View allAll Photos Tagged Laboratory
Strobist: One hand-held speedlite with YN-602 trigger, shooting through a diffuser, from the left side...
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Quite some work in Photoshop:
- Double raw processing for a cooler background
- Two different alignments for the rack and for the oscillograph
(which included isolating the osci and patching the fractures)
- inserting a new background
- cloning- out some cables and stuff ...
- setting in the display shot ...
In my lab.
Available for licensing through Getty Images:
www.gettyimages.com/detail/photo/scientific-laboratory-gl...
This was the former Laboratory Building for Clark Equipment. This corner of the building was used as a display room for the company's products.
Photographed using a Sony A7R using a PC Nikkor 28mm f/3.5 shift lens. The builtin level makes composing shift lens photos hand held easy. This one could be a bit sharper, but that is on account of a fault of a loose adapter. I am getting a Novoflex adapter as many of today's photos were ruined by an adapter which added unwanted tilt.
What an epic little place this is, the heat from the furnaces and the humming of transformers throughout!
Keighley Laboratories date back to 1920 making the site 102 years of age to the day of writing, not too much seems to have changed in here since the 1940's including the oil-fired furnace pictured here. The site specializes in heat treatment services and metallurgical research, which probably explains why she's fitted with new furnaces in the 1940's, possibly part of the war effort? Upon our visit only two workers where present on the night shift, making it feel a little eerie throughout the aging melt shop whilst in full flow! At the time they were heat treating a set of large marine diesel engine crankshafts.
The furnace pictured is a late 1930's oil-fired machine of the Incandecent Heat Company, Smethwick, Birmingham.
I'm a big fan of Ironman.
This passion combined with the love for the LEGO, allowed me to create this work dedicated to his mansion and his laboratory.
By inserting all the armor produced by LEGO until now.
This is just the Mark I
Contact me :amphotography22@yahoo.com
Don't use this image without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
Command/Service Module (CSM) 008, aka FRM-008, aka S/C 008 is readied, circa mid-1966, for extensive unmanned, and subsequent manned thermal vacuum testing to follow in Vacuum Chamber A of the Space Environment Simulation Laboratory (SESL)/Bldg 32, Manned Spacecraft Center (MSC), Houston, Texas.
Informative reading:
www.collectspace.com/ubb/Forum29/HTML/001089.html
Credit: collectSPACE website
www.drewexmachina.com/2016/10/26/the-apollo-flights-to-no...
Credit: DrewExMachina website/Andrew LePage
The oblong light colored ‘patches’ surrounding the Reaction Control System (RCS) quadrants possibly replicate exhaust plume thermal impingement affects on the exterior of the Service Module?
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Space_Environment_Simulation_Labora...
Credit: Wikipedia website
Outstanding:
www.nps.gov/articles/space-environmental-simulation-labor...
An excellent view:
Credit: Internet Archive website
Tutkimustyötä tavaraopin ja kemian opetuksen tiloissa.
Aalto-yliopiston arkisto / Aalto University Archives
Image nr: HKK_06_012
Tiedätkö lisää tästä kuvasta? Jätä kommentti tai ota yhteyttä sähköpostitse: arkisto@aalto.fi
Lisätietoja kuvakokoelmista / more information: libguides.aalto.fi/c.php?g=578570&p=4667669
A collection of books, artefacts & curiosities from all over the place! The usual suspects - Sideshow, dollhouse stuff, McFarlane toys, Mononofu and also parts from Mezco's wonderful Control Room Nemo set. There's even a vintage Capt. Scarlett gold bullion crate in there!
A memorial for my colleague Hugh O'Neill who died in November 2019 aged 75.
He retired in Spring 2009 after working for 49 years in the Regional Virus Lab first as part of the University and then later when it became part of the health service.
He did his primary degree and then his PhD and then his RCPath exams all while working in RVL after originally starting as a technician straight from school in 1960 aged 16 )
I worked with him since 1990. He was a great colleague and friend in the virology laboratory. He was such an important part of what we were as an organisation and he left a legacy and ethos that has served us well since.
I think this is a lovely and fitting memorial. I think Hugh would have actually been ever so slightly embarrassed but very pleased by what his family have arranged. I am sure there will be loads of folk who will sit here and wonder for a moment who Hugh J O'Neill was. Maybe a google search on their phone might just bring them here to this Flickr post!
James - Sit Down
Gary has always been a bit unlucky when we talk about love. Maybe it’s his appearence, because Gary’s looks… eh, how would I say it… Anyway, girls haven’t shown much attention for him over the years, though Gary has tried everything from blind date to Tinder. Because Gary works as a biochemist, he decided to develop some kind of love potion in his home lab! He recruited volunteer women with a newspaper announcement to test his creations. After many years, chemical reactions and failures, it seems that he finally made it!
