View allAll Photos Tagged Modules
Sunrise in Moll del Petroli (Petrolium dock), Badalona.
Simple shot in Manual mode with 416 seconds (7 minutes) of exposition. A double filter (Haida ND3.0 and Haida ND1.8) was used.
This shot was taken and published in 2019, being processed under the display-scene workflow. Now I repeated the process under the scene-referred workflow and version 6 of the Filmic module in Darktable. The result is much more realistic.
On the moon of Cephalus IV, a small lunar outpost stands alone amidst strange landscape…
I built this for an @connlug quarterly build challenge. I built it as a modular section, so ideally I can connect it with other modules to create a larger base. Hope you enjoy! Comments & criticism welcome
This goes with the previous photo amongst the cotton fields near Corpus Christi, Texas. Taken across a neighboring field, the truck is hauling modules of compressed harvested cotton to the gin for cleaning and processing. The modules are huge, only eight of them fit on a 40 ft flatbed.
やっと商品でけました。
Modulorブランドのほうではほぼ1年ぶりかもしれません。
春を先取りした感じの商品で、カーディガンとワンピを組合わせて着ることができます。1年前に作って放置していたティペットもあわせて販売します。
お気に召していただけると幸いです。
photo by nyanchi eel
SLOW, SLOW (136, 138, 20) - Moderate
Explored 2/23/23
Thanks for the Favs and Comments! As a photo enthusiast it's a pleasure to be recognized by my peers. :-)
iPhone's camera + iPod touch / brushes+trigraphy+scratchcam fx+decim8+dxp+vsco+deco sketch+touchretouch+phototoaster
A7 III + SEL14TC + FE 100-400 GM OSS, main levée AF-C.
Photo traitée avec le module DxO pour l' A7 III + Canon EF 100-400 mm L IS USM II + EF 1.4x III.
Der Modulor ist ein von Le Corbusier entwickeltes Maßsystem und stellt einen Versuch dar, in der Architektur ausschließlich am menschlichen Körper vorkommende Längen-Maße zu verwenden.
Olympus XA
Zuiko 35mm/2,8
Lomography CN 800
Louvre Abu Dhabi – Saadiyat Island, Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates
Architecture: Ateliers Jean Nouvel
Engineering Consultancy: Buro Happold
Structural Design: Arup
Façade / Dome Specialist: Waagner Biro
Developer: Department of Culture & Tourism – Abu Dhabi
Lighting Design: 8’18” Lumiere
Date Completed: 2017
Photography: Andrew Shenouda
Website | Instagram | 500px | Behance | LinkedIn | Pinterest | Facebook | X | Tumblr | Deviantart
The rim of a large crater, with some smaller craters within. I originally planned to have this rim be at one end of my base, with the entire base inside the crater. But now I'm thinking of building parts of it outside, e.g. I have a few Windtraps that would make sense to have on the rim, to pick up the maximum amount of wind. Also, I have a force field barrier, that would make more sense to have on the outside than on the inside of the crater...
Nasa Visitor Center, Greenbelt, MD
"This is a model of the Apollo Command Module, which carried a total of 27 astronauts to lunar orbit aboard nine missions between 1968 and 1972. Launched by a Saturn V rocket, the largest and most powerful rocket ever built, the Command Module was the only part of the spacecraft recovered at the end of a mission."
NASA
Hitches rides on to interstellar asteroids, studying both the asteroid as well as surrounding space.
Quickie build.
iss069e014837 (May 28, 2023) --- The SpaceX Dragon Freedom spacecraft is pictured docked to the space-facing port on the International Space Station's Harmony module. Dragon Freedom carried four Axiom Mission-2 astronauts to the orbital lab on May 22, 2023, including Commander Peggy Whitson, Pilot John Shoffner, and Mission Specialists Ali Alqarni and Rayyanah Barnawi.
Alright Gentlemen, you know what we are here for. Recover that ACS module, and if you have to, shoot anyone who stands in our way.
Vitrine mécanique,petite serre de métal et de verre,illustration des cabinets de curiosités du 19e siècle.
Conçue par François Delarozière pour le bicentenaire du muséum
D’histoire naturelle de Nantes
Plantes carnivores dans la petite cage à côté
So my big project is done. Here's a shot of me sitting behind all the various sections to give a sense of scale. If I can remember how all this goes back together (and I can find a vehicle big enough to carry it), this thing will be at BFVA 2014.
Collection of the Verbeke Foundation
Superuse Studios is a Rotterdam based architecture office of Cesare Peeren, Willem Coenen, Bart Lentze and Mel Feldmuller. They utilize the contextual potential for design. A design is not considered as the beginning of a linear process but as a phase in a continuous cycle of creation and recreation, use and reuse.
Superuse Studios re-appropriates unwanted materials into architectural structures and is known for their innovative projects focusing on sustainable design within the fields of architecture, urban design and research. Three projects that highlight their strategies and design approach are ‘design shoe store’, ‘the miele space station’ and their ‘wikado’ urban furniture.
