View allAll Photos Tagged MAGNETS
@Strobist: "Morning, Australia! #OCF mag in Brisbane: On the pole opposite bakery on Foxton Street, Indooroopilly." (http://twitter.com/strobist/status/4955896440)
Kylie and I grabbed ourselves a sweet OCF magnet!
SB-900 in Lumiquest SB-III, with 1/2 CTO at 1/1. Triggered with CLS.
1728 magnets. 96 6x3-magnet cylinders (16 on the left, 80 on the right). 4 cylinders make an extended tetrahedron, which are then packed in a face-centered cubic configuration (hexagonal close packed configuration also possible).
I ran out of 1/4" spherical magnets before I could finish this form. It is hard to see what is going on without seeing them in person so I will attempt to describe it here: 4D Dodecahedral Tube Mesh
For A Year of Dolls! Odds & Evens - May 29th
Fidget gets her magnets on to help Ting and Whimzy with their math skills. Yeah, it's summer but it's fun! :)
Been out of the photo games for a while, my husband was in the hospital a couple of weeks ago, he's been released but is still recuperating. I just wanted to take my mind off things for a bit.
I like my magnets but I like them neat and tidy. This is the side of the fridge; they're on the front top and bottom as well. Some were picked up on trips, some were gifts, some were handmade by my mom and some are just local business magnets.
Photo prise avec l'AFS 24mm f/1.4 G dans les souk de Sidi Bou Said.
Christophe GILLES DE PELICHY
Ne pas utiliser sans mon autorisation écrite. Ne le faites pas ! Merci
Don't use without my written permission. Do not ! Thanks
Fridge magnets, given by a friend as Christmas presents (Novák J. 2007). They're hand-made, of course (the balloons are separate magnets.)
Strobist info: see setup shot. Curves in digiKam but no editing otherwise.
About a year ago I received a request from a Russian company - they wanted to use three of my photos of Bermuda on refrigerator magnets. I granted them permission along with a request of my own - that they send me the magnets when they were produced.
Look what arrived in today's mail.
It is a kick for me to see images of my favorite place in the world commercially produced and hanging on my refrigerator.
Birthdays can go on for weeks in this family...these refrigerator magnets were gifts...several made from my flickr pics that showed family and friends
Après 137 prises de vues, 3 tentatives de stacking (1 avec Helicon Focus et 2 avec CombineZ) voilà enfin un résultat acceptable ! Finalement, c'est CombineZ le gratuit qui a remporté la mise en combinant toutes les méthodes de stacking (mais il lui a fallu environ 6 heures pour faire le boulot). Il s'agit de limaille de fer ramassée au pied de mon touret à meuler et placée sur une tête de boulon aimantée que j'ai auparavant copieusement martelée avec un marteau à piqueter de soudeur pour lui donner cet aspect lunaire.
Le fond gris est constitué d'une feuille de canson et j'ai placé une autre feuille de canson orange pour diffuser la lumière du flash.
L'objectif utilisé est un Bresser x4 à 48 €.
Je commence un album sur ces scènes magnétiques mais je ne crois pas que j'en ferai des dizaines : c'est d'un laborieux !
Bref ! Maintenant, c'est à vous d'imaginer des personnages dans tout ça : c'est comme pour les nuages quand vous étiez petits !
Available on Etsy for $3.50 and it comes with a little gift, the matching ATC. :) The ATC is a thank you gift, I do not sell ATCs.
I've been a magnet making fool lately and have been having a blast with it. Individual elements noted.
From the leaflet by Leisure Arts "Fridgies By the Sea". I am putting these away for my daughter for Christmas. She loves to open one gift on Christmas Eve, and this is the one. (She is 24 by the way, LOL) She always begs to open just "one", please mommy!!!!
Reaching a point where the gravitational force is competing with the magnetic force. Made with a few thousand 1/4" magnetic spheres and 12 5/8" ball bearings.
Playing with Neodymium magnets I got in my christmas stocking. I'm using them on my fridge. Here one is responding to movement on the other side of my hand, and then a demonstration of "attractive distance."
According to Wikipedia, Neodymium magnets are the bad boys responsible for erasing credit cards, wrecking CRT monitor displays (permanently, if they bend the CRT grill) - and though rare these days, nuking floppy disks.
See more? It's blogged here, pdf tutorial to download