View allAll Photos Tagged Multiples
Class 143 diesel multiple unit No. 143620 pauses at Montpelier station in Bristol with the 11:16 Bristol Temple Meads to Severn Beach service on Saturday 13th September 2008. "Pacers" such as this one no longer operate services in the Bristol area, having been cascaded to work on the "Devon Metro" a few years ago.
I know ... it's an outrageous title but, according to Wikipedia, Montpelier has a reputation for being 'Bohemian'. I simply know it as a vibrant and culturally diverse inner suburb of Bristol.
© Ten Years After archive series 2018
This is an abstract view from a garden on Madeline Island, Wisconsin. Three exposures were obtained while moving the camera slightly between each one. The images were combined in camera.
Experimental multiple exposure of a pregnant model named Emilie I worked with recently, using Blue & Green Hoya Pop Colour filters.
I also had her hold my Lubitel 166+ camera as a prop. First time trying out multiple exposures on this film. Taken at Victoria Park in Sydney.
Nikon F4. AF Nikkor 24mm F2.8D lens. Vision 3 250D 35mm Motion Picture Film.
I submitted this image for a competition here: www.tigercamera.com/photo/23802/
Any votes would be appreciated! :-)
Aberration is fairly frequently met with in this species and even quite small colonies can produce interesting forms year after year. It is always worth having a close look at any Small Copper that you see in the field.
Upperside ground colour can vary from pure silver-white through oranges and fiery reds, to deeply suffused specimens that appear almost entirely black. The amount of copper on the hindwing band can be greatly exaggerated or reduced to the point of absence. The number, size, and shape of the black forewing spots can also vary considerably on both the upperside and underside; and even the tails on the hind wings can be markedly exaggerated in length. Heavy suffusion on the upperside is probably environmentally triggered and can sometimes be met with relative frequency in the autumn generation following a particularly hot summer.
Rarely (as in other species) more than one genetically inherited aberration can be expressed in the same specimen. This becomes particularly impressive where, for example, the silver-white ab. schmidtii also expresses the blue markings on the hindwings known as ab. caeruleopunctata and the reduced forewing markings of ab. bipunctata. Such multiple aberrations are almost unknown in the wild but have been produced in captivity by selective pairing of aberrant imagines through successive generations. There are 140 named aberrations known to occur in Britain.
Citation;
Spotted on a beach recently, most people missed this lad "upside down".
(Bizarre too editing this in the hotel lobby listening to Christmas Carols!)
A view I think from outside the modestly-named Universal Buses Limited's Smithybridge depot, showing off two of its Optare Excels, R817/9 WJA. Perhaps as a result of hubris, Universal Buses were not with us for long and the operation was purchased by Stagecoach in 2000. 817 was sold by Stagecoach in 2001 and ended its days with Essex County Buses. 819 has been more fortunate; by 2003 it found itself converted to dual door and providing shuttle services to and from the P&O Ferry Port at Dover. I understand it, together with stablemate R818 WJA , remains active with P&O in Hull.
This got me thinking about the dual door business. It’s not often one hears of a used bus getting a door inserted. Usually opposite arrangement applies as a vehicle from a London operator is cascaded or sold on to the provinces. What do they do with all the doors, I wonder? I can’t imagine there is a ready market for used centre doors. Perhaps there’s a big pile of them somewhere, stockpiled in case of a Great Door Shortage
Some colour multiple exposures with the LomoApparat in the City of London. Another walk back to the train station from the office
LomoApparat
Portra 160
Experimental multiple exposure of a pregnant model I worked with earlier this year, with Hoya Red & Blue Pop Colour Filters. Taken at Victoria Park near the University of Sydney.
Nikon F4. AF Nikkor 24mm F2.8D lens. Kodak Pro Image 100 35mm C41 film.
I was 13 when I took this photo, I'm 14 now and I hope I can top this picture this year, it's gonna be tough!!
A parasol with multiple functions, c.1900. It is an En-Tout-Cas parasol, which translates to "in any case," that is functionally a cross between a parasol and umbrella. The parasol is characterized as a later en-tout-cas because of its button and loop closure that wraps around the rib tips when closed. The proportion of canopy to handle sees the canopy favoring the longer umbrella canopies. It is also a walking parasol, due to the large size and long spike with a practical metal ferrule. The parasol also has a wooden stick that widens at the handle, that curls at the end. The stamp "T.S." within a diamond is placed on the stick above the handle.
The parasol has a top notch, black steel ribs and stretcher, and spring mechanism with black metal runner. The spike has a flared metal base. It is made from off-white cotton serge and lined with a vibrant teal blue cotton.
