View allAll Photos Tagged STACKABLE
My grandmother's Bible and a book of my great-grandfather's sermons.
taken for Be Still 52 (side lighting) and Our Daily Challenge (STACK)
This is my first go at stacking multiple images in Photoshop, using the 'mean' method, (7 images).
Given the conditions on the day, I'm really happy with the result I've achieved and I'm fairly close to the image I had pre-visualised.
There is plenty of room for improvement, but as a first step, I'm very happy with it.
Your comment and critique is most welcome!
North Shore, Oahu, Hawaii
The moon, stars, Milky Way, and trees...10 light-frames and 8 dark-frames stacked with Starry Landscape Stacker.
Sony A7R III | Sony 24mm GM | F/1.4, 16sec, ISO400
This stack is about all that remains of a silver and gold smelter operated by Ohio Colorado Smelting and Refining in Salida, CO. The stack was built in 1916 to address pollution problems from shorter stacks, on the noxious idea that dilution is the solution to pollution, i.e., higher stack, better dispersion.
Photographed using a Sony A7R with a Nikkor 100-300mm lens.
Palmer, Alfred T.,, photographer.
Smoke stacks
1942
1 transparency : color.
Notes:
Title from FSA or OWI agency caption.
Transfer from U.S. Office of War Information, 1944.
Subjects:
World War, 1939-1945
Smokestacks
Industrial facilities
Format: Transparencies--Color
Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication.
Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
Part Of: Farm Security Administration - Office of War Information Collection 12002-28 (DLC) 93845501
General information about the FSA/OWI Color Photographs is available at hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.fsac
Higher resolution image is available (Persistent URL): hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/fsac.1a35070
Call Number: LC-USW36-374
Stacked rocks in Iceland. Not sure exactly where this tourist "fad" started, but we saw them several places in Iceland. On the good side, at least in this case, the Icelandic environment can be "harsh", and the lifespan of a stack itself could probably be measured in days. Maybe hours.
Either way, I thought it made for a good picture.
Photo of the stacks of the main branch of the Carnegie Library in Pittsburgh, through what used to be exterior windows. (The library was opened in 1898.)
This photo was taken from the Carnegie Museum of Natural History's dinosaur exhibit room.
Note that the ceilings here (and the floors of each story above them) are made from very thick greenish frosted glass which allows the light from each floor above to help light the floor below. The two lower-right windows show some of the large double-sided bookcases.
The windows have window seats where two patrons seem to be hanging out, away from the action in the main part of the library.
Camera: Nikon F5
Lens: AF Nikkor 50mm 1:1.8
Ilford FP4+ Black&White negative film
Developed and scanned by www.meinfilmlab.de
An eastbound Norfolk Southern stack train crosses the Fort Wayne Line in Bucyrus, Ohio. The train is on the NS Sandusky District and the junction is known on the railroad as Colsan, which stood for Columbus and Sandusky.
The 12 Apostles along the Great Ocean Road are one of the "must-see" things in Australia. There are lots of tourists but it's still a worth while place to visit - especially if you're into your geology.
Trying my hand a cloud stacking with mixed results but I quite liked how this one turned out. This is a blend of 11 x 110 sec exposures taken @ Newport Beach, NSW. A storm was rolling up the coast which made for some nice clouds.
Spending my day off work, by going back and spending some time on photos I took in Texas. Re-edit of the amazing second supercell in SW Texas. Got to watch this with my noob friend Alec and the rest of the ETT crew. Did some HDR blending, some temperature changes and some noise reduction. Can't wait to get this image printed.
Loch Glencoul and the Stack of Glencoul from above Newton, Sutherland.
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