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Dubai Frame - presents views of old Dubai in the north and new Dubai in the south.
wiki - Dubai Frame
Wainuiomata Hill lookout, Wellington.
Canon Rebel 2000 camera, EF28-105/f3.5-4.5 lens, Ilford HP5+ black-and-white negative film, Tiffen yellow 12 filter.
This butterfly will live forever in this photo box, and deserves a home that loves bright and happy colours. If you want a butterfly in a frame like this, but in a different colour or something, contact me and I'll get right on it for you.
I took this Frame in the late-ish 1980's at Drakelow, Stapenhill Burton-on-Trent ... like most things its condemed to History having been long demolished!
The Original All-Welded Frame
Martin Docks, Inc. has improved on the basic bolt-together design by using an all-welded frame, this makes a Martin Dock completely boltless and a much stronger frame.
From the most basic swim platform to the most complicated custom project Martin Docks, Inc. is fully capable of handling all of your dock needs. Martin Docks, Inc. offers a low maintenance, heavy framed all welded aluminum boat docks, and gangways. Many different styles are available including platform docks, open slip docks, gable roof docks, hip roof docks, and sundeck model docks. Martin Docks Inc. creates a boat dock that will not only hold up to the roughest climates, but will also amplify the beauty of your lakeside property. Martin Docks, Inc. takes every possible step to deliver the best quality, highest value boat dock available while also customizing your dock. Being a Dock builder for over 50 years allows a Martin Dock to stand the test of time. We customize each of our docks to the location, intended uses, and budget.
with messy hair and disastrous background. ha ha ha...what to do? My stylist is too busy being the model.
It's the Ronjonie Wild Frame 3 texture created in the Filter Forge plugin. It can be seamless tiled and rendered in any resolution without loosing details.
You can see the presets and download this texture for free on the Filter Forge site here — www.filterforge.com/filters/6001.html (created by ronjonnie)
To use this texture download Filter Forge 30-day trial for free here — www.filterforge.com/download/
Petone wharf, following the earthquake. Note the dip behind the red fencing.
Canon EOS 33 camera, Canon EF 28-105 f/3.5-4.5 lens, Kodak EliteChrome 100 colour slide film (expired 2009).
Sub adult cub of Noorie feasting Sambar deer.
08 June, 2024.
Zone2, Ranthambore National Park, Swaimadhopur, Rajasthan, Bharat(India).
OM1mk2-300f4
1/800, f4, ISO8000.
Here I have used the 1.5" Digital Photo Frame Keyring without any modifying and it fit straight into the LEGO 1x6x5 panel. But I had to turn it 90 degrees sideways.
Zealandia wildlife sanctuary, Karori, Wellington.
Canon Rebel 2000 camera, EF28-105/f3.5-4.5 lens, Kodak Gold 200 colour negative film.
Here is the Happy as a Lark embroidery embellished and framed in an 8" x 10" frame. I made green the dominant color, just for you KJ!! :-)
The railway viaduct heading down the line towards Tumut. The last train to cross the viaduct was in 1984.
Canon Rebel 2000 camera, Canon 28-105mm/f3.5-4.5 lens, Fujifilm Provia 100F colour slide film.
Floriade, Commonwealth Park, in Canberra.
Mamiya C220 TLR camera, Mamiya-Sekor 65mm f/3.5 lens, Fomapan 100 black-and-white negative film, Tiffen yellow 12 filter, Adox Adonal developer at 1:50 for 8 minutes.
Caleb Cull grave stone, located in the Cornelian Bay cemetery, January 2014.
Canon Rebel 2000 camera, EF 40/f2.8 lens, Kodak Gold 100 colour negative film.
"A "framed" picture I took of my nephew enjoying some boogie boarding on the beach" - Katya Small, 2012 myPQB Story Contest
An illustration for a blog post about half-frame film, from a while back:
women-and-dreams.blogspot.co.uk/2013/08/olympus-pen-pony-...
It's basically the same as four-perf motion picture film, which is where 35mm camera film came from in the first place. Of all the small formats that came and went, half-frame is probably the easiest to process and scan nowadays - the frame gaps are in the same place as standard 35mm so photo labs just cut the negative as they would normally.
The images were all taken at the London Transport Museum. With Kodak TMAX 400, and obviously my metering (I shot with a manual-everything Olympus Pen) was decent.