View allAll Photos Tagged Phasing
40th Anniversary P42 #145 lays over with a Downeaster train set at the station in Portland, ME.
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I'm just trying to get myself sorted with a blog and oh my word where do you start?!! I feel such a noob at it all and it does daunt me a little. But there is only one way to overcome and learn and that's to dive right in - right?!!
Wish me luck!
Amtrak #184 leads the eastbound Southwest Chief out of Fullerton on a Thursday evening.
April 16th, 2015
Three Amtrak locomotives (GP38-3 #752. ALC42 #332, and another ALC42) are seen at the Chicago Locomotion Facility.
Phase Two - More For The Series
See Whole Album Here - www.flickr.com/photos/simon__syon/albums/72157647561060619
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This is from a series of photographs. They are an unusual and lighthearted idea strongly influenced by Gardens & Gardening.
Gardeners Don’t Do It In Wellies.
A series of photographs by me Simon Hadleigh-Sparks gardener, with the cooperation of his fellow colleagues who all work at Syon House, Park & Gardens, London as gardeners or estate workers. The concept was Simon‘s and the initial idea was to learn more about his love of photography especially about ‘people‘ photography and this then evolved into a lot of fun with friends but also a team building activity as more co-workers became involved and wanted to take part.
The basic concept concerns garden workers at a stately home, there roles and interests and taking their joy of work to the extreme…… Sounds tacky but all workers here love their job and are happy to wake up each morning. The majority of staff also live at Syon.
Syon is a 200 acre private stately home estate not far from the centre of London.
This will hopefully happen again as many more colleagues have shown an interest.
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The Phase 2 heritage takes the lead of Amtrak 8 as it descends Shortline Hill on the CP Merriam Park Sub. It’s running two hours late but that helped the shadows clear away. This unit recently got a new paint job making me want to catch it even more. So finally got the chance on this day.
At Hawthorne Yard on Indy's east side, five Amtrak P40DCs (four in Phase IV), built in 1993, are waiting to be shipped out to its new owner, Larry's, after years of rusting away at Amtrak's Beech Grove shops, and before that, Bear, Delaware. #813 and the rest of these P40s were the first of over two-hundred Genesis units built for Amtrak between 1993 and 2001; the P40s were subsequently stored after only a decade of service.
Vanochtend had het een beetje gevroren en gehageld. Nadat de zon opgekomen was, verdween langzaam de vorst en bleven er nog druppels in het gras. Met de trioplan lens dit bubbelfeestje kunnen fotograferen.
Phase between frost and dew.
This morning it had frozen and hailed a bit. After the sun had risen, the frost slowly disappeared and there were still drops in the grass. With the trioplan lens I was able to photograph this bubble party.
Thanks for taking time to fave, comment and look at my work. I really appreciate.
Sun’s phases: almost straight up at high noon (11:53 am EST)
Seasonal phases: Winter
Ice phases: freezing, cracking, and some open water in the distance
Today’s view from the dock at Centennial Park, Deseronto, Ontario - Mohawk Bay, Tyendinaga Mohawk Territory.
Amtrak's Phase III heritage unit returns to the Pittsburgh Line pulling the eastbound Pennsylvanian. After the brief station stop at Lewistown, 145 throttles up, completes the crossover from track 2 to 1, and continues eastward
Manipulations of my own photograph(s) combined with sampling and manipulations of my own previous abstract work using IfanView and Photoshop Elements.
Fit young fellows romped ahead up that mountain — retired and grey now.
Behind was the cadre of the gods, keepers of the arcane, among them — the pyrotechnician. He's why I'm in front. He knows his stuff. He also throws lighted fireworks over his shoulder; maintaining attention, creating mischief. I know him, and some of his foibles. Mostly, they're dead now, those gods and even a few of their disciples. Their genius documented is all that remains. All things must pass.
Passage obtained through the cow dung and mud of a farmer's lane is now superseded. A modern pilgrim might run a different gauntlet as mythologies younger than this tale are wrapped around like that sea spray from the heavy waves. Watching the phases evolve is a new experience. The ascent then was imperfect; its purpose served.
Mud-splattered white Kombi vans await the descent, and to repeat a dance with the slithering slime of the farm. This mountain had its gold mine, now worked out, and secrets for the god's revelation. Practically its the root of a Cretaceous volcano, now ⅒ of its former height. Typified, it is a zoned pluton — a monzonite, they say — more mafic on the outside, more quartz-rich in the middle.
The highest ranking of the gods holds court, black marker in hand, and with a Kombi whiteboard to draw his Qz-Ab-Or ternary phase equilibrium diagrams, explains why we should believe that this mountain and its concentric zones were once a partially melted and fractionated alkali basalt. He's very big on partial melting — drawing on his expertise, and cars!
Adding a mind-bending fourth dimension, his curves become the planes where his hypotheses glissade. Where the containing pressure is exceeded by the volatiles that flux his crystal mush, they breakout and flow stops in an instant as the mobilising flux exits, stage left, creating a solidus for the melt. All things must pass, and so they wait for the next zone to form — I think that's what he said.
There was a notion to re-ascend that mountain; finish the job. Trusted advice said, nah, you're on a short break, it'll break you, and besides the recent view was a bit rubbish. Instead, I'm here contemplating the tail end of an east coast low which dumped 250mm of rain and continues to pile up a heavy surf that's making all of that spray. Tomorrow I head away south to peramble gently between the two end points of a track I have visited and not joined.
All things must pass. This is just one of those phases.
Still some redish colour in the shadow
Second Partial Phase of the Total Lunar Eclipse of 16 May 2022
Quick doodle of a shuttle "landing" or phasing into N-space. The shuttle is fairly goofy but the angular shape was fun and above all easy to place around with transparency effects.
The electrical phases in this substation, reminds me of the past 27 years I spent building some of these. I guess it too was a phase I went through.
In freezing, the liquid phase of water turns into the solid phase. At the phase transition, beautiful structures akin to our image of the cosmos are created. Taken in our garden, focus stacked.
100% low poly, made and rendered in Eevee (Blender) (with viewport render).
Firing a phaser is fairly easy to make: set up a bezier curve, apply a physical constraint to a cylinder to follow the curve, and insert the necessary keyframes in the timeline.
For the "world" shader I used a star map from NASA (credits: NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio. Constellation figures based on those developed for the IAU by Alan MacRobert of Sky and Telescope magazine (Roger Sinnott and Rick Fienberg)).)
Can you spot the Big Dipper?
It took me a while to figure out how to set this up. In the world sharder editor: use a texture coordinate - mapping - environment texture. Connect the "camera" of the texture coordinate to the vector of the mapping node and in the scale options of the mapping node, set X and Y to 3 (leave Z at 1).
Connect the "color out" of the environment texture to a "RGB to BW" node, and feed this into a RGB curve node. Then drag this curve down to get rid of all the noise.
Connect the output of the RGB curve node to the color of the background node and connect the latter to the surface of the world output, as usual.