View allAll Photos Tagged Complex.

LARGE feel the depth

 

Another shot from Belur. The rains had just stopped and a passage of light ...lucky to

get a patch of blue n shades of white in the sky. THE LEFT section is at a higher level than the right, dry except for the floor and has a roof ...the light/color absorption is different. Same WB settings across.

 

DRI- Handheld. 3 different exposures. with spot focus on the pillar for one exposure and 2 others between the left flank wall and the right section - sky. I had to hold the cam steady with one hand and move the cursor to specific spots...aligned in PS. Individual exposures treated in ACR.

Found in a pile of grass clippings at home.

Believe it or not, this little guy was no more than 20cm long! And despite his tiny stature, he was completely fearless, and even took a few bites right at my lens!

 

Best viewed on black

Been busy Saturday night, IC1396, Sadr Complex, NGC7000 and IC434

WO SkyCat 51, Zwo 183MC Pro cooled color camera

Optolong L eNhance filter

#SharpCap Pro PoleMaster

Ioptron i45 Pro EQ mount, PHD2 guiding

Orion 60mm guidescope SSAG

220 Gain offset 20 0c cooling, 1 minute exposure, 1 hour 45 minutes for IC1396, IC434 was 45 minutes, 1 minute exposure each, NGC7000 was 30 minutes, 1 minute each, Sadr complex was 4 panel 15 minutes each, 1 hour total,

Weather was good all night for me, I didnt get home till 3 in the morning

50 darks 50 flats and 50 bias frames

Astro Pixel Processor and PS

© Wil Wardle

 

Do not use this or any of my images without my permission.

 

Please also find me on:

 

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www.wilwardlephotography.co.uk

The buildings in this historic mill complex date from 1850 till about 1890. They were used to manufacture wool, cotton, paper bags, and then, finally, chocolate from the early 1900s till World War II. More recently the old mill buildings have been renovated and repurposed as retail, dining and office space. Ballston Spa, New York.

The Summit Complex building is located at the summit of the Great Orme, Llandudno.

 

Click here for more photographs of Llandudno: www.jhluxton.com/Wales/Conwy-County-Borough/Llandudno

 

The site was previously used as a semaphore station forming part of the Holyhead to Liverpool telegraph system.

 

Between 1810 and 1829 a chain of telegraph signals was established along the North Wales coast from Holyhead. These signal stations relayed information about vessels arriving and departing Liverpool.

 

The telegraph station was later moved to Great Orme’s Head Lighthouse when it was built in 1862 by the Mersey Docks and Harbour Board.

 

After the closure of the Telegraph Station the original station became the Telegraph Inn serving visitors to the Summit of the Great Orme.

 

At the beginning of the 20th Century Griffith B. Morgan – catering manager of the Great Northern Railway and proprietor of the Clarence Hotel, Llandudno – purchased the Telegraph Inn for £1,500.

 

The plan was to turn the site into a hotel and create an 18 hole Golf Course on adjacent land.

 

Unfortunately the original project was not completed and the venture went liquidation.

 

The hotel was eventually completed on a reduced scale than originally envisaged, along with the golf course, aided by the support of a local golf club.

 

The Great Orme Golf Course closed with the outbreak of World War II with the land reverting to sheep grazing.

 

The Summit Hotel hotel – was requisitioned during the World War II and became RAF Great Orme Radar Station.

 

The end of the war signified a new era for the Summit Hotel. The property passed through various hands until it was bought and later restored by champion

middleweight boxer Randolph Turpin and Leslie Salts a loca businessman.

 

Unfortunately Turpin was not good at managing his business affairs and was forced to sell the business after being pursued by the Inland Revenue for tax debts incurred during his boxing career.

 

He was eventually declared bankrupt and took his life in 1966.

This year was really the first day when Novorossiysk felt the warmth of the Sun.

- - - - - - - - - - -

В этом году прошёл действительно первый день, когда Новороссийск почувствовал тепло Солнца.

The buildings in this historic mill complex date from 1850 till about 1890. They were used to manufacture wool, cotton, paper bags, and then, finally, chocolate from the early 1900s till World War II. More recently the old mill buildings have been renovated and repurposed as retail, dining and office space. Ballston Spa, New York.

