View allAll Photos Tagged LEDflashlight
Lighting sources: candle at camera right, LED flashlight at camera left. I really like the effect here.
Osaka VW45FC, Osaka 120mm f/6.3, Modern Collodion black aluminum, Bostick & Sullivan Old Workhorse Collodion (1 week old)
Used a Dorcy 41-2510 55-lumen LED flashlight for lighting. Test plate showed a 3 minute exposure. Overdeveloped a little, then my squirting wash bottle failed, so I REALLY overdeveloped.
Also there's a blur because my locking cable release didn't lock so I had to re-cock the shutter and fire again. Anywho, now that I know an approx. exposure time for this LED light, hopefully I can extrapolate that to a more powerful light.
So what do you do when the temperature is in the low 30's and it's raining and snowing? ....well, you certainly don't go out and shoot nightscapes! I took this opportunity to give a try at some lightpainting in a nearby culvert for runoff water. This month's assignment for the photo club I'm in is lightpainting, so I wanted to give a try at something a bit different that my typical night images.
After my first serious attempt at spinning an orb I have much more respect for those that can do this well. I'm sure that given time and with more practice that it gets easier and they look better. Anyway, mine looks like crap.
This is a single exposure shot that I was able to capture in just under 100 seconds.
Lights used:
Blue Orb: LED Flashlight on a string that had a blue plastic water bottle cap on the end.
Red Lines: Small LED glow stick that Santa gave to one of my kids at Christmas.
Green Light: LED flashlight that has 10 different colors. Thanks to Jeff Maltzman for telling me about this very cool $18 purchase.
Seriously, there was a lot of free stuff on this outing. Stuff I'd never pay for, but would gladly take. 1970s/studio style headphones? Hell yeah!
CB antennas, SWR tester, battery chargers, camping chair, cat figurine, cdrs, dustpan, extendable duster, ham radio microphone, led flashlight, spray paint, umbrella.
upstairs, Clint and Carolyn's house, Alexandria, Virginia.
September 15, 2012.
... Read my blog at ClintJCL.wordpress.com
... Read Carolyn's blog at CarolynCASL.wordpress.com
... View my camping-related blog posts at clintjcl.wordpress.com/category/hobbies-activities/camping/
BACKSTORY: Lots of free stuff this week! Unattended yardsale that just had a sign out that said ôfree stuffö. Crazy amount of stuff. Where most of our stuff came from. GuyÆs pack-rat brother died of an aneurysm, so he flew out from San Francisco and basically had a yard full of junk. As we arrived late, he was pretty much giving everything away. Including 2 trombones. We took 1. We should have taken both, as Clint ended up shelling out $70 for a trombone on Craigslist later.
Full report of this yard sale expedition can be found at: clintjcl.wordpress.com/2012/09/29/journal-yard-sales-2012...
But in summary: 1 hour 4 minutes driving, only 6 miles total, spent $2.00 + ~$2.05 gas on 32 purchases worth $511.86. $479.87/hr saved. Lifetime record due to all the free stuff, and the fact that things like trombones actually cost a lot of money.
Installing the power-supply. It's mounted on the bottom in this case. This case has a HUGE fan on top.
building computer, hooking up.
Antec computer case, LED flashlight, motherboard ASRock Z77 Extreme6 hardware, power supply Corsair Gaming Series GS800 hardware, screwdriver, table, wires.
Goliath.
upstairs, Clint and Carolyn's house, Alexandria, Virginia.
November 8, 2012.
... Read my blog at ClintJCL.wordpress.com
... Read Carolyn's blog at CarolynCASL.wordpress.com
BACKSTORY: Carolyn decided now that Clint had a job, the time had come to replace her computer of 9 years, Magic. So, she started spec'ing out computer parts for a new computer that would become Goliath.
Carolyn built Magic in 2003 when Clint got her a motherboard for Christmas. She kept her old computer, Mist, which as far as we know, is still alive to this day (and was originally a 286, then a 486, then a Pentium 3). Anyway, Magic had tried to die a couple of years ago, but since Clint didn't have a job at the time, we decided it was best to repair rather than buying a whole new computer back then. So Carolyn found an exact replica of Magic's motherboard on Ebay and replaced the motherboard and the power supply. Magic has been limping along ever since.
But now it is time for Goliath. Goliath came into being at the beginning of November and was up and running by November 13th.
SPECS:
CASE: Antec Twelve Hundred V3 Black Steel ATX Full Tower Unbeatable Gaming Case ($160) (**10** frickin' drive bays!).
