View allAll Photos Tagged STACKABLE
This is why I stack multiple frames for my pictures of jupiter.
From left to right:
1) A typical single frame
2) After stacking 95 frames
3) After wavelet sharpening in registax and some brightness/contrast adjustment.
See here for the final image with extra contrast and moons added:
Edited NASA PR diagram for a stacked (eg, put into place ready for launch) Apollo Command and Service Modules, along with the Lunar Module.
Carmen stacks her winter wood... She layers the wood - two rows of soft fir which comes from the land, and then two rows of oak. The fir is mostly for kindling and starting the fire and the oak is also split into smaller pieces which burn hot and heat up the cookstove. Carmen has used a cookstove for thirty years. She cooks all her meals on it and the cookstove warms the house and saves on fuel costs.
Rubbermaid Stackable Recyclers make recycling easy! Three sizes can be stacked and interchanged to suit your sorting needs. The flip door makes unloading recyclables a breeze. Stickers allow you to label your bin so you can see if you are sorting glass, paper, plastic, etc. The hood snaps securely to the base so you can transport your recyclables to a facility if necessary.
For additional information please visit: www.rubbermaid.com/Category/Pages/ProductDetail.aspx?Prod...
A sure sign of civilization. Only a human would stack rocks like this. I like stumbling upon little impromptu things like this.
Another image from the top of Grizzly Mt. Visitors to the peak often find inspiration to stack the flat broken pieces of stone lying around on the ground.
I made a large bunch of randomly stacked buttons... I love having these ready to use. I have been neglecting my buttons... time to play with them again!
Same block as the last two quilt tops. This time, I'll set the blocks without sashing and it will give a tessellating design.
Rubbermaid Stackable Recyclers make recycling easy! Three sizes can be stacked and interchanged to suit your sorting needs. The flip door makes unloading recyclables a breeze. Stickers allow you to label your bin so you can see if you are sorting glass, paper, plastic, etc. The hood snaps securely to the base so you can transport your recyclables to a facility if necessary.
For additional information please visit: www.rubbermaid.com/Category/Pages/ProductDetail.aspx?Prod...
After the ice storm which hit Missouri, Oklahoma, Arkansas and Kentucky this January, thousands of trees were left limbless, with layers and layers or branches distributed across the ground. Some branches were cut up into firewood.
Just a sampling of my book collection:
"Mother West Wind 'Where' Stories" by Thornton W. Burgess - 1918
"Fifth Reader" by Emma Miller Bolenius - 1919
"The Sketch Book" by Washington Irving - 1906
"Last of the Mohicans" by James Fenimore Cooper - 1905
"Tanglewood Tales" by Nathaniel Hawthorne - 1898
"The Pilgrim's Progress" by John Bunyan - 1901
After making this one, I found it in someone's photostream (thiomor, I think) and realized that Chris Palmer had already made it! Oh well....
This is the second in a series of variations on Chris Palmer's Flower Tower. It was made using the decreeping technique devised by Jeremy Shafer and Chris Palmer.
Folded from 8.5 inch (22cm) square printer paper, no cuts.
East and westbound BNSF stack trains fly through Naperville kicking up snow on a very cold Groundhog's Day in 2013.
Looking west from Columbia Street Bridge
Naperville, Illinois
February 2nd, 2013
1st attempt at a stacked timelapse image folks a bit of mucking around but definitely a viable way of doing these shots.... :-)
A crew from Dogsthorpe was called to a stack fire at a farm in Middle Road, Newborough.
Approximately 10 tonnes of baled straw was well alight and had spread to wooden pallets and trees.
Firefighters used hose reels and jets to contain and control the fire and a farmer with a teleporter assisted by removing wooden pallets.
At 9am the incident was handed back to the farmer and fire crews will return to inspect the stack.
The crew returned to station by 9.15am.
The cause of the fire was deliberate.
South Stack is famous as the location of one of Wales' most spectacular lighthouses, South Stack Lighthouse. It has a height of 41 metres (135 feet). It has a maximum area of 7 acres.
Until 1828 when an iron suspension bridge was built, the only means of crossing the deep water channel on to the island was in a basket which was suspended on a hemp cable. The suspension bridge was replaced in 1964, but by 1983 the bridge had to be closed to the public, due to safety reasons. A new aluminium bridge was built and the lighthouse was reopened for public visits in 1997. Thousands of people flock to the lighthouse every year, thanks to the continued public transport service from Holyhead's town centre.
There are over 400 stone steps down to the footbridge (and not, as local legend suggests, 365), and the descent and ascent provide an opportunity to see some of the 4,000 nesting birds that line the cliffs during the breeding season. The cliffs are part of the RSPB South Stack Cliffs bird reserve, based at Elin's Tower.
The Anglesey Coastal Path passes South Stack, as does the Cybi Circular Walk. The latter has long and short variants; the short walk is 4 miles long and takes around two hours to complete. Travelling from the Breakwater Country Park, other sites along the way are the North Stack Fog Signal station, Caer y Tŵr, Holyhead Mountain and Tŷ Mawr Hut Circles.
Shot for Active Assignment Weekly, theme Stich or Stack".
WIT
In this case it is a stacked picture of an insect that has sucked itself to a leaf. I spotted it a few days ago and it is totally motionless.
I took 1263 shots (with an automatic macro rail) and stacked it with Helicon Focus. In post bit color correction in Lightroom.
Rainroom by RedBlackProduction
Heya!
I had the idea recently of doing a Rainmeter theme based on Lightroom, as I really like the look of it's user interface. As I'm starting to get the hang of Rainmeter I feel compelled to add more and more information as I pick up bits and pieces! Bars and meters everywhere!!!! More functionality!!! At the same time I don't really like a cluttered look and I don't particularly want RSS feeds clamouring for my attention all the time . . So I thought maybe I could create a modular set of docks and have some buttons to switch them in and out as needed.
I've been using this setup for a while now and am really enjoying it's functionality, especially combined with Launchy, Standalone Stacks and CD Art Display. This is Rainroom in full flight, with all the modules active . . .
. . The black outer frame is always on and is meant to fade from the windows taskbar at the to the slightly transparent black at the bottom. On the bottom left is the module controller, in the center is currently a very familiar looking clock setup which is flanked by two small docks. These docks contain the folders I access 99% of the time! Left click opens the folder in explorer while right click launches a Standalone Stack. To the bottom right is a little Twitter input box! Utilising SendTweet by the talented Mr JSMorley, when it's clicked on it turns opaque and offers a text input for tweet tweet tweeting away . . . and it fits in seamlessly! I was thinking of using Taskkill.exe and making that little button on the bottom bottom right right kill Raininput, acting as a 'cancel tweet' button [for when I'm too lazy to use the keyboard :]
On the inner left is the CAD cradle module, ToDo list module [controlled by launchy :], and . . . well, something that wasn't finished in this sceenshot . . a Task Launcher module for a couple of tasks I run regularly: system maintenance scan, defrag, backup flash drive contents to pre-designated folder on hard drive etc.
On the inner right is the System Performance module, RSS reader module utilising a combined feed of my personal faves, Drives module incorporating histogram, activity lights and drive launcher, and finally a Twitter feed module . . .