View allAll Photos Tagged Shift
Masp Tilt Shift, tirei essa foto com o celular Nokia 5530 em um prédio na Av. Paulista no 27ª andar.
Mamiya 645 AFDII + Mamiya ZD Back +Mamiya Sekor 50mm F4 Shift
Photo self-restrictions: 2 axis camera leveling + Tripod+ wide DOF
Raw to Tiff & Jpeg (Capture One)
Developed for print in Hahnemühle Photo Rag paper w/UltraChrome K3 pigment inks
I moved some furntiure around to make more room in my shop area for exciting new stock that will be here soon.
blogged :: paper-and-string.blogspot.com/2009/12/on-move.html
On 22-27 September 2014, UNDP organized its first ever "Shift week of Innovation Action" to showcase how our offices around the world are shifting away from the business-as-usual approach.
Check out these great photos from events held throughout our region. And to read more, go to: www.undp.org/innovation
Mayor Bill de Blasio greets and thanks Department of Sanitation workers in Manhattan District 7's 57th Street Sanitation Garage during a shift change on Tuesday January 21, 2014. Credit: Rob Bennett for the Office of Mayor Bill de Blasio
Sebastião Lima da Silva and family speaking with CIFOR (Center for International Forestry Research) researchers.
Photo by Kate Evans/CIFOR
If you use one of our photos, please credit it accordingly and let us know. You can reach us through our Flickr account or at: cifor-mediainfo@cgiar.org and m.edliadi@cgiar.org
Pano-sabotage, Vinci, and GIMP change a woven blanket into something new. Assume you are looking into the silicon crystal structure of a semiconductor.
The one on the left will be reincarnated as a Shift Lever. The one on the right will have its cage modified and serve as a second life open cage FD.
This is the mapping of the gear shift of an old tractor, a Ursus C-330. It's not easy to shifting gear because of the not synced gear.
Picture taken in Poland.
Most small-scale farmers in Mozambique practise slash-and-burn agriculture (shifting cultivation). The trees are cut down and burnt, after which annual crops are sown for some years. Here close to Pemba town in Northern Mozambique (Pemba-Metuge District).
ultra crappy job I did here.
too lazy to properly simulate the DoF I was.
instructions:
gimparoo.blogspot.com/2007/02/fake-tilt-shift.html
for TRP
On 22-27 September 2014, UNDP organized its first ever "Shift week of Innovation Action" to showcase how our offices around the world are shifting away from the business-as-usual approach.
Check out these great photos from events held throughout our region. And to read more, go to: www.undp.org/innovation
Aerial tilt-shifted photo of KidZaam, a pediatric dentistry building.
View in ym gallery on black: www.excipiolux.com/Aerial/Aerial-Photography/14821782_NWC...
Follow me on twitter: www.twitter.com/excipiolux
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On 22-27 September 2014, UNDP organized its first ever "Shift week of Innovation Action" to showcase how our offices around the world are shifting away from the business-as-usual approach.
Check out these great photos from events held throughout our region. And to read more, go to: www.undp.org/innovation
The first time I tried to make something like tilt shift. How much it's good?
Первый раз попробовал сделать что-то похожее на tilt shift. Интересно на сколько хорошо получилось ))
An example of extreme movements on a large format camera. Pretty much everything (rise/fall, tilt, shift, swing) was used to illustrate a crazy amount of focus shift.
Nothing significant done in photoshop, by the way. Just scanned, dust spotted and upped the contrast a bit (it was already a pretty contrasty negative).
Faked tilt shift of Simcity 4. for those of you that dont know, A tilt shift lense (or in this case Photo-shopped tilt shift) if used properly can make an image look like a miniature. I was curious to see what it would like on a "fake" city. Well, you be the judge.
On 22-27 September 2014, UNDP organized its first ever "Shift week of Innovation Action" to showcase how our offices around the world are shifting away from the business-as-usual approach.
Check out these great photos from events held throughout our region. And to read more, go to: www.undp.org/innovation
A 16 foot high bronze sculpture for the GMAC Corporate Center, 1100 Virginia Drive, Fort Washington, PA. Dedicated November 1, 2007.
