View allAll Photos Tagged NutsAndBolts
For my video; youtu.be/KtJLVTn2wfY
Work in progress.
Notice the nuts and bolts and new blacktop.
10 degrees and a new walking path to explore behind the blue fence
Foreshore Park flood protection
Work is underway on a 900-metre section of the Fraser River Dike in Fraser Foreshore Park. This section, known as Reach 8, extends from Glenlyon Creek to Byrne Creek, on the south side of Glenlyon Parkway.
If you have hit the barrier and are feeling exhausted you will not be alone as millions feel just the same today!
Me? As Ever.
Instruction Manual for the Moon III, 2.75 x 4 x 2 inches (open), Brass, copper, copper, clock parts, rulers, found objects, fabricated. Blog entry here.
A black and white photograph of a latched bolt, attached to an aged and decaying railway wagon door, which has been the subject of graffiti - largely with silver spray paint.
I was playing around with some extension tubes on the 70-300VR lens. I like the results, but the DOF is very hard to manage hand-held -- esp with the length of the lens + tubes.
Explore #226 June 20, 2008
Another shot from Gravesend's New Tavern Fort...one of a number of canon/field guns on display, this is from the (replica ?) gun carriage...
In pubs, at park benches and over garden fences, people discussing the issues of the day get down to the nuts and bolts of it, the nitty gritty, not to put too fine a point on it, the nub of it: getting down to brass tacks, the gist of it, this and that, this is it: mm hmm. There's the rub, there's no getting away from it. I'm a plain speaking man.
And that's the truth.
[IMG-0505a]
Last week when I stopped to photograph the train bridge that crosses Interstate 40 in western Putnam County, I also took a couple of shots of the pinned connection that I was standing right next to. Being a Structural Engineer, this is just some of the coolest stuff anywhere!! This particular bridge connection is a pinned type that restricts movement in the vertical and the horizontal direction but allows rotation. Cool, huh?!?
This was three bracketed photos that I combined in Photomatix to create this HDR. Further tweaks were made in PS.
By the way, did I mention that I love bridges...and this is the coolest thing ever?!?
"For I know the plans I have for you", declares the LORD, "plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future." ~Jeremiah 29:11
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Copyright © 2014 by Craig Paup. All rights reserved.
Any use, printed or digital, in whole or edited, requires my written permission.
Glamour bolts and metals on aircrafts, Tag der Luftfahrt/Aviation Day Frankfurt/Main Airport. Sony A9. Beech 18 ready for boarding.
For the 52Project Macro group, on the subject of 'Nuts and Bolts'. I really wanted some nice rusty ones for this weeks theme, but I don't seem to have any left, so new, shiny ones it was...
One bolt, one square nut - which I don't think I've seen before, and one wingnut.
One 430 EX II, slaved. 1/32 +0.7, flash positioned above the nuts and bolts. Triggered with 600D's own pop-up flash.
This is a single short video clip from a Insta 360 X3 camera.
The ornaments are made from nuts and bolts and washers.
They are sitting on a motorized turntable with a beach scene on top, It is sitting on the dining room table and it is turning anticlockwise.
In the middle of the ornaments I placed the 360 camera standing on its end and recording at 60fps. It is turning the same as with the turntable and the ornaments.
In post, with a few key frames, I edited the 360 footage to rotate the opposite way after a few seconds. The turntable is still turning the same way.
I then keyframed the footage to look up and turn into a sphere, turn inside out then spin around a few times.
I used Insta 360 Studio for the 360 video and the title and endings are added with a different video editor.
It has been two tears since I have had the macro lens out. Had fun playing around and am working on getting the touch back.
105mm
Handheld
NO STACKING
LA Arboretum
Macro - Nuts and Bolts. ©Copyright 2017 Karlton Huber Photography - all rights reserved.
Another tabletop project on a Sunday when I can't get out and shoot.
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Rome (Italy) March 2007
Meccano is a model construction kit comprising re-usable metal strips, plates, angle girders, wheels, axles and gears, with nuts and bolts to connect the pieces. It is a versatile constructional medium enabling the building of a variety of working models and mechanical devices.
Meccano was invented in 1901 in England by Frank Hornby and manufactured by the British company, Meccano Ltd, between 1908 and 1980. Currently it is manufactured in France and China.
(Wilkipedia - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meccano -)
The tiles that line the walls of Lisbon tell the tale of the city and of Portugal. These tiles were once perfectly ordered and neat. Each predictably after the other. They once were certain and stood confidently facing the sun and the sea.
But time has designs of its own. It has sought to destroy some and gently wear away at others. Some tiles that were lost could not be replaced. In such places, rather than remove all the tiles and start again, the owners of the buildings simply replaced them with other tiles. This has created a complex patchwork, all the more beautiful for the story it tells.
And although the buildings' owners do the best they can, perhaps time is the real architect. Portuguese tiles, known as azulejos, adorn the inside and outside of almost every home in Portugal. Although introduced to Iberia by Moors, the fashion continued after they left. The Moors restricted themselves arabesque geometric patterns of triangles, squares, and diamonds, probably because many of them belonged to the Sunni brach of Islam which prohibited images of living things.