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"... still not reached my aim of 1 ½ inch - any idea how I can accelerate my growth ?
Please let me know !
My stretching excercises have not helped a lot, but I will keep trying - and NOT give up... ... "
🌟"Happy Weekend to all my Friends! 🌟
Take care and stay tall" 😄
[Dedicated to CRA (ILYWAMHASAM)]
GigaSet GS290
ƒ/2.0
3.5 mm
1/33 Sec
ISO 308
...of too heavy luggage ahead...
Flying is not very easy nowadays...
:-(
Trying to use my 18-200 to create a close up of my luggage meter...
In preperation for MacroMondays theme “measurement“...
HMM :-)
TIME: “A dimension in which events can be ordered from the past through the present into the future, and also the measure of durations of events and the intervals between them” (from Wikipedia).
Time is so important that people are always measuring it...
Wristwatch - for Macro Mondays’ theme “Measurement”
HMM
For the theme “Orange”- group “Looking close... on Friday”
With my best wishes for a nice weekend :-))
Leica x1
Back alley, Downtown Seattle.
Shot just a few hours ago in downtown. i went around Union Street and above, for about 3 hours. there's definitely a lot of alleys in the upper area that i haven't checked yet.
for this specific shot, i guess i was just lucky :)
Photographed on a Vancouver-area Four Thirds Photographers photowalk with Daniel, Don, Jonathan, and NJ. Front Street, New Westminster, BC. May 25, 2014.
Senkspindel aus Glas mit integriertem Themometer einer Mohr-Westphalschen Waage zur Bestimmung der Dichte von Flüssigkeiten.
My good old caliper. The highlighted scale is the Vernier scale, this can be used to interpolate the reading with 1/20th mm precision. If for example the 2-bar of the vernier scale is aligned with one of the bars on the main scale, you have to add 0.2mm.
I also have a digital one, but since I rarely make use of a caliper the battery is always empty when I need it. Besides that it's also thicker and heavier than this one, so I still prefer this plain old analog one.
Thanks for all your comments and faves, they are really appreciated.
Happy Macro Monday!
Deb is a fan of anything kitchen.
Dishes, Gadgets, Cookware, Appliances. Especially if they are colorful.
These measuring spoons are an example.
We had plenty already but she liked the color. So why not get two sets?
Her thought is you can never have enough measuring stuff.
Macro Mondays: Measurement
Measuring teaspoons: 1, 1/2, 1/4, 1/8
When I was a kid, here in the U.S., a long long time ago, I remember being told that the metric system was coming soon.
Still waiting...
100mm + 25mm extension tube
window light, tripod (of course)
Screw thread Gauge
This simple tool is used to measure the pitch of a machine screw. Generally, you need one set for imperial threads and one for metric threads. Each toothed blade has a number stamped on it confirming the pitch in either inch or millimeter fractions. This humble tool is essential to engineers and has changed very little over the centuries. However, the world's first national screw standard was the British Standard Whitworth (BSW) devised and specified by Joseph Whiteworth in 1841.
The tool is simple to use, just find the right serrated edged blade for a snug fit between the thread or pitch of the screw you wish to measure.
The arrangement for this shot was laid out on a brass plate. The bokeh was created by scattering some steel and brass swarf on the plate.
Many thanks for all views, fav's and comments! HMM!
I.C.S. Civil Engineer's Handbook, 1913...A book I will never use, but like to page though anyway.....glossing over topics like hydrographic surveying, laying out railroad turnouts and the computation of volume related to earthwork using prismoidal measurments.
The ‘jaws’ of a micrometer measuring the thickness of a single sheet of paper
It came out to be 0.1mm, or about 1/250”
HMM!
The sealed glass spheres float or sink as their relative density changes with temperature. Each is 'tuned' to float at a certain temperature.