225 / 365
Continuing my theme of shooting things on my Jeep. This is the shifter knob for the transmission with my home made hand throttle made from some pieces of aluminum I had a friend CNC for me and an old bar end shifter from my hold Miyata Cyclocross bicycle.
I noticed 15 foot high piles of sand on the beach and got up on top to take some tilt-shift pictures in infrared. Thanks to whoever built it, i was hoping to find somewhere to shoot at a downward angle and it was just right.
I dropped by the Fred Astaire studio this morning, along with four 5x7 prints of this image, which had just arrived from Mpix a short time before. I had already designated one of the prints for my wife, who had requested it; and I decided one each of the remaining three would go to the studio, Miss Gergana, and me. The receptionist -- not Sheena, but a Danish woman named Mitzi who works the other shift -- was practically ecstatic over the black-and-white version; in fact, at her suggestion, I replaced the color print already on display at the counter with the b&w. Her reasoning was that they already have an 8x10 color print hanging on the wall, and with the b&w they avoid repetition. Besides, it was quite obvious that she preferred the black-and-white version, and she said the owner would, too. I told Mitzi that if the owner or anyone else at the studio wanted me to bring the color print back, I would be happy to do so. Meanwhile, I am trying to figure out what to do with the color copy if fee simple title thereto has in fact reverted to me, although I'm sure I will think of something.
I showed the print to Miss Gergana, who loved it; and with permission from her and her student, I took a few pictures before heading for a nearby frame shop. A half-hour or so later, I returned to the studio, where I replaced the color print with the black-and-white version, as suggested by Mitzi, and left a beautifully-framed copy for Gery. Now I am at home, uploading this. Sheila is asleep, and has not yet seen the framed copy I am giving her, but I will probably take a picture of that and put it on this site within a day or two. It looks REALLY good in the frame I picked out!
As for this morning's little shoot, I only took about ten pictures, none of which turned out great, although I adjudged three to be acceptable for uploading to Flickr, with this one being the best of them. She was teaching a lesson on arm technique, about which I know very little, but Miss Gergana is sort of the resident guru on the subject.
Nokia Lumia 930
Editado: Fotor
"Tilt Shift". Técnica que permite ser possível fazer com que lugares, objetos e pessoas reais se pareçam com miniaturas e maquetes.
*SURLY*long haul trucker complete bike
BLUE LUG custom
SPEC
Frame:*SURLY*long haul trucker BLUE LUG CUSTOM PAINT by COOK PAINT WORKS
Headset:*DIA-COMPE*
Wheels:*ARAYA*rim × *SHIMANO*hub
Tire:*FAIRWEATHER*for cruise
Brake lever:*DIA-COMPE*128
Shift lever:*SHIMANO*
Crankset:*FAIRWEATHER*cx crank
RD:*SHIMANO*
Brake:*TEKTRO*
Handle:*VELO ORANGE*porteur
Stem:*SIMWORKS*
Saddle:*VELO ORANGE*microfiber touring
Seatclamp:*SURLY*
Fender:*SKS*
Basket:*WALD*
So, somehow despite paying extra for EMS shipping from Singapore, I still managed to get my MP57 after everyone who preordered in the US did. Needless to say I'm not exactly thrilled with the outcome of this.
MP57 is of course Skyfire/Jetfire, and is the most recently reelased figure in the Masterpiece line up. After seeing the pretty good job that Hasbro/Takara did on the Siege version, I figured that this figure would just be that one, but with much better production values.
Turns out I'm only half right.
Being in MP scale, Jetfire is huge. The box is 20.5 inches long, and is basically the entire length of the Jet mode. Photos have put the Jet mode at the same length as the combined Convoy/Optimus Prime 3.0 with its trailer attached.
Of course, the character mass shifts during transformation to result in a robot mode that is canonically twice as tall as Convoy, but in Jet mode is a flying fortress capable of troop transport. To show this side of things, the set comes with three mini figures - Prime, Wheeljack, and Jazz. Not sure why specifically these three, but that's what they chose..
The mini figures are actually decently articulated, with no articulation on the main torso whatsoever and very basic arms and legs. Which is normally fine (and expected) for figures of this size, but I REALLY thing they should have either given Jezz wrists of maybe considered the awkwardness of how things look with his hands fused like that.
