View allAll Photos Tagged Infinity

Lego mosaic of Thanos from Jonathan Hickman's Infinity. 7 hours and around 2000 pieces.

The Infinity footbridge across the river Tees, linking Stockton with Thornaby.

All photography credit to Kee Jameson, who took and edited this photo.

 

Crisp Estates 1st Annual Fall Fling in Hikeulo Cove on September 23, 2021. Over L$ 15,000 worth of prizes. Sponsor: Infinity Games. Musical guests: Samm Qendra & DJ Doc Darkside.

Doesn't it look like the calm water is at the same level as the open ocean? Okay, well it is, but this scene did remind me of an infinity pool. No HDR.

 

Free wallpaper for over 100 of my images in 6 different screen sizes is now available!

 

See the 1200 pixel version!

www.flickr.com/photos/patrick-smith-photography/357845706...

 

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Settings etc.:

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Canon 5D Mark II

Canon 17-40L @ 37 (I really zoomed in for this one!)

30-second exposure @F14 (It is one hour after sunrise)

Hoya ndx400 (9-stop) very dark circular filter

LEE soft ND grad (100x150mm) 0.9 + 0.6

Lee foundation kit filter holder with Lee 77mm adapter ring

ISO 50

RAW file processed with Capture One by Phase One

TIFF file processed with Photoshop

Bare feet (soft sand)

  

A very low tide on this morning created a still pool that extended out to the breakers. Every minute or so, waves would interrupt the stillness and then things would eventually become still again. I waited for a time where I would get 30 seconds of stillness. The extra long exposure made things look even more still, and was made possible by a very dark circular filter. The clouds moved a lot during the 30 seconds. I made sure to include some solid sand and some offshore rocks and islands to anchor the image somewhat to reality!

 

I will admit that it took about 20 minutes to get this image. It seemed like every time the pool was nearly calm, another wave would mess things up. I was starting to worry because the tide was rising and the calm periods were getting shorter and shorter. After this, the ocean moved in for good and that was it. The next morning the tide was too high to get this shot.

 

The map shows exactly where this is.

  

See my profile for a link to my website where I have limited edition prints and less expensive open edition prints.

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Copyright: © FSUBF. All rights reserved. Please do not use this image, or any images from my photostream, without my permission.

 

www.fluidr.com/photos/hsub www.facebook.com/AndrejePhoto

Shot with Samsung S4

Infinity Bridge Stockton On Tees

 

Live Composition made on the Olympus OMD-EM5MKII

Room #14, since Alex Jordan is superstitious

Picnotes

 

HouseOnTheRock

 

SpringGreen

Wisconsin

A mono rework of an old favourite, the Infinity Bridge in Stockton.

 

Picture by Steven Iceton of www.steveniceton.co.uk

 

The Infinity Bridge is a public pedestrian and cycle footbridge across the River Tees in the borough of Stockton-on-Tees in the north east of England. The bridge is situated one kilometre downriver of Stockton town centre, between the Princess of Wales Bridge and the Tees Barrage and it links the Teesdale Business Park and the University of Durham's Queen's Campus in Thornaby-on-Tees on the south bank of the Tees with the Tees Valley Regeneration's £320 million North Shore development on the north bank.

  

Built at a cost of £15 million with funding from Stockton Borough Council, English Partnerships and its successor body the Homes and Communities Agency, One NorthEast, and the European Regional Development Fund the bridge is a major part of the North Shore Redevelopment Project undertaken by Tees Valley Regeneration.

  

The bridge had the project title North Shore Footbridge before being given its official name Infinity Bridge, chosen by a panel made from the funding bodies, using names suggested by the public. The name derives from the infinity symbol formed by the bridge and its reflection.

  

A special feature is made of the way the bridge is lit at night. This lighting scheme was designed by Speirs and Major Associates who also designed the lighting for the Burj Al-Arab. At night the bridge handrail and footway are lit with designer blue and white LED lighting built into the handrail that changes colour as users cross. Attached to the steel cable ties are white metal-halide up-lighters to illuminate the white painted bridge arches, and blue LED down-lighters to illuminate the water and ground surfaces immediately below the deck.At night from certain viewing angles when the river surface is flat calm, the twin arches together with their reflection in the river appear as an infinity symbol ∞, and it is this effect that inspired its name.