CPU: Intel Core i7 (i7-3770) Ivy Bridge 3.4GHz (3.9GHz Turbo) Quad-Core (LGA1155 socket, 4 cores, 8MB cache, 77W power consumption) ($300). CPUBenchmark score: 9480. For comparison, Clint's computer Hades that everyone watches movies on only rates 4163 (and 1727 before upgrade).
POWER SUPPLY: Corsair Enthusiast Series CMPSU-850TX (850W) ($140) (5yr warranty)
MOTHERBOARD: ASRock Z77 Extreme6 ($180). 8 SATA ports! Onboard optical digital audio out so her computer is backup for playing music. Onboard video better than my pre-upgrade videocard (Radeon x1950) that Clint tried to give her, so her computer is backup for playing video. (However, the onboard video can only mine at 100MH/s, so it is useless for cryptocurrency mining.) Onboard network.
RAM: 16GB: G.Skill Ripjaws X Series (2x8GB, 240-Pin) ($86) (CAS 9-9-9-9)
HARDDRIVE: SSD: 128G: Crucial M4 ($103) (3yr warranty). Plus all the drives that used to be in MAGIC, before MAGIC crashed.
TOTAL COST: $969.
Ultimately it ended up with a coupld of SATA controller cards, as well as a bluray-burner. We've now burned over 200 blurays.
In other news, Clint decided to get a CPU for Magic for Carolyn's birthday, and she ended up killing Magic trying to install it. It was a mistake to try to mess with the delicate balance that was Magic. Magic died 2 days before its 10-year anniversary. Poor Magic! But it was a good thing Carolyn had already gotten a new computer before Magic decided to kick the bucket.
A run-down of all parts in my new computer, with links to buy them, can be found here: carolyncasl.wordpress.com/2012/10/24/the-new-computer/
Retail mobile phones at wholesale prices: well, you have come to the foremost stage of China cell phones and cell phone watches: all cellular phones from onThesource.com are thoroughly UNLOCKED, that indicates they can be applicable with any pre-paid SIM cards if the GSM network frequencies are matching.
To cater to the most consumers from different regions, we listed many kinds of China cellphones varying from quad band (GSM850/900/1800/1900MHz), tri-band (GSM850/1800/1900MHz or GSM900/1800/1900MHz) to dual band (GSM900/1800MHz). Besides, those mobile phones can be categorized into TV Mobile Phones, Windows Smart Phones, Dual SIM Phones, and Cell Phone Watch etc.
Primary features which you will discover on onThesource.com China mobile phones:
Multi-languages (English, French, Spanish, Italian, Portuguese, German, Arabic, Russian, Thai, and Vietnamese) installed with;
MP3/MP4 player;
Touch Screen or Induce Screen;
Analog TV, FM Radio, Bluetooth;
1.30MP (Mega Pixels) Digital Camera built-in;
Two SIM card slots or three (Dual SIM Dual Standby and Dual SIM Single Standby);
2GB maximum memory extension;
Additional functions: Calendar, Calculator, Memo Reminder and other functions as general as other cell phones.
All cell phones on onThesource.com are manufactured in the nearby high-tech factories in South Mainland China, which means every cell phone bought from onThesource.com at wholesale break prices can enjoy one year factory after-sales services. No matter you are a retailer, a wholesaler, an eBay drop shipping broker or a terminal consumer, welcome to retail or wholesale China cell phones from onThesource.com
Out with a hand light and the tripod to see who's visiting the Rose bush at night. Gaston County, NC, USA. Canon T6i, f8, -1/3 EV, ISO 100, Sigma 70mm EX DG Macro, tripod, RAW. 7/6/2016
Testing out the power supply.
building computer, hooking up.
Antec computer case, LED flashlight, motherboard ASRock Z77 Extreme6 hardware, power supply Corsair Gaming Series GS800 hardware, table, wires.
Goliath.
upstairs, Clint and Carolyn's house, Alexandria, Virginia.
November 8, 2012.
... Read my blog at ClintJCL.wordpress.com
... Read Carolyn's blog at CarolynCASL.wordpress.com
BACKSTORY: Carolyn decided now that Clint had a job, the time had come to replace her computer of 9 years, Magic. So, she started spec'ing out computer parts for a new computer that would become Goliath.
Carolyn built Magic in 2003 when Clint got her a motherboard for Christmas. She kept her old computer, Mist, which as far as we know, is still alive to this day (and was originally a 286, then a 486, then a Pentium 3). Anyway, Magic had tried to die a couple of years ago, but since Clint didn't have a job at the time, we decided it was best to repair rather than buying a whole new computer back then. So Carolyn found an exact replica of Magic's motherboard on Ebay and replaced the motherboard and the power supply. Magic has been limping along ever since.