Otherwise, accessories include two additional faces, a battle mask, his rifle, two thruster effects, Decepticon/Blank chest plate and the same Base/Stand that came with the Seekers and Dinobot,
Jet mode features landing gear that are manually operated (I say this because I remember the original G1 toy featuring spring mounted goodness) and there are various compartments you can open up for the mini figures to fit into/use, specifically the cockpit, under the fuselage, in the jetpack, and in the red pods on the lower legs. The pods are also accessible in robot mode should you so wish.
Being an updated G1 toy, this toy can assume the infamous Gerwalk mode that was the result of repurposing a Robotech toy. I honestly can't recall it actually being used in the show, but then again I can't remember many things.
Gerwalk mode can be achieved with or without the arms deployed, but of course the process is a bit more involved than back in the day. In order to make Gerwalk mode a bit more stable, the figure has die cast metal hips that provide additional support for the legs.
While yes, you can actually put the figure in Gerwalk without the support, for your own sanity you're probably going to want to do it, especially if you're displaying it in said mode for a longer period of time.
Transformation into robot mode is for the most part straight forward. MOST part. When you get to the backpack though, you're likely going to want to throw the figure out the window. The whole shifting mechanism is based on sliding panels, which are notoriously bad because of misalignment issues and just general friction. Couple with that some questionable QC and you've got a very frustrating time and getting things to shift and hold together.
The QC issues don't appear to be limited to the backpack as I have had a somewhat difficult time getting the shoulders to slot into their tab properly. I've also got a loose joint on one of my wings, though fortunately that doesn't really affect much. Getting the various accessories into the backpack cavity was also a bit of a challenge due to fit issues. I also found that the heels had to be put in just the right position for it to fold out correctly.
The resulting robot is tall, though when compared to other figures it's not as excessively large in comparison as comparing vehicle modes The goal was G1 accuracy, and you have to admit they did a bang up job from that respect. Proportions were always wonky so no criticisms from me in that regard.
Due to the weight of the figure, the legs are pretty much all ratcheting joints. Which is great from stability perspective, but not that great from an actual posing perspective. The actual hip joints are strong enough for standing robot mode, but the legs will splay out in Gerwalk mode. With the "ab crunch" hip joints deployed, the hips CAN be strong enough, but as always, test and observe. Actual range of motion is pretty typical, and the waist has flaps so you can move the legs out to the side.
However, it should be stated that the figure at least can stand up. My Siege figure has some issues with a loose hip, so it's either stand up straight or do the splits.
The rest of the body is.. pretty standard, really. There's no waist joint, and the shoulders technically are standard shoulders - but because there are additional flaps needed to move the shoulder in place, you technically have Butterfly Joint-type range of motion, but yeah, it looks weird. Elbows are single jointed but you're able to maximize range of motion. Hands are the typical MP hands with semi-fixed positions. The head can actually pull up a bit for additional range of motion
In general, you're probably not doing any dynamic battle poses without the stand, and even then you're doing them with the figure facing forward because there's only so much you can do laterally.
Speaking of heads, the facial expressions are alright, and the battle mask appears to be useable with or without an underlying face (though I think it fits better without the face under, so that might just be me forcing the thing on). It attaches with a magnet, so the grip is just the right amount to hold it in place. The faces, on the other hand, are friction based and can be a royal pain to get on and off. The other head gimmick to mention is in the head there's a meter of some sort. I don't remember the purpose of this, but I think it had to do with his changing of allegiances between Autobot and Decepticon (Jetfire was a scientist associate of Starscream).
So there you have it. Was it worth the wait? Ehhh.. I mean, it's not as bad as I thought it would be, but it turns out the lack of waist was my smallest concern. It just feels to me like the QC guys dropped the ball, because if they can get smaller figures to tab and slot n perfectly, there's no reason a figure that is at least double that size can't get it right. I mean, the new Seekers are much more complicated transformation wise and I don't have any problems like I do with Jetfire... though I guess the weak hips on the seekers is a problem I avoid here.
I think overall, though, unless you're looking specifically for a G1 styled Jetfire, you should probably consider the Siege figure, especially if you get one that doesn't have joint issues. It's like 1/3 the price, about the same size, and is significantly less frustrating to deal with.