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Hack, buggy, van.....whatever tickles your fancy. Providence and Worcester train CT-1 is about to tack the former NYC caboose on the hind end of their train in Wethersfield, CT before heading South back to Middletown. CSO 21226 was on loan to the P&W for making the shove over the swing bridge between Middletown and Portland, and sometimes the crew would take it for a ride elsewhere. Not too often theirs a hack in front AND behind the camera.
Copywrite Thomas Schubert 2022
Nice sunset over the White Mountains of NH the other night as viewed from Hacker Hill in Casco, ME. The days are getting A LOT shorter!
Think somebody hacked the dentist sign at the end of my road.
Wish I could say this was the weirdest part of my run today.
Six blocks later, a young guy jumped in front of me and demanded my headphones and running shoes.
Threatened me with what appeared to be a sandwich.
I said, No.
Sheesh...
IMG SQ_7428
This scene is supposed to be Cosmo the Cougar doing some computer hacking in some type of secretive lair.
For more of my creative projects, visit my short stories website: 500ironicstories.com
Looking towards Hackness during sunset. Hackness is a small village just outside Scarborough of which I often cycle through but have never photographed before.
For this image I used HDR because either the foreground was too dark or the sky was blown out. Used 0.9 and 0.6 ND grad to try and reduce the contrast between the two. In the end I ended up using a series of 5 different exposures and the ND grads.
The near wagon is one that I have shot before. It is a Hack Passenger Wagon c. 1862 that is in the Corpus Christi Museum of Science and History collection. It was manufactured by Abbot-Downing Co. Concord, New Hampshire
This four passenger wagon is the smallest of the Hack Passenger Wagons. The lighter versions of the East were called Concord Coaches. The heavy version, suited for the rough conditions of the West, was often called a "mud wagon" or "the poor man's Concord". The leather suspension system gave a ride that was smooth by the day's standards.
This coach belonged to Petra Vela Kenedy, wife of Mifflin Kenedy. Mr. Kenedy built a ranching empire in South Texas in the mid-19th century. By the time of Mrs. Kenedy's death in 1885, the ranch comprised 390,000 acres. This coach was most likely the preferred mode of transportation for Mrs. Kenedy, who traveled frequently from the La Parra Ranch in Kenedy County to the Kenedy home on the bluff in Corpus Christi, Texas.
For more information on the Museum:
Bay Street Shuttle Train 530 heads over the Lower Hack movable bridge, the start of the Terminal Dispatchers jurisdiction, on its way back to Hoboken Terminal.
After a busy day sorting out a hacked email account thought this would be a good idea, not realising how time consuming this would be to process
strobist for each of me... sb28@1/8 pointed at screen to bounce on me sb28@1/64 full cto gel through beauty dish pointing down for fill on imac.
(It's Ryan here) I just had to upload this to krysta's account so I could favourite it because I like it so much.
MUHAHA! <3
Wanted an easy project a few days ago, so I whipped up this little owl using fingering weight yarn and he ended up being about 2.5 inches tall including the ear tufts. The chair was made from a small ikea bowl and the bottom of an ikea soap dish. My Haru Casting Adori is sitting in the chair in the previous photo.
The free pattern for the owl can be found here: www.ravelry.com/patterns/library/easy-crochet-owl
The idea for the chair came from here (but my chair is smaller): www.apartmenttherapy.com/ikea-bowls-make-excellent-diy-do...
Front view of hacked Instax. Added an old agnar to the front. Replaced electronics with a simple relay.
Cassie, Vlad and Pooch are in distress!! Persian demon kittens are all over the place and there seems no way out the fuzzyness!
Destined for a 3 color silkscreen print. I gonna update the infos as soon as i get them.
Westbound Train #57 crosses the Hackensack River at Upper Hack drawbridge on its way to Port Jervis.
The bridge currently holds the title of the newest movable bridge on NJ Transit property. It was built by the Delaware Lackawanna & Western in 1958 to replace the original two-track span that was outdated and damaged by tidal river currents. The expenses related to building this bridge were among the final straws to break the camels back for the Lackawanna Railroad that would eventually result in the official merger of the Erie and the Lackawanna in October of 1960.
NJT 57 @ Upper Hack Drawbridge, Lyndhurst, NJ
NJTR GP40PH-2B 4216
The Matrix is still one of my favourite films. In the downtime over Christmas and New Year I was inspired to shoot this strobist selfie because my brother had so many old computer monitors lying around. I was travelling light with just one speedlight, a set of wireless triggers, but no filters or other light modifiers and so had to improvise.
Strobist info:
The key light was a Nikon SB28 at 1/64th power placed on the desk behind the laptop and the main screen, pointing up at the subject. An offcut from a green/blue plastic bag was used to provide the greenish tinge and the lenshood of my 24-70mm lens was used as a snoot to limit the spill. The computer screens actually provided very little light. Triggered wirelessly using a Yongnuo YN-622N trigger