View allAll Photos Tagged Fasteners
I created this image by capturing a macro shot of a loosely tightened translucent nylon cable tie measuring in approximately 50mm x 20mm x 5mm in dimension (left over from my LED light project :-)). I then masked the image of the fastener to remove the background, cloned the image, applied a colour overlay and rotated the image. The previous three steps were repeated a number of times to achieve the design I wanted.
I thank you all for your views, faves and comments!
Macro Mondays: Fasteners
This lovely little clasp on my grandmother's pearl necklace is just 1.2 cm long, and the necklace itself quite tiny. She was a very petite and elegant woman!
done and posted for "Macro Mondays" group
Thema / theme: “fastener"
© all rights reserved / Lutz Koch 2018
For personal display only !
All other uses, including copying or reproduction of this photograph or its image, in whole or in part, or storage of the image in any medium are expressly forbidden.
Written permission for use of this photograph must be obtained from the copyright holder !
Rivet together
That belongs together !
It will stay together
Either forever or never
(by me)
For #MacroMondays #Fasteners
Macro: Rivets (all together 1 ¾”x 2 ¼”)
Happy MM Everyone !
ƒ/2.8
4.5 mm
1/25 Sec
ISO 400
Dedicated to C.F. (ILYWAMHASAM
For Macro Monday - Fastener
For fastening a hose to a tap.
Measuring 30mm diameter and 40mm length.
Happy Macro Monday!
Guess who-hoo-hoo? :)
Fasteners - Macro Mondays
7. What's that object? - 52 weeks in 2018
Macro shots at home - The Flickr Lounge
CSXT 6014 spots a single tank car in the backwoods of Jacksonville's Commonwealth neighborhood on the creaky rails of the sparsely used spur to Triangle Fastener Corporation. This company is served only a handful of times a month with usually just a single car and makes the western most customer of the Edgewood yard industrial area. It's good to see this one has survived over the years; Adcom Wire and US Ink are the only two customers that closed shop and thus no longer require rail service around Edgewood yard in the last few years. This spur has a diamond where a long disused spur crosses the line in the middle of the woods; unfortunately I didn't have time to make it to that spot this time. Here's a photo of the diamond the spur crosses: flickr.com/photos/henry_dell/16107415778/in/album-7215764...
And some photos of the now gone Adcom Wire and US Ink spurs getting serviced a few years ago: flickr.com/photos/henry_dell/14218532940/in/album-7215764...
flickr.com/photos/henry_dell/15293854718/in/album-7215764...
flickr.com/photos/henry_dell/14708876458/in/album-7215764...
Focus stack (44 images). Shot with two off-camera strobes (Godox AD200Pro/XPro II L trigger). Flash A bare bulb, mounted on overhead boom, bounced off 32 inch white umbrella. Flash B, Camera fight, 45 degrees, 45 degrees above table, modified with MagMod MagSnoot, fully extended. White reflector (8 x 10 inch camera left, perpendicular to subject.
Shot for Macro Mondays - fastener
Subject (ceiling tile staples), 14mm (h) x 10,5 mm (w) x 34 mm (l, front, 48.7 mm rear)
Fastener this image is constructed by a few fasteners in shape of a flower . The head is made up from screws and the stem and leaves are made from cable ties .HMM folks have a great day. This image is no more than 3in
-[ Redux 2021 • Orange (5/31/2021) | Five (12/6/2021) ]-
Twist-on wire connectors, more commonly known here in the US by the brand name Wire Nut, or Marrette in Canada, where the product was invented. In my younger years, I called them “wire cappers,” a functional if not official term.
The orange color is part of a standardized color-coding system indicating how many wires of a specific gauge can be accommodated. Connectors of this color were commonly included with light fixtures and ceiling fans.
For Macro Mondays 'Fasteners' theme.
Pins and retaining collars.
Used to fix replacement glazing frames to the glazing bars in the old style red K6 telephone kiosks.
A low-fidelity riff on the timeless symbol made of twist-on wire connectors. These red connectors accommodate more and/or larger gauge wires than the orange ones I showcased over a year ago.
Installed correctly, they love to hold wires in a tight embrace for a long time.
the macromondays' theme for today (2/19) is fastener(s). this portion of the belt clip is an inch and 3/8ths. have a couple more possibilities ~grin~ let the dithering begin........
#MacroMondays and #Fasteners
#MacroMondays
#Fastener
This is an "S-Biner" double carabiner. They come in different shapes, functionalities, and sizes, and this is the smallest one available (methinks), a 3,7 cm/1.45 inches long steel thingy that, for example, comes in handy for extra securing a bag or backpack because it has a "microlock" at the centre part (it's really hard to open once it's locked). You can also use it as a keyholder, attach a strap to it... whatever. It's a convenient little device that I keep in a small pouch, together with extra camera batteries and other photo-related things. Because one never knows, right?
For this, I thought a nicely shallow DOF and bokeh might look nice, so I mounted the Laowa 50mm 2x macro. I glued the S-Biner to my go-to black, glossy tile with a small piece of modeling clay so I could make it stand up at a Dutch angle rather than just putting it on the tile. I also placed a green bnottle in front of one of the LED lamps because red and green always look so nice together, don't they? That's it ;)
HMM, Everyone!
Cotter pins and magnetic hooks.
I set up a nearly identical arrangement of hooks about 1½ years earlier, just dropping hints in the tags without explaining what I did. Since magnetism is the theme this time around, I used a large washer, placed behind a sheet of matte board held at an angle, to secure the upper hook magnetically. Cotter pins were chosen to be unique; their low profile is a bonus.