View allAll Photos Tagged Power,
Inspired by Pat Sanders.
Created for the TMI challenge In the Style of ... plsanders97, A. Walden & Hal Halli.
Abstract texture courtesy GraphicStock.
This came in low early in the morning about 50 ft of the ground following power lines,i just happened to have the 100-400 on my camera
abandoned power plant of a former steelworks
Ingersoll-Rand steam turbine and turbo blower for blast-furnace blowing
Oil fired radiant boiler with 139 atü (built by Steinmüller 1965) - Abandoned power plant for a former paper mill.
Abandoned power plant of a former steelworks
Steam turbine for a turbo blower by Franco Tosi (Legnano)
Power lines parallel the road leaving Bear Lake National Wildlife Refuge just after sunset. I think these lines supply electricity to Lifton Pumping Station at Bear Lake, Idaho.
Be the lungs
Be the heart beating
Be the muscle and sinew
Be the movement
Bio-Cup 2023, Final Round; Sports.
More on Cyclopic Bricks.
Mirandola, January 2020.
Sony a6000 with sel18105g and Polaroid cpl filter.
#sunset; #electrical; #trellis #evening; #purple; #magenta; #blue; #black; #silhouette;
#tramonto; #elettrico; #luce; #corrente; #traliccio; #sera; #viola; #blu; #nero.
The Southeast Steam Plant along the Mississippi River in downtown Minneapolis, Minnesota. The plant was built in 1903 to generate electricity for the street car system using coal fired boilers. It is now run by the University of Minesota.
abandoned power plant of a former steelworks
Ingersoll-Rand steam turbine and turbo blower for blast-furnace blowing
Grohnde-02-10-2020-001
My bike in front of Grohnde Nuclear Power Station.
Shen Hao PTB45, Schneider-Kreuznach Super Angulon 5.6/90, yellow filter, Adox CHS II 100 developed in Rodinal 1+25 using the SP-445 developing tank, scanned on an Epson V800.
Abandoned power plant of a former steelworks - The housing of the largest turbine there is painted blue, hence the name Blue Power Plant.
Edinburgh, Scotland - I have been getting into street photography recently, it’s pretty awesome to see how anyone can seem so empowering at the right moment.
With moving water I always try to impart subtle movement in the subject. This involves a shutter speed just slow enough to show movement but not so slow as to blur the details to much. The exposure has to be just right so as not to lose detail in the highlights of the water. These are the two main things that I watch out for when tackling water images. I thank all my loyal friends for their good wishes and I wish them all good health and many blessings. I love to see all your images, I learn so much from them.
Union Pacific dispatched a third Salt Lake City to North Platte E-Power with UP 6730 pulling SD70Ms 4414, 5188, 5029, 5110, 4412, 4944, and 4298. The train has been routed up the "wrong" main track due to a stalled eastbound train in Echo Canyon with a smoking traction motor. Never a dull moment in mountain railroading . . .
Former power plant, which operated from 1911-2001. The following machines can be seen here (from foreground to background):
1) STAL Ljungström turbine with 2 STAL generators
2) CEB turbine with GANZ-BUDAPEST alternator (1924)
3) Turbine with BBC turbo alternator (1925)
4) ESCHER-WYSS turbine with ACEC alternator (1928)
Total capacity of the plant was 56 MW.
Flying by at 75 miles per hour trying to get this shot. It intrigued me with all the power lines, towers, and wind turbines. HTT!
Second picture of the series Wave Power.
(The following image is an example of what that might be changing a photograph as it influences the light and the technique used. For this shot had not yet left the sun, and long exposure time created that totally different to the previous photo)
Sunrise on the beautiful village of Villajoyosa -Alicante-.
That day was blowing east wind, the waves crashed against the shore, tranquility in place...
The sun is not out of the horizon yet, nothing left to see how the power of the sea struck again and again against the shore.
Spectacles of nature that gives us every day and that lack of time sometimes do not appreciate.
To achieve this photograph I used a four-step filter and black card technique.
Image dedicated to my friend on Flickr Julián Solana (Tiogran), who met him in person that morning in his wonderful land.
I hope you like it. Have a nice Monday. :)
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