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These planes flew, dropping water onto fires. It would have been very tiring, being above the fires, maintaining saftey, yet delivering the water where needed. Helicopters using 'buckets' were being used as well, a busy airspace.
I live under a flight path, and a plane so happened to fly past whilst I was making an astro time-lapse.
The plane crash set from Spielberg's War of the Worlds.
Nikon F55. Ilford HP5 Plus 400 35mm B&W film.
Riffing on a little build from the Facebook Microscale Go! group. The tricycle gear was especially fun to puzzle out.
This photo shows wreckage believed to be of a Minnesota plane found in Whatcom County Wednesday morning. Search crews will need to reach the site to make official confirmation.
Yes this is a lego version of a BAe-McDonnell Douglas/BAE Systems Harrier II if you were wondering..
this cupcake too...it's like army cake I've made before :
www.flickr.com/photos/popocreation/2879886361/
and this the tutorial :
The Finnair plane was the one I had just got off - BA flight fly Helsinki that was operated by Finnair
Hey, we can't let tactom and Joel have all the fun, can we?
This was made by spreading a set of regular pleats, releasing the extra paper that had been stored up in the middle. The pleats end up being slightly curved. It looks very cool backlit, I'll post a photo as soon as I have time.
Folded from 8.5-inch bond paper (do I really need to say that anymore?!?)
Pam and I caught a little bit of the airshow at Willow Run yesterday.It always amazes me how close these pilots are able to fly to each other.
That's Lanzetta in the plane with the red highlights.
This is essentially not a comparison of the specific gear involved in these two shots but is a comparison of the performance I used to get from the D90/Sigma 17-70 combo v. the D610/Sigma 70 combo. It did turn out to be something of an Elements v. On1 comparison as these were both processed in On1 which turned out much better than my Elements attempts with this particular subject matter. The D610 was shot on a tripod while the D90 was shot handheld with the os of the Sigma on. So not scientific but I have shot these two lenses this way in the past as the os of the 17-70 gives me the flexibility of shooting handheld while the macro lens needs to be on a tripod to take advantage of its super close focusing ability. I used live view and manual focus for the tripod shot and single point af for the handheld shot. So, two different methods that are authentic with how I shoot and have shot with these combos.
(The phallic nature of the shots was unintentional; part of the nature of the flower and the pose I needed to use to get both the stigma and the near anther on the same plane of focus).
I prefer the composition in the D90 shot probably a result of having the flexibility of shooting hand held.