View allAll Photos Tagged Pipe
Half-pipe like.
© Andy Brandl (2014) // PhotonMix Photography // Andy Brandl @ Getty Images
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A fine example of Indian Pipe seen in Maywood Park, Colonie, New York, USA on August 18, 2020. I have more commonly seen Indian Pipe in Maine than in my home state of New York. This time, it was a single plant. For some reason, this season, I am seeing many instances of just one plant of a particular kind. Wonder why? Here's some interesting information about the plant--https://www.gardeningknowhow.com/ornamental/fungus-lichen/indian-pipe-fungus.htm
In recent years, these plants have become more commonly known as Ghost Pipe.
One from my favourite local location earlier this week. I've captured this pipe many times before with my old 50D so thought I'd get back there with the 5D to see how it compares. I love this location as it's so peaceful and gives you time to really think about things in solitude while the tide comes in. I'm jumping between the Edinburgh Fringe street work and seascapes just now - that makes the brain work :-)
Thanks for looking :-)
Best viewed large on black (Press 'L')
Canon 5D Mk II
Canon 17-40mm
Lee 10 stop ND
Lee 0.9 soft grad
f16 @ ISO 200 for 301 secs @ 26mm
Streetshot by the hospital. This tough old man, near after his surgery, with tubes and vacuum bottle in the wound, walk out of the hospital, to the nearest place where smoking is aloved. To smoke his pipe.
Cambois, pronounced, (Cam-us) where i come from. The pipe that is quickly and surely falling into the sea, just like the old one next to it. Modern engineering at its worst.Not sure if this pipe actually carries any fluid now, But if it does it will be leaking all over the beach within a few months, if any flickr members know's of any info regarding the contents of this pipe please let me know.
Here's an up close look at the giant pipe organ at the James J. Hill House in St. Paul, MN.
Here is some info from the Minnesota Historical Society website:
A 1,006-pipe mechanical action tracker organ stretches two stories tall on the west wall of the art gallery. The organ was installed in the house at the recommendation of the interior designers.
Renowned Boston organ-maker George Hutchings created the pipe organ when the Hill family first moved into their new Summit Avenue mansion in 1891. The instrument is a mechanical action tracker organ with 17 ranks and 1,006 pipes — a particularly distinguished example of a residential pipe organ of America’s Gilded Age.
The organ was used for family gatherings, concerts and parties. Four of the Hill daughters were married in the house, and Hill’s funeral took place there in 1916. Early concerts hosted by St. Paul’s Schubert Club made use of the pipe organ.
NIKON D750 + 24.0-70.0 mm f/2.8 @ 35 mm, 62 sec at f/11, ISO 100
www.rc.au.net/blog/2017/03/06/outward-bound/
© Rodney Campbell
Jeana Jorgensen.
Image was shot in downtown Bloomington, Indiana with a Canon Digital Rebel XT and then adjusted in Adobe Photoshop CS2.
Photography, wool and splitloom tubing hairpiece, and vacuum tube pendant by Libby Bulloff.
There is quite and industry of men and women dressing up for the tourist cameras in the square outisde the Catedral de San Cristóbal in Havana old town.
The most aggresive are the old ladies with fat cigars - they demand you take their picture then swiftly demand lots of cash.
This guy was a little different - a more subtle approach. I liked his style and was happy to hand over a few pesos in return.
Darkday setup the cameras for the Bat Hammock underground storm drain wool spin shot. The pipe was smallish but it had these rocks and water in one section that Darkday thought would look good in a wool spin photo. We used the blue led light to create extra colour
Brazilian Dutchman's pipe or giant pelican flower (Aristolochia gigantea), Aristolochiaceae family, papo-de-peru in Brazil.
Very large steel pipes leads into one of the five blast furnaces at the former Bethlehem Steel plant in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania.
Technical details:
Bronica SQ-A medium format film camera with a Bronica Zenzanon 150mm F3.5 lens.
Kodak Tmax 400 shot at ISO 400.
1/30th second at F16.
Developed in Pyrocat HD at 1:1:100 dilution for 15 minutes @ 20 degrees Celsius in Paterson 3 reel tank. 15 seconds initial agitation with swizzle stick followed by 5 seconds of additional agitation every minute thereafter.
Negative scanned with Epson 4990 on holders with ANR glass.
Taken on Foma 200 with a Yashica FX2 equipped with a Soligor 35-70mm lens.
Grandfathers Pipe
Prints available at zacharymassengill.smugmug.com