View allAll Photos Tagged STACKABLE
This represents 32 pictures covering a 1.8mm field of view of a crystal rock section of Spencer's.
I connected a stepper motor to the fine focusing knob on the Microscope with a bit of clear tubing - shaft to shaft - and then used a Gigapan control board to move the focusing up to capture 32 images.
I had to trigger the photos manually, and tell the Gigapan unit to advance to the next frame.
I now know how to remote trigger the Canon T2i camera, so getting focus stacking to be automatic, with automatic triggerig of the camera, is my next step.
After that I'll move on to xy stage automation
This is part of the nanogigapan project. See nanogigapan.blogspot.com
Stack Rocks, otherwise known as Elegug Stacks in Pembrokeshire. Elegug is the welsh terms for the Guillemots and razorbills that nest here.
Note to self - Shoot more Black and White
For Prints elliottcolemanphoto.com
This is what I decided on for the alternate blocks, so now all of the decisions are made and it's just sewing :)
The concept of stacking two twisted is also possible for hexagonal twists. This is one molecule.
Folder: Dirk Eisner
Kami
Elegant stacked wedding cake, too bad we didn't get a photo with the cake topper of flowers on it....
oh, ya, its show off.
Overwhelmed with the overflow. Another weekend of suspense and i'll be at peace or not.
The average American spends 2.5 hours per day driving. In Europe, its less than 2 hours. Which means, the average car stands around unused for more than 20 hours each day, taking up valuable space which could be used for urban housing or gardens.
Is it really such a clever idea to make everyone own a car that is idle more than 80% of its lifetime, depletes natural resources, and pollutes the atmosphere? Wouldn't it make more sense to invest in a tightly woven, reliable public transportation network which offers comfort as well as working or resting opportunities while traveling? And complement this by an equally tightly woven bicycle lane network? Wouldn't the average American (or the average human) be healthier if they walked to the bus stop or train station for, say, 10 minutes, then took a 30 to 40-minute ride, and walked another 10 minutes to their work place? Instead of entering the car in front of their door, cursing traffic jam while on the way, riding into their car park at work, and then driving to the gym at night to spend extra time on the treadmill to get some exercise? Or, for those who live less than 5 miles from their workplace, wouldn't it be healthier and less stressful to ride the bike to work for half an hour twice a day - at least when it's not pouring, freezing, or scalding hot?
This is the first stack of the indoor season this year.
It's a bee I have kept in the freezer since autumn where I found it dead. The reason for the rather dramatic composition is quite prosaic: During the cleaning I accidentily broke off the left antenna with the brush I use and since I wanted a portrait, this was the only way.
Studio stacking is not something I have done a lot of, but with a long cold winter ahead, I'm sure there will be more to come.
This was done in a horizontal setup with the bellows at minimum extension, about 35mm, plus an additional 12 mm of adapter. The bee was lid by two IKEA Jansjö LED lamps which were diffused by one layer of ordinary copy paper.
50 exposures stacked in Zerene Stacker, PMAX and DMAP.
f/4, 1/2 sec, ISO200, ca. 2.4:1
Olympus OM-D E-M5, Canon MP 35mm f/2.8
Focus stacked in Element 12 with plug-in.
using two images should have been 3 as mid ground is not sharp. Still its a economic way to get focus tacking in Photoshop Elements. using smart phone to control camera on low tripod. with out having to get on my knees I could adjust position of camera on tripod looking at phone screen.
First attempt at multiplicity stacking.
I did this because I was reminiscing about the movie Identity.
"What a sausage fest." -@LuPach
"Oh, you have so many looks." -Homer Simpson
made a couple of different passes at stacking and subtracting dark frames. this one has a long dark subtracted from the merged stack.
Lots of chimney stacks on the roofs but nowadays many homes do not have coal burning fires! I took this during my walk into Troon, this morning and it was very cold with a strong wind blowing from the sea but you do not see smoke rising from the chimney pots!
Our Daily Challenge ~ On The Rooftops ...
Stay Safe and Healthy Everyone!
Thanks to everyone who views this photo, adds a note, leaves a comment and of course BIG thanks to anyone who chooses to favourite my photo .... Thanks to you all!
Earrings I made using polymer clay stack beads featured in my blog: fulgorine.wordpress.com/2014/08/31/rustic-stack-beads/
Sitting by the George's River today working so I set up the camera with an automatic timer remote. Unfortunately ran out of battery but managed to get 32 x 30 second exposures with a 10 stop and 3 stop screw in filter attached to the lens.
Stacked in Photoshop using Dr Brown's and processed in NIK. I have since tried manually processing this shot and realised that NIK was responsible for the texture in the water. The original file is super SMOOTH so maybe 16 minutes is worth it after all!
Effectively a 16 minute exposure. Not sure I see the benefit in going that long.
"Them smoke stacks reaching like the arms of God into a beautiful sky of soot and clay."
Watch the depressing story on the high cancer rates in Tonawanda, NY - video.wmht.org/video/2364999803
On BNSF's busy Transcon line, a westbound stack and an eastbound pig train pass each other at a closing speed of close to 140 miles per hour. With plenty of power on the front and DPU's on the rear, these trains cross the barren country at an incredible pace.
A stack of books in front of an orange/reddish wall. One of several stock images that I had laying about not doing anything.
It's funny, I've had those narrow stacked strips for a long time and have kept adding to them. I couldn't think of what to do with them, so I'd think that I should just cut them and add them to my regular scraps instead of waiting for an idea to come along. Glad I kept them as stacks because this was the kind of idea I was waiting for :)