View allAll Photos Tagged PushPull
Pull the handle to open the china cabinet...the first piece of furniture we bought back in 1970.
HMM
A syringe with water drop pushed out by tiny plunger for MacroMondays theme of PushPull this week.
I took many photos. One with eye-wash foam dribbling out won't even get posted. Usually it pours out in a nice, large sudsy foam! Another with a spray of water we use for indoor houseplants. That won't appear.
Oh well, it was fun to try all of these. Messy, but fun. Thanks for looking.
Ca y est, la saison sportive bat son plein et les pistes sont prêtes à recevoir les compétiteurs pour le prochain slalom. Les portes rouges et vertes se chevauchent un peu mais c'est le but du jeu. A défaut, on peut toujours les déplacer après la première épreuve. #Macro #MacroMondays #PushPull
Near the Öresund bridge, Malmö, Skåne, Sweden, August 2021
Fomapan 100@800 developed with Microphen (stock) 16 min.
An old calculator (really old) seen at an antique shop in Snogebæk, Denmark. I did not bring my macro for the vacation but this is really cropped down... HMM!!!
Macro Mondays ..... Theme " PushPull "
The topic is pull or push, I have captured the zip of a colourful stylish fashion ankle boot .
Thanks for your views, faves and comments very much appreciated.
The macro monday theme for 2/1 is safety. This handcrafted device was created to pull out (or push in) hot oven racks, thereby protecting your fingers from burns. I think it looks a bit like a rooster.
..... It is actually also the 50th whatizit picture I posted for a self challenge. here's the album of all 50 whatizits:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/muffett68/albums/72157717700765917
"Macro Mondays" safety possibility
This is the 1st try for the next Macro Mondays Challenge called PushPull. I thought i`m gonna split it and create two single images. One for "push" and another one for "pull" ! In little world the tiny people sometimes spend time playing game just like the well known jenga.
#macromondays #pushpull
Thank you for all your visits, comments and faves
Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. © All rights reserved
Öresund bridge, Malmö, Skåne, Sweden, August 2021
Fomapan 100@800 developed with Microphen (stock) 16 min.
HMM!
Monet themed coffee plunger.
Push the plunger down carefully to separate the coffee grounds
Pull the plunger all the way up to remove the lid for cleaning.
Hello There!
MacroMondays is a weekly theme-based challenge group. This week's challenge? PushPull. The subject had to be something to be pulled, or pushed. I liked this challenge because it gave me permission to open the can of olives and enjoy a few of them as a reward! Happy Macro Mondays! HMM!
Thanks a million for viewing and for your comments. I do love hearing from you! Have a marvelous day and week ahead!
©Copyright - Nancy Clark - All Rights Reserved
Kävlinge, Skåne, Sweden, June 2022
Adox Sport Ia (1950), Schneider-Kreuznach Radionar 105 mm f4,5, 6x9., Fomapan 400@200 120 film developed with Adonal 1+50, 11 min.
Macro Mondays - PushPull, August 17th 2020
- HMM to all flickr friends.
- Thank you for all of you who have spent the time to see my photos.
- Thanks to everyone who favors and have commented this photo.
- Press "L" or "Z" for a large view - an absolute must to fully enjoy this picture!
- For more, please visit my Albums
Plastic picnic plate space time continuum, the push and pull and tensions of light across the visible spectrum, who knows what tensions lie beyond?
Pull on one or more spheres from one end, and watch a similar amount of spheres get pushed on the other end through the transfer of energy.
Used one remotely triggered flash with a softbox located above subject.
The needle is pushed into the fabric from the top and pulled out from the bottom.
Illumination: LED panel and LED spotlight.
Worked to death on the intensive and fast Edinburgh - Glasgow push-pull expresses introduced in the early 1970s, the BRC&W class 27s modified to handle these trains nevertheless served their purpose and changed forever the rail proposition between these two major Scottish cities.
For years accustomed to DMU haulage, passengers could now enjoy Mk 2 carriages and 90mph running. However the intensity of the timetable and challenging schedule took its toll on the locomotives - reliability became an issue and some of the units, particularly the 27/2s, were prone to catching fire. As a result, they were phased out in 1980 and replaced by single modified class 47/7s operating with a driving trailer at the other end.
Here unit 27210 is seen departing Edinburgh Waverley with one of the services, and throwing out no small amount of oily exhaust in so doing. An unidentified sister unit is on the other end.
Today the line is electrified and the trains have reverted back to units. Currently 100mph Hitachi-built class 385s operate a half-hourly off-peak service on the direct route and, with stops, cover the 47 mile journey in around 50 minutes.
Agfa CT18
16th July 1977
Near the Öresund bridge, Malmö, Skåne, Sweden, August 2021
Fomapan 100@800 developed with Microphen (stock) 16 min.
the stopper of a bottle of Italian, cold-pressed, unfiltered, extra-virgin olive oil
for Macro Mondays: PushPull
Happy Macro Monday!
Canon EOS 6D - f/5.6 - 1/1250sec - 100 mm - ISO 400
- for challenge Flickr group: Macro Mondays, theme: PushPull
#MacroMonday
#PushPull
Size of the "S": 1 cm / 0,39 inches
Pushing works, too, to lift the lid of this small glass pillbox ;-) In my early teens, I had a soft spot for old stuff (I wouldn't call it antiquities, because these come at a different price). I found my then only second spectacle frames at a flea market, nicely silver-rimmed things, and used them for three or four years before I deemed myself too "grown-up" for them (at 15) and decided I needed someting more fashionable for my eyes. I loved old everything, cupboards, fashion (we are talking about fin de siècle), old lace, and old "luxury" pill boxes, you know, the small ones that are round or oval, with a nicely painted lid. This is a small glass box – old, of course – bought (for me, not by me) at a proper antique shop, and it was rather cheap, because the bottom part has a huge crack across the whole diameter and the lid, framed with brass, wasn't closing properly anymore already back then. The glass is of a beautiful turquoise-blue colour, with white bellflowers painted onto the upper lid. I've used both the glass box and the green Swarovski beads, which I keep inside and which once were part of a selfmade necklace, for another MM theme, "Trinket", you can check it out in the first comment, if you like.
My original idea of how to present this didn't quite work out: I envisioned a lightbeam shining through the opened lid, but how should I make the lightbeam visible? I cut a hole into a cardboard box and shone a flashlight through it, but that alone doesn't make the beam visible, of course. You need something else, smoke, steam, dust (no way!)... flour? Well, obviously I didn't use either for the image, because I somehow didn't have the nerve to play with fire and cardboard, or mess around with steam or flour, so in the end I decided to use an "old aquaintance" for some light trickery, the star filter. I will keep that "lightbeam idea" in mind, however, and hope that I can use it for a later MM theme once I have figured out how to set up eveything safely and conveniently.
Happy Macro Monday, Everyone, have a beautiful and safe week ahead!