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Focus stack of 30 images. Two off camera flashes (Leica SF60/Leica SF C1 trigger), diffused with MagMod Magspheres place on opposite sides of subject, in front and 3.5 ft. above subject to bounce off of white ceiling.
This photo was taken for #Red theme on the "Weekly Theme Challenge" group.
And for the theme "Male Accessories" in "Looking close... on Friday!".
This is my daily carry pocket knife. It is probably the most handy multi tool one can have. I also have a Leatherman Wingman but found this pocket knife to be more handy due to the corkscrew. You might wonder why, but untying very tight and small knots of all kinds is easily undone at parties or at home with it. The smaller knife is used for cutting objects while the larger knife blade is used for fruits and foods. not to mention the best toothpick and tweezers you can get. This is some of the many uses of this pocket knife/multi tool.
The Swiss Army knife is a pocketknife or multi-tool manufactured by Victorinox.
Photo taken at Randfontein in South Africa.
Using the (kit lens) Nikon Nikkor AF-P 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 G VR DX lens.
I Shoot Raw and edit in GIMP.
I am open to critique.
Comments are welcomed.
Thank you all very much for your visits, favs and comments. Each one is dearly appreciated!
Riddles “Pocket Rocket” '4MT' 2-6-0 no.76079 needs all it legendary power to surmount Darnholm Bank, as she hauls the 7 coach 10:00 Whitby-Pickering train towards Goathland Station.
I went to White Pocket back in early November with the Marc Adamus SW tour. After some issues with one of the vehicles in getting here, we only had a couple of hours to shoot. Marc showed us a few comps and then I wandered around looking at all of the leading lines hoping to run into this iconic tree ( which I had seen in my one and only visit a year ago ). After the sun set and we were looking at our shots a veteran of countless visits here, asked me with a disappointed voice why I had taken this shot. He said everyone takes this shot and there really isn't a fresh way to take it. I agreed with everything that he said and he was right. But I had only seen it now twice, so to me it is still fresh. And after all icons are icons for a reason. So as long this icon is still new to me, it will still be pretty cool.
Remote region of the Paria Plateau; swirling, multicolored formations of Navajo sandstone, including domes, hoodoos, gullies and potholes. Reached by a long drive on unpaved roads, some requiring a high clearance 4WD vehicle . Like Coyote Buttes, some formations at the White Pockets are delicate and could be damaged if subject to a large number of hikers, but there is no permit system and visitation is unlimited; it is however naturally restricted due to the difficulty of access. The main approach to the Paria Plateau is along House Rock Valley Road to the west .
More from the Junior League shopping event at the Birmingham Jefferson Civic Center....
There was a booth selling "pocket pets" which were sugar gliders......they were soooo precious!!! I was fascinated with them!!!
This shot on Los Angeles.
Portfolio flic.kr/s/aHsk7LUokY
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I am Japanese Camera Assistant. I graduated from Nihon University College of Art in Japan with a B.A. degree in Cinematography. After that, I worked at OMNIBUS JAPAN, a film production company, for one year.
At present, I am learning English in Los Angeles. Also I often volunteer to help out for AFI & USC graduation filming. In addition, I am looking for job or internships in California. In order to do this I would need sponsorship to work in the USA.
Photography is my lifework.
Experience
・ARRI FLEX 16ST, 16SR, 16SR2, 16SR3, ALEXA
・CANON XH-A1, CANON EOS 60D, 7D, 5D Mark Ⅱ
・PANASONIC AJ-HDC27F, PANASONIC AG-AF105
・SONY F900, SONY FS700, SONY F3, SONY F5
・RED ONE, RED EPIC
Languages
Japanese(Native), English(Limited working proficiency)
On the remote Paria Plateau in Arizona's Vermilion Cliffs National Monument, White Pocket is a group of swirling, multicolored formations of Navajo sandstone, including domes, hoodoos, gullies and potholes. Arriving at White Pocket inside Vermilion Cliffs National Monument, you are initially struck by the contrast of white rock in smoothly rounded mounds and cliff edges, dotted with two imperial looking spherical beehives rock cones
This is my Great Grandfather's pocket watch which he had on his person during WWI. My Grandad gave it to me in 1982, along with the note. I'd love to get this thing working again....
