View allAll Photos Tagged STACKABLE
Stacks on the power plant at Nortre Dame photographed at dusk.
Photographed with a Olympus Pen E-PL1 micro 4/3 camera witha 14-42mm lens.
Now that the 3rd deck on the Bob-lo Boat Ste. Claire is exposed after removal of the haunt, there are surfaces I had not seen before. This rust is on the stack as it rises up through the floor.
A stack of 18 1/2 second exposures processed for the brightest pixel.
It gives some interesting detail like all of the traffic lights lit and reading the pavement lettering through the cars.
For those curious these were shot from the pedestrian overpass at 130th & Aurora Avenue North in Seattle.
Starting to get the hang of my new lens and stacking photos, but I need to make much deeper stacks. This is a stack of 17 with adjustments as small as I can do by hand, time for a slide rail. 4.5:1 mp-e65
SoftDEL offers royalty free comprehensive BACnet stack library. Visit this page to know more about SoftDEL’s BACnet stack - bit.ly/1CIn9Ig
The process of taking images using the Cam Ranger for later stacking at home on the computer ... very time consuming as is the combining of the shots to make a single detailed image - the end however justifies the means!
Very large straw stack on fire next to the A428 in Eynesbury, Cambs.
1 crew from St Neots in attendance supervising.
"Campus Challenge 2007" photo. Note that "we" are at the end of the Dewey Decimal System, indicating that this is the end of BSU's collection.
** purple, green, aqua **
MEASUREMENTS: stacked pendant of 20mm round bead, 2x14.5mm disk bead, and a 8x12mm rondelle bead on a fine silver lampwork headpin, and a 20x6mm ring bail with a 10mm inner diameter.
SOLD
Constructed in 1927 and shut down in the late 1970's, this former steam plant looms above Philadelphia's Callowhill neighborhood, a former industrial neighborhood that is in the process of gentrifying.
Rail tracks (served by the Reading lines) ran along Willow Street allowing coal-laden train cars to pull into the building. This coal was burned to heat water which produced steam that was fed into a network of mains under the sidewalks throughout central Philadelphia.
Steam production began in Philadelphia in 1889, when the Edison Electric Light Company of Philadelphia realized it could sell the steam produced from it's new downtown power plant for use as a source of heating during the winter months. Today Philadelphia's steam network (the third biggest in the country) serves numerous residential, commercial and institutional properties in and around Center City.
Since it's closure, the structure has sat as a hulking industrial ruin viewed as an eyesore and blight to its surroundings. A proposal was put fourth in December 2016 for a nonprofit group to demolish the plant under PA Act 135 that allows organizations to act as conservators of blighted properties without using eminent domain.
Demonstrates stacking for more sensitivity.
The objects depicted here are stars south and west of the Orion nebula; they were taken at Æ’2.8 with Canon's 100mm macro lens using 3.2 second exposures and manual non-critical focus from a tripod with 2s shutter delay for stability.
The stack consists of 12 images; at the left, you see the result of taking the stack as 12/6ths per pixel, resulting in a gain of two and a noise reduction of 6x; at the right, you see the result of taking the stack as 12/3rds per pixel, which results in a gain of four and a noise reduction of 3x.
I've got an example showing gain of one (unity) and noise reduction of 12x, as well as a single frame from the stack of 12, here.
Shot for Iron Photographer 163 - elements:
portal
stack
heavy grain or noise.
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I was wondering where I'd get a stack that wasn't a pile of books, then the house renovations started again and I found the 1st floor was being held up by a few broken bricks and a bit of old window frame.
Attribution: Flickr user Damian Gadal
Attribution source: www.flickr.com/photos/23024164@N06/2985670890/
In picture-perfect sunlight, this westbound stack train races around the curve at MP 300 in Torrance, PA.