View allAll Photos Tagged Solar
Mayor Tom Grant in Vulcan Solar Park, one of the first solar parks of its kind. The town built a solar park that turned an old fenced-off brown field into new green space in town. Photo David Dodge, GreenEnergyFutures.ca See blog, video and CKUA podcast: www.greenenergyfutures.ca/episode/vulcan-solar-park
asterixenergy.in/ - Solar Consultancy Services
Contact: +919884019800 Email: praveen@asterixenergy.in
Solar Summer Photoshoot
April 5, 2010
In this photo: Lauren
View entire set: www.flickr.com/photos/milkdoll/sets/72157623664863551/
Photo © Lauren Musni, Kathleen Musni
Edited by: Lauren Musni
Here is my second attempt at solarization. I still need a lot of practice, but I like this technique. It looks pretty cool!
Print solarization is a technique where you briefly expose the paper to white light while it's still developing. You get a really weird looking picture. It darkens the image and the tones are partially reversed. It's kind of hard to explain until you actually see a real solarized print. It kind of looks like a charcoal drawing and kind of an infrared effect.
First, I exposed the paper on the enlarger as you normally would. I put it in the developing tray and I waited until the image just started to appear. Then I turned on the room lights for about 2 seconds while the paper was still in the developer. I finished developing and fixing the print as normal.
It's a really interesting effect. The grass and weeds almost look like they're glowing white, and some details on the pipe have actually completely reversed colors. The actual print looks better and more dramatic than the scan.
I definitely need more practice. I'm sure there are a lot of things you can adjust with this technique, like how long you expose the paper on the enlarger, how long you expose it to light, the development time, etc.
Technically, I think when you solarize a print it's called the "Sabatier Effect."
Here is a normal print of the same picture:
I was trying to use the solar viewer with telescope... The solar viewer was melting while I took the picture...
Fortunately I have not tried to view the telescope directly...
Just a tighter crop of the original image ( www.flickr.com/photos/jojo_septantesix/7239251642/ ) that I thought I'd try. I think I like the simplicity, though there's not much else going on.
Nikon D5100 with Tamron 70-300 USD; processing in Aperture 3 and Photoshop CS6.
The 2017 solar eclipse, viewed from the Urban Center of Portland State University. Portland was close to having a total eclipse, with obscuration of 99.2 percent.
Here is a series of pictures that show the steps to build your own ultra low cost solar dehydrator. We had good success with one made lie this in Hungary.
I did not get pictures of it getting painted black.
This design the sun does not hit your food so there is not any of the losses caused by the UV rays.
Taken through disposable solar film... which worked remarkably well until the very end of totality where I think the crinkly film created many lens flares while I was trying to capture the 'diamond ring' effect. Still, these photos came out 100x better than I expected, not having shot a single photo of the sun before this day.
Observed from Tupper Lake, NY
We are dealers and Exportes of Solar pannels and its Accessiories through Out India and Abroad.Individuals can access us @ www.steelsparrow.com
"Eco Smart provides Solar Panels of world class premium brands up to 25 years of manufacturer warranty at wholesale prices. We provide many benefits over our Solar Panels and Components which will foremost bring you a long lasting value of our recommended components.For more information visit www.ecosmart-solar.com
1st Floor, Al Riqqa Building,
Near Clock Tower, Deira,
Dubai, U.A.E.
Phone: +971 4 2669986
E-mail: dubai@ecosmart-intl.com"
Bold Nebraska and Pipeline Fighters installed solar panels in the path of the proposed Keystone XL pipeline, on Diana and "Stix" Steskal's Prairierose Farm near Atkinson, NE on Saturday, Sept. 16.
Donate $25 now to put solar in the path of KXL: bit.ly/solarxl
This second Solar XL project installation follows the first solar panels that were installed on the farm of Jim and Chris Carlson on the KXL pipeline route. Details for the 3rd Solar XL installation site announced soon!
The families partnered with Solar XL project sponsors Bold Nebraska, 350.org, Indigenous Environmental Network, CREDO, and Oil Change International to put renewable energy directly in the pipeline’s path. Solar XL underscores the need to center solutions to climate change while rejecting the Keystone XL pipeline and resisting the expansion of the fossil fuel industry.
DETAILS: boldnebraska.org/solarxl
Photos: Alex Matzke / Bold Nebraska
Here is a series of pictures that show the steps to build your own ultra low cost solar dehydrator. We had good success with one made lie this in Hungary.
I did not get pictures of it getting painted black.
This design the sun does not hit your food so there is not any of the losses caused by the UV rays.
"Solar Street Lights are designed to the finest qualities which suit various applications. These are operated by non-conventional renewable energy and provide better illumination facilities to its users.Eco Smart hasSolar Street Lights of luminosity ranges from 1,800 lumens to 10,000 lumens.For more information visit www.ecosmart-solar.com
1st Floor, Al Riqqa Building,
Near Clock Tower, Deira,
Dubai, U.A.E.
Phone: +971 4 2669986
E-mail: dubai@ecosmart-intl.com"