  

At the start of construction a temporary jetty was built on the south bank to enable the building of a cofferdam for the safe construction of the central pier. In April 2008 the supporting legs were added to the central pier.Steel falsework was constructed in the cofferdam by Dorman Long[ to support the ends of both incomplete arches as they cantilevered over the river during construction. The first steel arch made from four pieces of fabricated steel welded together, was put in place in June 2008 and was later used to stabilise the cantilevering lower portions of the main arch using a strand-jack and tie cable between the top of the small arch and the large arch and then to reduce sway stress during its progressive construction of the large arch.

 

The final section of the main arch came in four pieces which were welded together on site and on 5 September 2008 all 170 tonnes of it was lifted into place by a 1,500 tonne mobile crane, the largest in the country. The crane, a Gottwald AK680 owned by Sarens UK is based in nearby Middlesbrough. The crane is 80 metres (262 ft) high with a maximum of 1200 tonnes of superlift, requires 45 transport wagons to move it,and takes three days to set up using a 100 tonne crane.

  

The concrete deck panels were cast on site using three steel moulds in temporary sheds in a construction compound on the north bank of the river. Using a short temporary jetty on the north bank the deck panels were floated out on a small barge and jacked into position working progressively away from the river pier. The concrete deck sections are held together by steel welds and adhesive.

  

The footbridge was completed on time and to budget in December 2008 with 530 workers and uses in total some 450 tonnes of Corus steel,1.5 km of locked coil steel cable, 780 lights, 5,472 bolts and weighs 1040 tons. Almost all labour, materials and components were sourced locally.

  

The bridge was officially opened on 14 May 2009 with celebrations including a sound, light and animation show, parkour freerunners who climbed the bridge arches with flares, and a specially composed music track and synchronised pyrotechnics from the bridge itself with big screens for the estimated audience of 20,000 spectators along the banks. The bridge was opened to the public two days later. Foot traffic is anticipated to rise to some four thousand people a day as the North Shore site develops.

  

The bridge won the Institution of Structural Engineers' Supreme Award for Structural Excellence 2009,] the premier structural engineering award in the UK. It also won in its own category of Pedestrian Bridges. The other awards the bridge has won include the Structural Steel Design Award 2010,] the Concrete Society Civil Engineering Award 2009, the ICE Robert Stephenson Award 2009, the North East Constructing Excellence Awards 'Project of the Year',and the Green Apple Award for the environment.

 

Taken with my old kit lens at Murano, Italy. I do not really like BW pictures but it is my fav of them. :)

not excellent, but it's something. i like infinity signs :]

 

This is a movie

 

It’s a marvel movie

 

It’s called infinity war

  

Also wow, Spider-Man’s head is really small on this display thingy

“...it's very much like your trying to reach infinity. You know that it's there, you just don't know where-but just because you can never reach it doesn't mean that it's not worth looking for.”

― Norton Juster, The Phantom Tollbooth

I was lucky to have the bird flying close as they normally do, but I was mostly suprised how well my 50mm performed with this! I was just really experimenting a little with the lens and then with the processing I had in mind!

 

This was also shot at st stephens green park in dublin city! If ever you see a mad man with a camera, that will most definitely/probably be me.... I love this park and can never get enough of it whenever I am in dublin city :)

 

Thank you for looking!

   

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looks like the infinity sign

Canon EOS 6D - f/8 - 1/2sec - 100 mm - ISO 200

 

infinity

It's weekend! Have fun!

Check large for details :)

Infinity Pool of Marina Bay Sands Integrated Resort is located on the 57th storey, offering a fantastic view of the Singapore skyline while relaxing in the pool.

The decking and bridge structure are illuminated at night. The decking has rather attractive blue lighting which interacts with pedestrians and cyclists, changing to white as they pass each set of lights.

The houses seem to go on into infinity here...

 

The weather has been beautiful here. Today it was seventy, but going to be a cold sixty-three tomorrow. Not too long until the Oscar party this week-end and I still haven't made up my mind who to go as...

 

This week I saw American Sniper -- I thought it was just ok. I am going to try and see Still Alice this week...

 

Hope you all are well!

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