View allAll Photos Tagged Scalable,
For Our Daily Challenge: SCALE is the Topic for 28 November 2010
OK, I know when the bark starts to come off the tree these things are called scales, right? It comes off in scaly sections? I need you to agree with me because the dictionary is not being helpful! Anyway, here is my interpretation for "scales"! Voila!
Golden scales of a sunset moth.
Camera and Equipment:
Nikon D810
Stackshot rail
Thorlabs optical setup.
Lens and Magnification:
Edmund Optics 20x Plan Apo
Custom designed tube lens
20:1, which is 20 times life-size.
Settings:
Stack of 362 exposures
Zerene Stacker, PMax and Dmap.
Stackshot Rail at 1um/step
ISO 64, 0.4-second exposure
Microscopy Method:
Focus Stacking
Reflected Light
Processed in Photoshop and Capture One Pro.
William praised his goodwife for the delicious meal. Everything looked and smelled delicious. A true feast.
APACHE COUNTY JOURNAL
10:11 AM Saturday 3/24/2018
Muddy Spring Police Sergeant Joey Dunn took a report of abandoned vehicle on Lower King rd . Scene investigated tow company called and cleared .
~~~~~~~~~~NOTE NOT REPORT IN THE PAPER~~~~~~~~~~~~
Muddy Spring Population of about 900 ,it is also located 14 miles north of the county line and is about 12 miles south of Apache the county seat of Apache county
Taken for Our Daily Challenge (Topic: Scale)
I might still play around with the edit on this. But it I try my best and it was fun to do :)
I got the idea of having a big me and a little me randomly. I thought I could do it, so I whipped out my camera and decided to stand on the bathroom scale for good measure :) I ended up looking more frightened of myself than I intended, but its okay. I believe my oddly shaped feet and toes are enough to frighten anyone ;)
Hoping everyone is having a superb day! I can't believe my birthday is tomorrow. It doesn't feel real...
PS- My hair is pulled up into a bun. I just now realized that it looks a little odd..
A frosty morning at the river Hull
I wrote a blog on Hull's popular photography locations. Please check it out, it may be useful! www.neilnicklinphotography.co.uk/blog/2015/5/photography-...
Light coloured scales. Panorama of 5 shots.
Camera and Equipment:
Nikon Z6
Stackshot rail
Thorlabs optical setup.
Lens and Magnification:
Edmund Optics 20x Plan Apo
Custom designed tube lens
20:1, which is 20 times life-size.
Settings:
Stack of 240+ exposures each
5 shots stitched in Photoshop
Zerene Stacker, PMax and Dmap.
Stackshot Rail at 1um/step
ISO 64, 0.3-second exposure
Microscopy Method:
Focus Stacking
Reflected Light
Processed in Photoshop and Capture One Pro.
More and more tweaks abound! Cassie once again having a little change, first and foremost the Real Girls diffuse and newly mapped scales to make them more a part of her skin than something that stands up, an effect I like a little more.
Also the ridging in her forehead is back which I love, the thing that stood out for me is the fact she looks like her age now as an aging warrior instead of looking so young like she did before. Also swapped out the hair for another one of the Kalillies hair pack stuff.
This week's FlickrFriday theme is: #Scales
Le thème de ce FlickrFriday est: #Écailles
O tema desta FlickrFriday é: #Escamas
本次 FlickrFriday 主題: #秤
FlickrFriday-Thema der Woche: #Waage
El tema de FlickrFriday es: #Escamas
Multiple Composite project set by the college.
I was inspired heavily by FiddleOak for this image who you can find here: www.flickr.com/photos/fiddleoak/
He has some fantastic work, and I enjoyed playing with this style.
Model: Megan Rainey
In this photo I have attached the UniJoiners to the ends of the rails but have not yet connected the track sections.
Unitrack made by Kato consists of sections of rail and crossties mounted on roadbed and easily connected and disconnected by their patented UniJoiners. This series of photos shows three kinds of UniJoiners. All three kinds of UniJoiners connect the rails and hold the sections of roadbed together but otherwise serve different purposes. Please look at all three photos of this series: UniJoiners by themselves, UniJoiners attached to the rails, and track connected by the UniJoiners.
The basic UniJoiner shown in the top view has a gray plastic body for connecting the plastic roadbed of two sections of track and a metal rail joiner for connecting the metal rails of two sections of track while allowing electric current to pass along each rail. The metal rail joiner itself is similar to those made by Atlas, Peco, and other brands of N scale track. Clips that are molded into the plastic body of the UniJoiner snap into recesses at the ends of each track section and are what securely holds two sections of track together. Each piece of new track from the factory has a regular UniJoiner already installed on the right rail (as you face each end of the track), but you can remove it with a special tool. On all but hidden track, I color my UniJoiners with a Rail Black marker and then scrape away paint from the conductive metal rail joiner surfaces.
The bottom view shows Insulated UniJoiners. They are molded from black plastic and are designed to lock the roadbed of two track sections together and keep the rails in close alignment without allowing the rails to touch each other and conduct electric current. I use a pair of Insulated UniJoiners at each end of a segment of track I wish to electrically isolate from all the other power blocks. Each track of both of my staging yards contains an electrically isolated segment that is long enough of hold a complete train of 10 passenger cars or 18 freight cars plus engines.
The middle view shows a pair of Terminal UniJoiners (Kato item 24-818). They are constructed like the regular UniJoiners but have built in power wires already soldered in place. At the other end of the cable is an electrical plug that ultimately plugs into a Kato power pack. With the FORWARD setting turned ON, the WHITE wire will be +, the BLUE wire will be -, and the train will go EASTBOUND. By substituting Terminal UniJoiners for regular ones, I can hook up power to any segment of track, but I use them to power up my electrically isolated staging tracks.
This week 8 Sept. - 14 Sept.. our theme is:
~~~~~ Unexpected ~~~~~
www.flickr.com/groups/temporaryexhibitionsartgallery/
Art Week Gallery Theme ~ Unexpected ~
~
AI/GIMP/PIXLR
Skógafoss is huge. My tall 6'11"; friend is, for once, tiny. And drenched.
The water plunges from a height of a 14 storey building (60m) to a deafening roar. My phone was getting sprayed with mist a hundred feet away.
I have a diecast model of a 1946 Ambulance that would work well in a scene, but there wasn't a stretcher included with the model. Hmmmm, why not make one, I thought.
In my "parts" box I found some left over brass window frames that had potential for the stretcher's base. And then there was the trusty aluminum tubing that could stand in for the detailing.
It was a plan.
About 10 hours later, there was a little stretcher on my work mat.
Gotta love the web for photo references!
The Complete Beginner's Guide To Model Trains
Discover all the “Closely Guarded” model railroading tips and tricks you need to plan & build your dream model railroad. This guide starts with a clear understanding that building a model railway is not just setting up a simple model train set around the Christmas tree. You are creating an entire scaled model railway which includes hills, rivers, fields, buildings, houses, roads, cars, people and whatever else your imagination dreams up. modeltrains.best-online-solution.com
Scale-throated Hermit / Ermite eurynome
(Phaethornis eurynome)
www.igoterra.com/artspec.asp?thingid=8025
Macaé de Cima, Serra dos Órgãos, Brazil.