possibly label a photo as being necessarily a "good" shot or a "bad" shot, or a "subpar" shot for that matter then? You show it to ten people and you will likely get ten different responses. Majority opinion then? Surely not. Because majority opinion would often be unimpressed with all your personal family photos, yet we still love to display them at home.
Each photographer shoots at least partially themselves, even if the photograph is meant for some other audience. It is their vision they are recording, their craftsmanship being put to the test. Ultimately I believe the person's opinion who matters the most when it comes to your photography is your own. And yes, I agree, the opinions of others, especially the nice and constructive ones, certainly make an impact too. I guess what all this long-winded rambling was about, was me just trying to say, don't do yourself that injustice by failing to see what you are capable of when you pick up a camera. Do not fail to believe in yourself, for to do so is to limit yourself, to handicap your ability to see. One does not have to be an arrogant snob about it either, instead of thinking good or bad, think potential, think vision, think possibility. I am always a little sad when I see such great photographers producing great photography, which everybody else enjoys except for themselves. Alright then, off of my soapbox. Hope you made it this far, now get away from that comp and go take some photos. ;-)
If you are interested in pricing for my images, or just plain curious, more info can be found at my website: www.zebandrews.com
Here I tried a different background with the Northern Harrier: She's been moved from Steigerwald NWR to Lake Vancouver.
I went back and shot this scene several times, and some of the pictures were "nice". I guess I'm not a good enough photographer to take real pictures they way I want to see them. So I combined a bunch of the pictures trying to capture all the masts, light, sky, colors, and clouds. It was tough getting a balance. This is version #62 and for better or worse it's time to move on.
The modern combined harvester, or simply combine, is a versatile machine designed to efficiently harvest a variety of grain crops. The name derives from its combining four separate harvesting operations—reaping, threshing, gathering, and winnowing—into a single process. Among the crops harvested with a combine are wheat, rice, oats, rye, barley, corn (maize), sorghum, soybeans, flax (linseed), sunflowers and rapeseed. The separated straw, left lying on the field, comprises the stems and any remaining leaves of the crop with limited nutrients left in it: the straw is then either chopped, spread on the field and ploughed back in or baled for bedding and limited-feed for livestock.
Inspired by the combiner mechs like Voltron or Megazord, i decided to build my own with five mecha dragons.
It took me 3 mounth and 3413 LEGO bricks to achieve this 45cm tall mech.
Each dragon's heads is a cockpit where you can fit a minifigure.
You can see the transformation in this video : www.youtube.com/watch?v=mNZnmCw0gvY
Uploading 3 archive Farming shots as such a miserable day again. 2023 has not started off with much brightness. All taken on farms in Norfolk a few years ago