View allAll Photos Tagged Effect
エフェクターの代表的モデルのウェリントン。ベーシックなフレームワークだが、インパクトも兼ね備えている。
The "distortion" is based on the classic Wellington design and its strong impact has made it a mainstay.
Today capturing Fall colors was hard with the rain and wind. I wanted to make the best out of a field trip I took with a group and tried this special effect capture. Not bad!!! Hope to refine this project little by little.
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Movie Name ✨ The Lazarus Effect 2015
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One phenomenon that has really produced incredibly effective results in terms of developing a positive self-esteem is The Trivedi Effect® as reported by tens of thousands of people.
A shelter for man and beast. Note blending effect with terrain. Portion
of a slag heap in the foreground. This photo taken near the mill site.
Bristol Wells Town Site
(#72000765)
23 miles north of Pioche off U.S. Route 93
Pioche, NV
Bristol Wells, also known as National City, Bristol City and Tempest, is a ghost town in Lincoln County, Nevada. The mining town was located on the west side of Bristol Mountain, 14 miles northwest of Pioche, Nevada.
The first mining claims were staked in 1870. The district was organized the next year when the settlement of National City grew around the National Mine. In 1872 a furnace was built to treat silver-lead ore from the Bristol Mine, 4 miles (6.4 km) to the east. In 1878 a richer deposit was found, resulting in the construction of a stamp mill. The settlement was renamed Bristol City the same year. The stamp mill expanded in 1880 and a smelter was built, while stone ovens were built to provide charcoal for the smelter. The town's wells provided water to the mines. By 1890 a new smelter was built to treat copper ore, and the town's population reached 400.
Activity declined after 1893. A leach-recovery plant built in 1900 operated for two years, recovering copper. In 1913 an aerial tramway was built to Jackrabbit, Nevada, 2 miles to the northeast, where ore could be loaded on the Los Angeles and Salt Lake Railroad. Mining activity continued intermittently, sharply declining after 1918. The town was briefly renamed Tempest after the Tempest Mine in 1922, returning to Bristol in 1929. The post office continued until 1950