Condition: Excellent, but stained. OH 35 1/2, DIA 35 1/2", Spike OH 4 1/2"
ACC# 80.344
See additional vintage glamor and accessories at flic.kr/s/aHsm1uRC7j.
(Photo credit Bob Gundersen www.flickr.com/photos/bobphoto51/albums)
Gateshead is a town in the Gateshead Metropolitan Borough of Tyne and Wear, England. It is on the River Tyne's southern bank. The town's attractions include the twenty metre tall Angel of the North sculpture on the town's southern outskirts, The Glasshouse International Centre for Music and the Baltic Centre for Contemporary Art. The town shares the Millennium Bridge, Tyne Bridge and multiple other bridges with Newcastle upon Tyne.
Historically part of County Durham, under the Local Government Act 1888 the town was made a county borough, meaning it was administered independently of the county council.
In the 2021 Census, the town had a population of 196,151.
Gateshead is first mentioned in Latin translation in Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English People as ad caput caprae ("at the goat's head"). This interpretation is consistent with the later English attestations of the name, among them Gatesheued (c. 1190), literally "goat's head" but in the context of a place-name meaning 'headland or hill frequented by (wild) goats'. Although other derivations have been mooted, it is this that is given by the standard authorities.
A Brittonic predecessor, named with the element *gabro-, 'goat' (c.f. Welsh gafr), may underlie the name. Gateshead might have been the Roman-British fort of Gabrosentum.
There has been a settlement on the Gateshead side of the River Tyne, around the old river crossing where the Swing Bridge now stands, since Roman times.
The first recorded mention of Gateshead is in the writings of the Venerable Bede who referred to an Abbot of Gateshead called Utta in 623. In 1068 William the Conqueror defeated the forces of Edgar the Ætheling and Malcolm king of Scotland (Shakespeare's Malcolm) on Gateshead Fell (now Low Fell and Sheriff Hill).
During medieval times Gateshead was under the jurisdiction of the Bishop of Durham. At this time the area was largely forest with some agricultural land. The forest was the subject of Gateshead's first charter, granted in the 12th century by Hugh du Puiset, Bishop of Durham. An alternative spelling may be "Gatishevede", as seen in a legal record, dated 1430.
Throughout the Industrial Revolution the population of Gateshead expanded rapidly; between 1801 and 1901 the increase was over 100,000. This expansion resulted in the spread southwards of the town.
In 1854, a catastrophic explosion on the quayside destroyed most of Gateshead's medieval heritage, and caused widespread damage on the Newcastle side of the river.
Sir Joseph Swan lived at Underhill, Low Fell, Gateshead from 1869 to 1883, where his experiments led to the invention of the electric light bulb. The house was the first in the world to be wired for domestic electric light.
In 1889 one of the largest employers (Hawks, Crawshay and Sons) closed down and unemployment has since been a burden. Up to the Second World War there were repeated newspaper reports of the unemployed sending deputations to the council to provide work. The depression years of the 1920s and 1930s created even more joblessness and the Team Valley Trading Estate was built in the mid-1930s to alleviate the situation.
In the late noughties, Gateshead Council started to regenerate the town, with the long-term aim of making Gateshead a city. The most extensive transformation occurred in the Quayside, with almost all the structures there being constructed or refurbished in this time.
In the early 2010s, regeneration refocused on the town centre. The £150 million Trinity Square development opened in May 2013, it incorporates student accommodation, a cinema, health centre and shops. It was nominated for the Carbuncle Cup in September 2014. The cup was however awarded to another development which involved Tesco, Woolwich Central.
multiple exposures from HDR gives the illusion of a tattered flag waving in the wind and ghostly cars approaching a contradictory traffic signal
Petaluma California
Canon A510
Explored :)
Tied for my most interesting shot.
Experimental multiple exposure with the fountain at Piazza Barberini in Rome taken with Hoya Pop Colour Filters.
Nikon F4. AF Nikkor 50mm F1.4D lens. Kodak Ektar 100 35mm C41 film.
MS-09F Dom Tropen
An advancement on the YMS-09D Dom Tropical Test Type, the Zeon military introduced the MS-09F/trop late in the One Year War, designed to operate exclusively in localized desert and tropical regions on Earth.
A sort of anti-Orton effect. I subtracted a multiple of the original from a 5-times blurred version, all done using software I wrote myself today. Roach End, Staffordshire.
If 5-times blurred sounds tedious - well, the program I wrote does all 5 automatically (well, as many as I want, actually), displaying each iteration sequentially and automatically and saves the result automatically, without further intervention.