201019-N-DA693-1026
SAN DIEGO (Oct. 19, 2020) Hospitalman Hannah Jarnigan, a laboratory technician assigned to Naval Medical Center San Diego’s (NMCSD) microbiology laboratory, prepares coronavirus (COVID-19) samples for testing on a high-throughput assay, molecular testing machine Oct. 19. NMCSD’s mission is to prepare service members to deploy in support of operational forces, deliver high quality healthcare services and shape the future of military medicine through education, training and research. NMCSD employs more than 6,000 active duty military personnel, civilians, and contractors in Southern California to provide patients with world-class care anytime, anywhere. (U.S. Navy photo by Mass Communication Specialist 3rd Class Jake Greenberg)
Two men at work in a medical laboratory
Image taken by me to used in an article and now released under Creative Commons. Please feel free to use as you see fit. I request attribution in the form of a link to www.dnalegal.com
Our University is equipped with recently built laboratories for our Chenistry, Biology and Medicine students.
The paint scheme, more than 75 lights, and its past role as a flying laboratory make this Beechcraft C-45 Expeditor unique.
Grimes Manufacturing Company was a pioneer in aircraft lighting. From the 1960s to the 1980s the company used this aircraft as its Flying Laboratory to test and demonstrate aircraft lighting. In 1973 the red, white, and blue paint scheme was applied. After being sold to another owner in 1986, the aircraft was damaged in an accident and fell into disrepair. In 1999, it was purchased again by Grimes and restored. The restoration was completed in 2008. The non-profit Grimes Flying Lab Foundation acquired the aircraft in 2003 and continues to operate it from Grimes Field in Urbana, Ohio.
This aircraft was built in 1944 as a C-45F Expeditor (44-47145), the military version of the Beechcraft Model 18 Twin Beech. The United States Army Air Force used it as a trainer. In 1953 it was re-manufactured as a C-45H for the United States Air Force.
Seen at Aerospace & Natural Science Academy of Toledo Open House and Aviation Expo.
My custom "Bride" minifig... >:D
Head & Hands - Oola (Star Wars)
Body - Marauder's Map Statue (Harry Potter)
Hair - Royal Guard Minifig (Series 5) - Her streaks are done in photoshop but I will be painting them on. This was a test run to see how it will look... as I wasn't sure about that royal guard hat. Buts its going to be pretty awesome! Lol!
Quinta da Regaleira
Sintra, Portugal
Quinta da Regaleira is an estate located near the historic center of Sintra, Portugal. It is classified as a World Heritage Site by UNESCO within the "Cultural Landscape of Sintra". Along with other palaces in this area (such as the Pena, Monserrate and Seteais palaces), it is one of the principal tourist attractions of Sintra. It consists of a romantic palace and chapel, and a luxurious park featuring lakes, grottoes, wells, benches, fountains, and a vast array of exquisite constructions. The palace is also known as "Palace of Monteiro the Millionaire", from the nickname of its first owner, António Augusto Carvalho Monteiro.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quinta_da_Regaleira
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O Palácio da Regaleira é o edifício principal e o nome mais comum da Quinta da Regaleira. Também é designado Palácio do Monteiro dos Milhões, denominação esta associada à alcunha do seu primeiro proprietário, António Augusto Carvalho Monteiro. O palácio está situado na encosta da serra e a escassa distância do Centro Histórico de Sintra estando classificado como Imóvel de Interesse Público desde 2002.
Carvalho Monteiro, pelo traço do arquitecto italiano Luigi Manini, dá à quinta de 4 hectares, o palácio, rodeado de luxuriantes jardins, lagos, grutas e construções enigmáticas, lugares estes que ocultam significados alquímicos, como os evocados pela Maçonaria, Templários e Rosa-cruz. Modela o espaço em traçados mistos, que evocam a arquitectura românica, gótica, renascentista e manuelina.
pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quinta_da_Regaleira
20100918_7D_IMG_2311_Regaleira
Quinta da Regaleira
Sintra, Portugal
Quinta da Regaleira is an estate located near the historic center of Sintra, Portugal. It is classified as a World Heritage Site by UNESCO within the "Cultural Landscape of Sintra". Along with other palaces in this area (such as the Pena, Monserrate and Seteais palaces), it is one of the principal tourist attractions of Sintra. It consists of a romantic palace and chapel, and a luxurious park featuring lakes, grottoes, wells, benches, fountains, and a vast array of exquisite constructions. The palace is also known as "Palace of Monteiro the Millionaire", from the nickname of its first owner, António Augusto Carvalho Monteiro.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quinta_da_Regaleira
---------------------------------------------------------------------
O Palácio da Regaleira é o edifício principal e o nome mais comum da Quinta da Regaleira. Também é designado Palácio do Monteiro dos Milhões, denominação esta associada à alcunha do seu primeiro proprietário, António Augusto Carvalho Monteiro. O palácio está situado na encosta da serra e a escassa distância do Centro Histórico de Sintra estando classificado como Imóvel de Interesse Público desde 2002.
Carvalho Monteiro, pelo traço do arquitecto italiano Luigi Manini, dá à quinta de 4 hectares, o palácio, rodeado de luxuriantes jardins, lagos, grutas e construções enigmáticas, lugares estes que ocultam significados alquímicos, como os evocados pela Maçonaria, Templários e Rosa-cruz. Modela o espaço em traçados mistos, que evocam a arquitectura românica, gótica, renascentista e manuelina.
pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quinta_da_Regaleira
20100918_7D_IMG_2309_Regaleira