But now it is time for Goliath. Goliath came into being at the beginning of November and was up and running by November 13th.
SPECS:
CASE: Antec Twelve Hundred V3 Black Steel ATX Full Tower Unbeatable Gaming Case ($160) (**10** frickin' drive bays!).
CPU: Intel Core i7 (i7-3770) Ivy Bridge 3.4GHz (3.9GHz Turbo) Quad-Core (LGA1155 socket, 4 cores, 8MB cache, 77W power consumption) ($300). CPUBenchmark score: 9480. For comparison, Clint's computer Hades that everyone watches movies on only rates 4163 (and 1727 before upgrade).
POWER SUPPLY: Corsair Enthusiast Series CMPSU-850TX (850W) ($140) (5yr warranty)
MOTHERBOARD: ASRock Z77 Extreme6 ($180). 8 SATA ports! Onboard optical digital audio out so her computer is backup for playing music. Onboard video better than my pre-upgrade videocard (Radeon x1950) that Clint tried to give her, so her computer is backup for playing video. (However, the onboard video can only mine at 100MH/s, so it is useless for cryptocurrency mining.) Onboard network.
RAM: 16GB: G.Skill Ripjaws X Series (2x8GB, 240-Pin) ($86) (CAS 9-9-9-9)
HARDDRIVE: SSD: 128G: Crucial M4 ($103) (3yr warranty). Plus all the drives that used to be in MAGIC, before MAGIC crashed.
TOTAL COST: $969.
Ultimately it ended up with a coupld of SATA controller cards, as well as a bluray-burner. We've now burned over 200 blurays.
In other news, Clint decided to get a CPU for Magic for Carolyn's birthday, and she ended up killing Magic trying to install it. It was a mistake to try to mess with the delicate balance that was Magic. Magic died 2 days before its 10-year anniversary. Poor Magic! But it was a good thing Carolyn had already gotten a new computer beforeMagic decided to kick the bucket.
A run-down of all parts in my new computer, with links to buy them, can be found here: carolyncasl.wordpress.com/2012/10/24/the-new-computer/
Too bad this is a banana and not a vanilla bean.
The depth in this image is illusory. The actual three dimensions are height, width, and time.
Easy to disassemble. Only unscrewing the tail cap is required to replace the single rechargeable Lithium battery cell shown here - a very commonly available 18650 size. All segments are sealed with rubber o-rings to keep water out if riding in heavy rain. The rings at the base of the lamp head are heat sinks to minimize temperature built up from the very hot LED emitter.
Flashlight weight = 185 grams
Quad band cell phones is standard for mobile phones supporting four frequency bands of GSM 850/900/1800/1900MHz. Generally speaking, Quadband phones can work in all GSM networks worldwide, no matter where they are located. Tri-band mobile phones describe those cell phones which support GSM900/1800/1900MHz. Mainly, GSM1900MHz is essential in the most phone carriers of U.S./Canada/Latin America and GSM850MHz is necessary in the most phone carriers of U.S./Canada/Latin America. Obviously, one quad-band phone must work properly in phone networks triband phones require, but not like that opposite as quad band networks cover tri-band networks, and triband networks are included in quadband networks.
However, if you are using AT&T Mobility in USA, onThesource.com highly suggests you would better buy quad band mobiles, or else, your future phone will display “emergency”. If your current SIM card belongs to T-Mobile in USA, you can both choose quad-band cell phones or tri-band mobile phones, because T-Mobile only requires GSM1900MHz, and quadband cell phone or tri-band cellular phone covers it already. Finally, quad band cell phone can roam in GSM networks all over the globe.
www.onthesource.com/cell-phones-mobile-phones/quad-band-m...
Here are two images of the same dollop of shaving cream taken one year* appart.
The one on the left is plump & smooth while the one on the right is shrunken & desicated.
You can still see the original outline of its contact with the platform.
* A human year is equal to 365 shaving cream years
so a shaving cream anniversary equals a human day.
Shot this series with my 1-watt LED flashlight at night on the moonroof of my car.
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I'm working on a design for an up-coming financial report for my church. Traditionally, this report features a world-missions theme in the design. So, while standing on our worship pastor's office, I spied this little crystal globe on her desk. So, I stole it. You'll probably see a few more treatments of this - hope you don't get bored!
