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© Seb Alessandroni | All rights reserved.
All photos they may not be used or reproduced without my permission. If you would like to use one of my images for commercial purposes or other reason, please contact me. Depending on the situation may have to assign the work as specified by the author.
In some areas the toes of pahoehoe flows can pick up pieces of scoria and other pieces of basalt that cover the ground that it is flowing across, and via a "reverse caterpillar motion" place these pieces on top of flow itself. This results in a phenonenon called "reverse stratigraphy " with older rock ending up above the younger rock. Such activity is localized. But in these limited areas, pre existing loose basaltic material ends up on top of flow instead of underneath. The black pieces in this photo lie on top of a pahoehoe toe and are the results of such a process. This photo was taken in pahoehoe flows near the current end of Chain of Craters Road.
A former RF&P GP40 was long-hood forward leading CSX Q406 on the Capital Subdivision in 1994. CSX had taken over the quaint Richmond Fredericksburg and Potomac in 1991 and quickly patched out the RF&P markings on their newly acquired locomotives.
RF&P had ordered their second generation EMDs to be run bi-directional which enhanced their utilization.
Professor Zoom, Zoom, and whatever else you want to call him, as he appears in CW's show the Flash... or will appear.
I kludged together a reversed Pentacon 50mm and the A7 using an EOS reversing ring and a stepdown ring. F/11 at min focus. And a little fast and loose post processing
Reverse Namaste! Requieres open shoulders. If you do not have enough flexibility only grab your elbows. It is still a good exercise to work on 🙏
You know, true macro lenses can cost a fortune so i sometimes prefer reversing my 50mm prime lens for macro photography to bypass these costs.
personally i think this is the best lighting we got during our travel to nz last month.. it's always tricky to shoot straight at the sun without getting the hightlight (especially the sun itself) washed/blown out. the solution is you either bracket your shots or use an ND filter (ND/GND/RGND ) or both. both have pro and cons though..... :D
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thanks all :)
New project that I've been working on. If you can't tell he is inspired by Ultron from Avengers Age of Ultron, but the color scheme and other aesthetics come from one of my favorite comic book villains of all time, the Reverse Flash.
"God has cared for these trees, saved them from drought, disease, avalanches, and a thousand tempests and floods. But he cannot save them from fools."
— John Muir
Sigi Kolbe Photography website
Please don't use any of my images on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit written permission. © All rights reserved
Former-Southwest Airlines 737 5N-MHM slows on the runway in Abuja, having just arrived with a domestic flight.
Aircraft: Max Air (VM/NGL) Boeing 737-300 5N-MHM.
Location: Abuja Nnamdi Azikiwe International Airport (ABV/DNAA), Nigeria.
Photographed with the front element reversed. I've tried this before on Helios and Takumar lenses, but not with this particular lens. The images still need a lot of contrast and saturation boost to look like this - no other distortion filters were applied.
For those who are not in the know about filters for cameras - oh yes we use those to distort reality too ;) A reverse graduated filter is simply a filter which darkens the sky and then also has a even darker band that can be aligned with the horizon to really reduce the exposure on the sun (the brightest part of the scene) during those sunrise and sunset time, those leave one with a nicely exposed frame.
Now, i don't have one of these since they are pretty specialised and really can only be used in a few cases anyway - you can also replicate the filter with a couple of normal graduated filters...
anyway there is a point to all that, there are some mornings when the cloud and sun gods shine upon you (hahaha did see what I did there ;) ) and you get a scene like this where the band of cloud along the horizon provides you with a natural part of the reverse graduated filter :)
nicely played clouds and sun :) its a bit of boring composition but I could not really find anything else nearby to jazz it up and by the time I would have climbed down the rocks the light could have been all gone :)
For Macro Monday's theme: "Backwards"
It's been five months since I've done a Macro Monday! This is really weird ... but the idea came to me in the middle of the night. It isn't particularly original, I'm sure someone already thought of it but I didn't even peek into the group yet.
♫ Written in Reverse – Spoon ♫
~
Happy Macro Monday Everyone!!
ETA: "mysterious place with no name" is how I like to think of shots taken in my house!! :-)