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Macro Mondays ~ Hexagon
Thank you to everyone who pauses long enough to look at my photo. All comments and Faves are very much appreciated
365/2021 - Expanding Horizons ~ 039/365
Treasure Hunt #34 ~ Hexagonal
Thank you to everyone who pauses long enough to look at my photo. All comments and Faves are very much appreciated
The hexagon is a naturally-occurring shape and is most commonly found in honeycomb. By default, we associate the shape with bees and their teamwork and cooperative nature. Community, creation and balance are just a few of the feelings evoked by this geometric wonder.
diamètre de l'écrou 9mm
épaisseur 4mm
nut diameter 9mm
thickness 4mm
EF100mm f/2.8 L IS USM + tubes allonges 68mm
Stack de 68 images capturées avec Helicon Remote et assemblées avec Helicon Focus
A section of one of Baxter's toys - a ball that he can get hold of with his teeth! For Macro Mondays - Geometry Shapes
Macro Mondays. Hexagon
I have this beautiful 8" vase that is a hexagon pattern.
I added water to it and played around with some lighting to get these fun refractions. Each hexagon is 1/2" and I included a photo of the entire vase below. (if I can figure out how to do that)
This is one of a pair of brackets included to hang a framed picture. Turn each bracket 180 degrees, so longer bracket side is at the top corner on the back of each top corner of the frame. Attach with small screws that are provided. Viola! Now when you go to hang the picture onto two small nails that you have already put in the wall, you don't have to be so precise! The multiple hexagon HOLES allow for some adjustment to be sure the picture is level! I've used them and it works so well!
Size of each bracket is: w 2.25" h 1.25".
Theme: "Holes"
Thank you for taking the time to view my photo, and for the faves and comments you make, thank you.
There are times when I wonder why I have held on to my son's toys and then there are times when I am pleased I have. I couldn’t find any other hexagons in the house, but no doubt I will find lots today! So here is a 40 plus year old construction set.
For Macro Mondays
For this weeks Macro Mondays theme I walked up to the old trash pit and found some corroded items with hexagonal features. This is a grease fitting and the hex is around 3/8 of an inch or 9.5mm approximately. I don't know what it was meant to grease because the thing is mostly buried under ground and brush. HMM everyone. And thanks for any and all views, likes, and comments.
At least I think this tiny 2" bowl is from Japan. I was giving it as a leaving present by a colleague many years ago when I left London.
I placed it on my tablet which shows a hexagonal pattern which I found on the internet.
The Frederick Douglass Centre, Newcastle University, UK.
The story and importance of Frederick Douglass can be found here:
www.ncl.ac.uk/who-we-are/frederick-douglass/
Design (2019): Sheppard Robson.
The auditorium uses a cladding system inspired by the Newcastle-born mathematician Louis Fry Richardson whose pioneering work defined modern methods of weather forecasting. Fry Richardson’s work, which subdivided the planet into hexagonal zones, has been expressed in expanded aluminium mesh on the external elevations of the auditorium. A pattern has been created by the changing the orientation of the mesh, varying the opacity of the material.
Hello friends. This is a photo that I took earlier this year for 52Frames. I really like this photo because it brings back good memories for me. It was a snowy morning, and I was alone at the park. I felt daring (I was balancing about 10 feet off the ground), creative and carefree. There’s something about photography that is so satisfying to me. Just being in the moment. I’m sure you can relate. :)
I also wanted to mention a moving film that I watched yesterday about a filmmaker who befriends an octopus. Sounds strange, I know, but it’s such a sensitive and wonderful film! I wept watching it because it made me think of all the missed opportunities humans have had with nature. How the whole world might be trying to communicate with us in the most meaningful way, but we are often too distracted, and lack the patience required to make those connections. It’s heartbreaking.
If you are interested, the film is called My Octopus Teacher and it’s available on Netflix. It’s beautifully filmed and narrated, and worth your time, I promise! ️
TD: f/8, 1/30 sec, ISO 100, @24 mm