[ It is not appropriate or legal to use this image on any project without a license from me. Please contact me for permission and a license. If you want to use this image on your blog, please attribute properly and link to this image's page. ]
(2007-11-21-globe-5408-new)
I recently bought a high power LED torch, and thought that using it to illuminate certain types of macro subjects might be interesting. This is my first experiment, and I find it very promising. I have a few more ideas to try in the near future.
Shot this series with my 1-watt LED flashlight at night on the moonroof of my car.
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I'm working on a design for an up-coming financial report for my church. Traditionally, this report features a world-missions theme in the design. So, while standing on our worship pastor's office, I spied this little crystal globe on her desk. So, I stole it. You'll probably see a few more treatments of this - hope you don't get bored!
[ It is not appropriate or legal to use this image on any project without a license from me. Please contact me for permission and a license. If you want to use this image on your blog, please attribute properly and link to this image's page. ]
(2007-11-21-globe-5402-new)
I've tried the cliche eye shots a few times, with my pocketcam but the highlights never come out right. (Probably because sticking a camera half an inch from my eye usually blocks the light.) This time I used my fancy LED flashlight with like a gazillion bulbs in it to provide all the light I need. Notice how washed things are on the right? Yes, it's like a million candles over there. And, of course, you can see the light reflected in my eye.
The highlight came out nice. The blood-shot effect, not so much.
(2007-08-04-richeye-3762-new)
Carolyn got Clint the GWAR comic book that he's been wanting for several years now. The missing issues are hard to find! Scans, however, can be found online, if you look hard enough.
Gift cards will be enjoyed for our birthdays and anniversary, as usual. :)
The Rescue Tape (above Big Gay Al) will be used to fix our leaking sink-gun, among other things.
The Moses and Big Gay Al action figure are funny.
Carolyn loves her soft bathrobe - she had been using her mom's bathrobe from the 1970s. After getting this one, her mom asked for her 1970s bathrobe back! Funny stuff!
Big Gay Al action figure, Christmas gifts, Christmas presents, Moses action figure, bath robe, comic, comic book, flamingo skeleton lawn ornament, flashlight led light, gift cards, gorilla bank, hats, holographic puzzle, ice bucket, jacket, popup, rescue tape, shirts.
Lynn Abbey: Thieves' World: First Blood. : Thieves' World: Enemies Of Fortune. : Thieves' World: Sanctuary. Lynn Abbey: Thieves' World: Tales From The Vulgar Unicorn. : Thieves' World: Turning Points. book: cartoon: South Park. music: GWAR.
downstairs, Clint and Carolyn's house, Alexandria, Virginia.
December 27, 2011.
... Read my blog at ClintJCL.wordpress.com
... Read Carolyn's blog at CarolynCASL.wordpress.com
Thanks for the gifts!
To paint with light, the image should be shot in a very dark room. Place the camera on a tripod. Experiment with aperture and long shutter speed, 10-30 seconds, depending on your light source. I move the flash light in sweeping strokes during the exposure to prevent hot spots. Avoid pointing the flashlight directly to the camera's lens unless you want a light streak effect. Lock you camera's mirror during exposure if you have one to prevent camera shake.
Shot this series with my 1-watt LED flashlight at night on the moonroof of my car.
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I'm working on a design for an up-coming financial report for my church. Traditionally, this report features a world-missions theme in the design. So, while standing on our worship pastor's office, I spied this little crystal globe on her desk. So, I stole it. You'll probably see a few more treatments of this - hope you don't get bored!
[ It is not appropriate or legal to use this image on any project without a license from me. Please contact me for permission and a license. If you want to use this image on your blog, please attribute properly and link to this image's page. ]
(2007-11-21-globe-5404-new)
1SB600 top front @ 1/2 power with Photoflex XS softbox
1 LED flash light behind blue colored glass
Triggered with pop up flash using CLS
I used an L.E.D. flashlight to paint the back and front edges during a 30 second exposure at f22. This is still off camera lighting (as in strobist)
Malibu California just before dawn. very minimal processing, a long exposure a passing car and an led flashlight, I did straighten the horizon in PS.
For this shot, I stood the globe on my desk with a CD propped behind it. I really like the rainbow coming through.
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I'm working on a design for an up-coming financial report for my church. Traditionally, this report features a world-missions theme in the design. So, while standing on our worship pastor's office, I spied this little crystal globe on her desk. So, I stole it. You'll probably see a few more treatments of this - hope you don't get bored!
[ It is not appropriate or legal to use this image on any project without a license from me. Please contact me for permission and a license. If you want to use this image on your blog, please attribute properly and link to this image's page. ]
(2007-11-20-globe-5350-new)
When I took the stuff out to try and reduce, I found I needed everything in there, except 2 CAT 5 patch cables.