View allAll Photos Tagged Stack,
Last of the series, I wanted to portray in these photos the scale of the Steel Stacks in Bethlehem, PA. This is a very small part of the structure, but you may be able to tell from the walkway, how small a person would be, moving around in the system of mysterious pipes.
I was quite happy with the way this time stack turned out, since I was rather unimpressed with this sunset. That's why I have a "stack 'em all" approach to time stacking. You never really know what you're going to get.
I'm almost exactly 1 year behind in posting photos online. I shot this timelapse on March 18, 2019, and it's interesting to see the difference in weather via the lake. In this shot from last year, it's completely frozen over, but today it's mostly open water. (I didn't even get to go on the lake this winter because it never seemed safe, but I'm also extra cautious and usually wait until it could hold a car, just to be sure)
Visit my instagram page to see the timelapse video, www.instagram.com/mattmolloyphoto/
I made this time stack by combining 238 photos into one image. Here's a quick and easy Photoshop tutorial of the process I use to make time stacks. youtu.be/oTfp47jTzWc
The great windstorm of last fall left plenty of fallen wood for stockpiling in advance of the winter. Unlike last year, March has come in like the proverbial lamb with temps in the 30s, 40s, and now even 50s with bright sun causing a dramatic melt of the snow. Some of you have inquired as to the lake and it will be some time before the thick ice releases its grip. While there remains plenty of potential winter in the month ahead, this has been a most pleasant change from last year. Perhaps this pile will endure until next fall...
Should NOT have posted these just before lunch ! I am HUNGRY!! I took a bunch of other THREEs for MM. This is one of them!
South Stack Lighthouse, I am starting the Anglesey photos with this wonderful place, exceptional for birds, flowers and scenery.
Cloud to ground and anvil crawlers dominated in this 15x8s stacked image. 35mm lens was used (not 85mm as noted at right).
Smoky stack of mountains, well hills actually, Kallar Kahar, Pakistan.
October, 2007.
Nikon D200. Nikkor 18-200mm VR @ 70mm.
Exposure: 1/320s @ f9.
ISO: 100.
South Stack is situated in the North West Corner of Anglesey, a mile urther north as the coast turns Eastwards there is another rocky outcrop or stack, called North Stack.
I will be away for the weekend visiting Anglesey again
2014 03 023 Wales Anglesey South Stack HDR1
Some of the most dramatic coastlines in Wales that you would ever come across is near the southern Pembrokeshire National Park from Castlemartin Range East to all the way to Govan's Head. Castlemartin Range East is the only one that is open to public subject to some Ordnance tests that happen from time to time. It is also the only route to get to the Green Bridge of Wales - A natural sea arch that is simply spectacular.
As you walk east from the Green Bridge, you would come across these two sea stacks. You can also see the Devil's Cauldron in the distance. There are a lot of other less prominent stacks till you reach Govan's head which is spectacular on its own. This has a 6 stop ND filter and a graduated ND filter. I also had used the UV filter to limit some of the haze but as the sun was setting in the other side, I could not get rid of em all...
Thanks for viewing and have a nice day!
Massive stash of chopped and stacked "fire wood" in downtown Madison, Wisconsin (yes, downtown)
Toggle "L" key to get less distracting view
I took this as an oblique view across the geyser field near Grand Prismatic Spring in Yellowstone National Park. I liked the abstract way the various concentric rings appear here in earth tones. All is a result of the interaction of mineral-laden water, scalding hot, and the extremophile microorganisms that live in this environment.
The Elegug Stacks consist of two large detached pillars of limestone which in the spring provide valued nesting sites for razorbills and guillemots. Elegug is the Welsh for guillemot
Used by the Ministry of Defence as a firing range, since the 1940s, there has been relatively little human influence on this area of the south Pembroke Coast dominated by dramatic limestone cliffs.
This lack of disturbance has produced a rich, unspoilt range of habitats for wildlife (apparently the wildlife don’t mind the noise too much!
WILD ATLANTIC WAY | IRELAND
Thois picture was taken at the Slieve League cliffs. Actually I was standing high on top of the cliffs, but with the telezoom, I got some nice details of the area, including this sea-stacks.
The picture was taken from appr. 530-560m height.
I have one place available for my upcoming BW photography workshop in Iceland June 3rd - 13th
www.vulturelabs.photography/product-page/iceland-june-3rd...
Secure your place with a deposit
www.vulturelabs.photography/product-page/deposit-payment-...
Every shoot has a story. Well, all my shoots do. Every single one. Most stories are kept between me and the people involved. This shoot’s story is so fun I thought
I’d share it. And with most good stories, this one is short and sweet.
It’s 2AM. I get a call from Michea. She’s drunk. HEY JEF!!! WHAT ARE YOU DOING, she yells. “Not much, just working”, I know what’s coming.
“You wanna do a shoot?” she says.
I was there in ten minutes.
Nuff said.
Photo by Jef Harris.
Stack Rocks- Pembrokeshire Coast from the last trip!
More pictures at tomaszjanickiphoto.co.uk/.../wales-landscape.../
Stacks Wood, books is an art work by David Harper. Created in 2005 at The Stone Quarry Hill Art Park, Cazenovia, N.Y.
Harper, a Cazenovia-based, artist is telling us a story in Stacks. From a fallen tree to the page of a book, the transformation of wood is represented in this bookcase.
Follow link below for more info for The Stone Quarry Art Park:
CHALLENGEGAMEWINNER
Canon EOS 50D
Nikon BD Plan 20x- 0.40 210/0
Exposición: 1.5" - ISO100
Stacking
Canon auto bellows
Nº de fotos: 300
Pasos de 0,0028 mm.
Magnificación aproximada: 17,4x
If you ignore the Walmart and Amazon containers, this could be a scene out of the late 90's: a pair of fakebonnets lead a stack train along former Santa Fe rails.
Instead it's 2024, and finding a decent-looking pair of matched red & silver paint is tough on a BNSF network that primary consists of orange. And yet, here's a Houston-bound stack train with such a consist rolling through Richmond, TX on BNSF's Galveston Subdivision. In a little over 30 miles they'll turn north at Alvin for the final 15 miles to BNSF's Houston intermodal terminal.
Q CHIPEA6 04A (Quality Intermodal- Chicago, IL to Pearland, TX)
BNSF Dash 9-44CW #707
BNSF Dash 9-44CW #743
Richmond, TX
January 6th, 2024