Just sewing the diamond shapes together into a tumbling blocks layout, took an entire day. My next step will be to layer and quilt this panel, then trim to the pocket shape. The pocket on the other side of the bag will have a different design pattern.
White Pocket has been described many times as otherly world or right out of Mars. I have been there three times and I just describe as pure SW with a twist. What makes it otherly world is that several of the various sandstone formations seen throughout the SW can all be seen concentrated in one area. And the number of leading lines seen from this varying sandstone can seem to be overwhelming in your first visit. This was my third visit but my first at a nighttime shot. As I mention in my twisted tree Zion shot, the Milky Way and moon were in harmony for one of the two times yearly. Pure luck on my part. And we got there just in time as the moon was popping over the horizon.
This a 2 shot blend. One taken for the moon/Milky Way and one for the foreground. Hope you enjoy.
"White Pocket" is a distinctive rock formation in the Vermillion Cliffs National Monument, Arizona USA.
Well worth the drive through sand and rocks!
This is in the "Arizona Strip", a large section of Arizona north of the Colorado River (Grand Canyon) only accessible by crossing the Navajo Bridge north of Flagstaff or going through Nevada and/or Utah.
Iguane - ZooParc de Beauval
Merci de ne pas l'utiliser sans mon Accord !
Please don't use it without my Permission !
A small table scrap roadster knocked together a little while ago. What do you think of this scale? It seems to work really well next to a standing minifig but is obviously quite cramped inside. Overall I prefer it vs. the new generation of Speed Champions for minifigs for example.
A plastic pouch to hold pens and pencils. I used this in the 1980's while working for ABEX - a manufacturing firm in Oxnard, CA. It saved many a shirt from ink stains.
What's the point of these shirt pockets when you can't even take anything out of them without being attacked?! Fine keep my pencil.
Day 278/365
Very nicely styled after an original antique pocket watch, with a mechanical 17-jewel movement, and all for US$12.34 (though I had to open and adjust for better accuracy). Now it keeps within about 15 sec (per day) of the right time, which is good for any mechanical watch.
www.ebay.ca/itm/Fashion-Elegant-Mechanical-Hand-Wind-New-...
My wife has had a number of these little wooden "hugs" during all the restrictions with hugs not being permitted she was handing these little "pocket hugs" to her friends.
Our restrictions are relaxing and effective this coming Monday we are allowed to hug family and friends, again .... our government specifically have stated "hugs are allowed!"
Our Daily Challenge ~ Repetition ..
Weekly Theme Challenge ~ In A Row ..
Stay Safe and Healthy Everyone!
Thanks to everyone who views this photo, adds a note, leaves a comment and of course BIG thanks to anyone who chooses to favourite my photo .... Thanks to you all!
shot with the latest iPhone (perhaps processed in one or more desktop or iOS apps) and finished in photoshop.
an ongoing project contributing to my pocket project flickr set.
shot with the latest iPhone (perhaps processed in one or more desktop or iOS apps) and finished in photoshop.
an ongoing project contributing to my pocket project flickr set.
The White Pocket (Arizona) is a superb photographic destination about five miles due east of South Coyote Buttes (Cottonwood Trailhead). The White Pocket is part of Vermilion Cliffs National Monument. It was "discovered" by photographers 20 years ago. The name White Pocket refers to two areas. The topo map shows a tall butte about 500 feet high that can be seen from miles around. I'll refer to this butte as the White Pocket Monolith or Butte. Conversely, photographers use the term White Pocket to refer to the area of white and coral-colored cauliflower (aka brain) rock to the east of the White Pocket Butte. This area has many water pockets, which accounts for the name, and is the area of photographic interest. The area is small, about one hundred acres. No permit is needed for the White Pocket, and cattle can roam freely as of July 2015, although they are mostly fenced out.It isn't easy to get to the White Pocket. You need a high-clearance four-wheel drive vehicle due to deep sand. The White Pocket is often combined with a trip to Coyote Buttes South, so I will also give directions from there. Due to the bad roads after shooting at the White Pocket, I recommend camping at the trailhead overnight and driving out the next morning.