View allAll Photos Tagged STATIONARY
It dawned on me that my stationary was stationary. I found this cool white pen the other day, but it is only cool if you have black paper.
That is my handwriting by the way. I have jars full of pens and pencils and I usually carry around a Fountain pen. I love writing on paper.
Happy Macro Mondays
Uvas Spillway
I haven't seen the spillway overflow in about 4-5 years. I've been wanting to go get this long exposure shot for a while now, and finally the lake level breached over the spillway. This is the end result.
Little denizen patiently stayed put here for several minutes.. at Afton State Park, east central Minnesota.
Steam rolling down the side of Mammoth Hot Springs in Yellowstone during the 2018-2019 government shutdown. Slowly freezing the branches of these trees in a thin layer of ice.
The basics of colors, RGB.
Added some fragments of the colors on the base to make the composition more vibrant.
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Street photography from Glasgow, Scotland.
Thank you all for your comments and favourites on my street photography, I am grateful to you.
Een mobiele telefoonhouder die ik regelmatig gebruik. Dit is de achterkant, omdat ik beloofd heb, de bedrijfsnaam buiten beeld te houden.
A mobile phone holder that I use regularly. This is the back, because I promised to keep the company name out of the picture.
Photographer William Wegman's portraits of his Weimaraners installed as mosaics in the 23rd Street Station of the F train.
Photo of an old Mercury Comet captured via Minolta MD W.Rokkor-X 17mm F/4 lens. City of Olympia. Puget Sound Lowlands. Thurston County, Washington. Late January 2020.
Exposure Time: 5 sec. * ISO Speed: ISO-100 * Aperture: F/8 * Bracketing: None * Color Temperature: 3500 K * Film Plug-In: Kodak Portra 160 VC ++
A statue by artist and mathematician Rinus Roelofs at Hengelo railway station square, The Netherlands.
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Taken for Our Daily Challenge: repetition
I am a stationary junkie!!! When I first saw this cute ~ and repetitive! ;) ~ flower patterned notebook, I just new I wanted it. Even though the pens look like pencils, they are real pens that work...the erasers click down to open up the pen. Neat eh?
I'm very fascinated from the stationary flight by Kestrels.So I've tried very often to get a capture, where is movement in the wings.
Paper is a Chinese Han dynasty invention from before Christ the west previously used papyrus of various grades for normal use and vellum for recording important documents.
Pencils with a wooden casing are an Italian invention from the 1560's prior to that people used square sticks of very valuable graphite imported from Cumbria in England from a closely guarded mine the only known deposit of pure graphite.
The Germans and French both worked out methods to make artificial pencils using graphite mixed with clay though initially it was not as good a product as the English pure graphite pencils.
Rulers are an ancient tool with the Indus valley Mohenjo-Daro ruler being divided into units corresponding to 1.32 inches (33.5 mm) and these are marked out in decimal subdivisions with amazing accuracy, to within 0.005 inches (0.13 mm). Ancient bricks found throughout the region have dimensions that correspond to these units.
c (Whitelaw)
Whitelaw, Ian (2007). A Measure of All Things: The Story of Man and Measurement.
Macro Mondays Stationery Micro Nikkor 55mm f2.8 at f22 P9020265
OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA
Working on the sails of the Finnish full-rigged school ship Suomen Joutsen (May, 1934). My restoration and colorization of Pietinen´s image in the Finnish Heritage Agency archive.
"Suomen Joutsen is a steel-hulled full-rigged ship with three square rigged masts. Built in 1902 by Chantiers de Penhoët in St. Nazaire, France, as Laënnec, the ship served two French owners before she was sold to German interest in 1922 and renamed Oldenburg. In 1930, she was acquired by the Government of Finland, refitted to serve as a school ship for the Finnish Navy and given her current name. Suomen Joutsen made eight long international voyages before the Second World War and later served in various support and supply roles during the war. From 1961 on she served as a stationary seamen's school for the Finnish Merchant Navy. In 1991, Suomen Joutsen was donated to the city of Turku and became a museum ship moored next to Forum Marinum." --
"The overall length of Suomen Joutsen is 96 metres (315 ft 0 in). Her hull is 80 metres (262 ft 6 in) long at the waterline, has a beam of 12.3 metres (40 ft 4 in) at midship and depth of 7.29 metres (23 ft 11 in) to the main deck." --
"When Suomen Joutsen was converted to a school ship for the Finnish Navy, her general arrangements were changed considerably in order to accommodate up to 180 men on long international voyages."
(Wikipedia)