SOOC (straight out of the camera with only the signature added)

Taken using with KnightX CPL 58 mm filter

impressions @ clockwork

Pentax Espio 928 Delta 400 LegacyPro EcoPro 1:1 11/17/2024

Apartment complex in Tenerife overlooking the pool at night

 

*photographed using my old point + shoot cam

White House Complex, Bengaluru

The Bass Maltings complex at Sleaford was completed in 1907 to the designs of the company’s chief engineer, Herbert Couchman. The planning of the development dated back to 1880, when Bass, Ratcliffe and Gretton Ltd proposed the development of sixteen new malthouses in the Sleaford area of Lincolnshire. The area was a major producer of English barley, and was well-served by the rail network, which made possible the bulk transportation and distribution of both barley and the finished malt. Construction on the scale proposed dwarfed other centres of malt production, and was driven by the need to reduce production costs by increasing the scale of production, and by locating the malting process close to the source of the barley, rather than at Burton-on-Trent at the site of the Bass brewery. Bass’s requirement for malted barley had increased after it became a public company in 1888 in order to provide the capital for the development of its own public houses. The company identified a suitable source of water in Sleaford by boring an artesian well in 1892, and in 1901, purchased 13.3 acres of land around the well site. Plans for the development were submitted in 1901, work on site began in the same year, and malting began in 1906. Only eight maltings were completed rather than the sixteen originally envisaged, and the complex was finally completed in 1907.

 

The Sleaford maltings were traditional floor maltings, with soaked or ‘steeped’ barley spread over the several germinating floors before being kilned to produce the finished malt. This linear process replicated on a massive scale the traditional design of floor maltings found in farmsteads and small breweries throughout England, and continued to be constructed until the mid-C20, despite the development of pneumatic malting in the late C19.

 

From 1907 until the outbreak of the Second World War, the Sleaford maltings operated at full capacity, producing malt more cheaply than could be achieved at the company’s Burton maltings. However, in the post-war era, production was reduced and vacant space in the maltings ranges was let to local businesses. The closure of the maltings in 1959 was precipitated by Bass’s installation of a new automated pneumatic-mechanical malting system in four of its Burton-on-Trent maltings. This system allowed the malting process to be carried on throughout the year with a very small labour force, making the process far more cost efficient than could be achieved at Sleaford.

 

Following the cessation of malting on the site, various parts of the complex were occupied by other businesses. Partial occupation and a lack of maintenance made the site vulnerable to damage, fires breaking out in 1969, and again in 1976, this time resulting in the far greater loss of original fabric when the central range’s barley store and screens, and parts of three malthouses were severely damaged. The complex was added to the statutory List in November 1974, and various parts of the complex remained in use until 2000, when the site was closed.

1st Day Tour in Cambodia : Tha Prohm Complex ~ Siem Reap

  

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission.

© All rights reserved

  

Buckhead, Morgan County

Georgia

Making the Google campus wild again.

 

Mountain View CA.

Steel Bridge, Portland, Oregon i13p9306

Lawrence, MA: Pacific Mills

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Step Up Revolution hay tuyệt vời :-x

Mến thì add cái facebook: www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100004170692673

 

A complex composition, lots of separate elements at play but I think that maybe the flow of it all holds it together.

[[Good Girl]] - Cinthya Suit.

Furniture set by ~FL~ . Modern Orgy Sofa.

Both available at Beauty Event

 

My Blog for all the details on furniture and outfit. ♥

For my last photo of this week, I thought I might do an abstract.....Have a relaxing weekend....

  

Texture by Darkwoods - thank you Darkwoods

www.flickr.com/photos/darkwood67/4511192078/

Complex and compact power substation. Utah County, Utah.

R0003841a

Red Fort Compound

Chandni Chowk

New Delhi

 

500px I Instagram 1 I Instagram 2 I Bijanfotografy I Facebook

The mouths of estuaries are places of shifting sands, as tides and rainfall result in water flows of varying direction and velocity. Sunset puts the icing on the cake of this beautiful, complex pattern of sandbars. Ballina

São Luiz Gonzaga hospital. São Paulo.

Nikon D2X. Nikkor 28-80mm AR.

This is the first deep sky photo I've taken with my Canon 6D. The camera is unmodified, and I'm impressed with its performance.

 

Exposure: 53x300s, 15x60s, 20x20s second exposures at ISO 1600

Camera: Canon EOS 6D (Unmodified)

Filter: Unfiltered

Telescope: Orion ED80 with .85x Focal Reducer

Mount: Losmandy G-11

Guider: Orion SSAG through ST80

Date: 11/27/2016

  

Exposures shot RAW in BYEOS, stacked in Deep Sky Stacker, and processed in Photoshop

Part of the .. Queen Mine

Greece, Athens Vicinity

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