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Easy Jet A320 Engines in reverse thrust, spoiler and slats deployed for slowing downing.
Manchester Airport
Reverse mounting lens for macro shooting.
50mm f1.4 lens on 58mm Canon mounting macro reverse ring, all mounted in reverse mode on macro 12mm keno tube (macro ring).
:-)
pic taken with PowerShot G5.
Sorry for dusty environment ...
The Soviet objective 'Helios 44' 2.0/58mm) is a known performer and can be easily be changed for some tens of euros at flea markets etc.
The reversing ring for commonly used camera mount isn't expensive and is easy to get.
This M42 version (2) of Helios 44 hasn't an A/M switch. So the diaphgram pin must be pushed (except in wide open shooting). A suitable adapter ring has a flange to push the pin in.
So this objective has two EOS mounts. Practical: you need only reverse the objective when choosing between landscape and close-up photography!
The boys at the equity market recently shot up Air Deccan's stock price on rumors of a reverse merger.
MINT-Wall Street Journal asked me if it was the right thing to do and i said YES..sure, it makes pefect business ence and leads to better profitability...
I hope you find this article informative about the aviation sector in India and insightful. Aviation is a sector where comments and views are always appreciated. Therefore, I look forward to hearing from you
Big Cypress swamp in Florida. The actual shot wasn't good, but the reversal made it work somewhat. Just something different.
1x Stacking, 112 Frames, 1/10s, f5.6, ISO100, Reversed Nikkor 50mm f1.8, LED Spotlight, Ext.Flash, Diffuser
a trial of using double lens reverse macro technique for microphotography on a cross section of a plant root.
55-250IS@250mm on 500D body with 18-55IS@18mm reverse mounted. This was mounted above an old microscope (with viewing optics removed) to use the mount and light for lighting and micro adjustement of focus. Shake is a major issue and this set up requires alot of light, so even with the microscope illumination, i used both lenses wide open, ISO 6400, Av with -1Ev for 1/320s exposure.
lens set up gives a calculated magnification of 250/18=13.8x. On a canon APS-C 1.6x crop factor this gives a FOV of approximately 1.6mm. After softening and noise, resolution is a little shy of the micrometer range.
I saw a guy on the bus talking on his phone like this, so had to do it to both explain it to others and try it myself (not in public).
I should mention that I only made one quarter of this image and then digitally mirrored it. This is the reversed version, putting the opposite corner in the center. I remember the first time I was taught how to make a curve with straight lines in math class somewhere near the end of public school. (grade 7 maybe) It blew my mind and I've been doodling them ever since. (It;s in the center of this image, all the squares that make a curved diamond)
Winters grey sky.
This is a water reflection that's been flipped over and a couple of light textures blended in to give it a painted look for sliders Sunday. It is not Fathers day here for a few weeks but Happy Fathers day to my northern hemisphere friends.
HSS
This is how it's going to go down, folks. Each week, starting this Saturday, I will post a certain picture to the group. This picture will be of a tablescrap-esque item with hidden innards. Your challenge each week you choose to participate will be to figure out how it's built, and privately show or explain to me your solution. The catches:
• There may be -- and often will be -- more than one correct solution. As long as you achieve the same result, it's acceptable.
• I will put limitations on how each one may be built (e.g., "no headlight bricks")
You will have a week (until the next Friday night) to reverse-engineer mine and present to me the results. I will keep a running tally of everyone who enters, and at the end of each cycle I will award one point to each person who correctly builds the item, as well as reveal my own solution.
I will give a follow-up question to everyone who solves the original; solving this gains you an extra point!
There is no one "best" solution to many of these; and as such, everyone who solves an item correctly earns a point, no matter who else solves it, who solves it first, or how exactly it's solved. Every solution must be approved by myself, of course, to prevent any irrelevant entries.
Prizes:
1st place: A small assortment of custom parts made by L.D.M., a microtank, and a small set (small set TBD).
2nd place: The pure pride that comes from having beaten nearly everyone else.
There's no need to sign up. You could enter every week, every other week, or only once; the more you enter, though, the more points you could get! It's entirely your choice each cycle.
Be prepared!
Taken with a 24mm reversed onto extension tubes. A hinged hot shoe allows the flash to lean out over the stack. A DIY snoot fires the light in front of the lens.
Reversed lens macro. Bought this solely to photograph it. I'm guessing it tastes like broccoli since it smells like it.
Reversed Lensing is when you take the lens away from the body and turn it round! I got the idea from the lovely Emma (:
© JCH 2012