The Miele Space Station was one of Superuse Studios early trials in reuse architecture in 2003, its final destination is based at the faculty of architecture in Delft where it served as an espresso bar. Its futuristic appearance of a space station is composed of modules where it can be configured to different programs- even suited for living accommodation.
verbekefoundation.com/en/2017/03/superuse-studios-nl/
www.designboom.com/architecture/superuse-studios-design-s...
a7riv+ Venus Optics Laowa 15mm F4 Wide Macro
Hi to anyone still watching this account 🙋♀️ I haven’t built anything or been active in the community for several years now, but recently unearthed this creation from 2013 and realized I never photographed it.
This was built for the Brickfair 2013 Cyberpunk/Apocalego display, using a modular system designed by Carter Baldwin. The Technic framework allowed builders to combine modules, stacking our segments into an eclectic city. Unfortunately I don’t have any photos of the whole display but I’m sure they are floating around somewhere.
If anyone’s interested in the non-LEGO stuff I’ve been making since, you can find me at Instagram.com/dillonsamuelson
Thanks for looking!
With the expanded workspace, the three modules can now be merged as one and an additional module will complete the facility...
Ancrée dans la vase sur ses frêles jambes,
la pêcherie devient mirage.
Soudain le réel bascule :
ce qui est maritime devient spatial.
As their soldiers walked across the battlegrounds, we were ready to strike on top of an abandoned building roof. There was no hope for them now!
For the Annual Military Build Contest. Are there any other requirements I have to fill to enter this?
Here is the continuation of my large summer-2018 project.
I had imaged this region for about 13 nights altogether between July and October 2018. You can call me crazy, using so many nights for just one object, in a region where clear nights are rare :) But I really wanted to see if I could catch this beautiful Supernova remnant, and I'm glad it succeeded :)
Recently Pixinsight was supplied with the new Starnet++ module, which you can use to completely separate the stars from the background. I used this software to enhance the very weak nebulosity and was astonished to see how much more could be drawn from the background compared to the processing I did last year. All other processing was performed using Astropixelprocessor and photoshop.
Supernova remnants (SNR) are formed when a large star ends its life in a supernova explosion. About 300 of these remnants are currently known in our galaxy. One of the most famous remnants, the Veil Nebula, is located in the constellation of Cygnus. Although this is the most famous one in this constellation, it’s not the only SNR. Cygnus contains several obscure SNR’s, among which SNR 65.3+5.7 (also known as SNR 65.2+5.7).
SNR G65.3+5.7 was discovered by Gull et al. (1977) during an OIII survey of the Milky Way. Some parts of this SNR were already catalogued by Stewart Sharpless in his SH2 catalog as SH2-91, SH2-94 and SH2-96, but they were not recognized as being part of a bigger structure at that time. The idea that they could be part of a larger SNR was postulated by Sidney van den Bergh in 1960, but it took until 1977 for this to be confirmed.
This is one of the larger SNR in the sky spanning a region of roughly 4.0x3.3 degrees. Mavromatakis et al. (2002) determined the age of the SNR to be 20.000-25.000 years and the distance about 2.600 – 3.200 lightyears. The shell has a diameter of roughly 230 lightyears! This SNR is a predominantly OIII shell with also some H-alpha signal.
This supernova shell is quite weak and there are hardly any high-resolution images of this region. In the internet maybe 5-10 deep images of this shell can be found and, in most cases, they don’t cover the entire shell or the resolution is quite low because it was done by using photo lenses at short focal lengths. That’s why I decided to see if I could try to image the entire shell using my equipment, a TMB92 refractor in combination with a QSI583ws ccd camera. Because of its large size I needed to make a 3x3 mosaic to cover the whole region.
As so many nights were already necessary to cover the region in OIII I didn’t succeed in grabbing the H-alpha data, but on the internet I found the MDWsurvey (mdwskysurvey.org) initiated by David Mittelman (†), Dennis di Cicco, and Sean Walker (MDW). This is a marvelous project with the goal to image the entire northern sky in H-alpha at a resolution of 3.17”/pixel. I contacted them and told them of my effort to grab imagery of this SNR and they were very kind to provide me with the H-alpha imagery of this region, so that the entire SNR could be brought into view in reasonable high resolution.
This bicolor image shows a combination of about 53h of OIII data (made by myself) and 20 hours of Ha-data (made by the MDW survey) in a single image. In this way the full span of the shell can be seen in all its glory.
Image info:
H-alpha (astrodon 3nm, mdwskysurvey.org):
Telescope: Astro-physics AP130mm starfire
Camera: Fli Proline 16803
5 frames of 12x1200s each
OIII (astrodon 3nm):
Telescope: TMB92SS
Camera: QSI583ws
9 frames, 158 x 1200s total