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Shot with - Kiev 6C + expired Fuji Superia 100ISO

 

+ DIY developing, with Tetenal chemistry

 

A stack of fluffy, light and lovely blueberry pancakes. Recipes soon here.

 

Explore, August, 28, 2006

This picture was also honored a place in the Guten Tag group as a Summer Fave.

A 12 deep stack using Zerene Stacker.

The stacks off the coast of Vik in southern Iceland are very picturesque. I used a big zoom to try to capture the power of the massive waves breaking on the beach.

 

www.sophiecarrphotography.com

Strange, evenly spaced clouds over the ice...

Coprinellus disseminatus

Mamiya RB67 Pro-S

Mamiya Sekor 50mm f/4.5 C

Fujifilm Pro 400H

ECN-2

The Stacks of Duncansby, Duncansby Head at dawn.

 

Copyright www.neilbarr.co.uk. Please don't repost, blog or pin without asking first. Thanks

The Stacks of Duncansby, Duncansby Head at dawn.

 

Copyright www.neilbarr.co.uk. Please don't repost, blog or pin without asking first. Thanks

Stealing a page from the book of the mid-90s, this SD40-2 running long hood forward looks like it could be hustling out a hot 223 out of Luther Yard. In reality, it's operating as DS02, shuffling these stacks around out of the east end.

 

I was surprised to see it poke out as far as the P.D. George Company building at 2nd & Talcott.

 

-NS SD40-2 #1642

-NS DS02

-NS (ex-Wabash) St. Louis District, near MP S5

-N 2nd St & Talcott Ave, St. Louis, MO

-March 3, 2018

 

TT1_6818_edited-1

A 40-second exposure of Elegug Stacks, south Wales, just before sunset. Thanks for viewing. (GIC)

www.entomopixel.com

Ibagué, Tolima, Colombia

Focus Stack with 43 photos

Photo by: Julio César González-Gómez

@gonzalezgomez40

BC Ferries MV Queen of Surrey, Langdale Ferry Terminal, B.C.

 

Nikon D200

AF-S VR Nikkor 70-200mm f/2.8 G IF-ED

This is the first time I've done a focus stack that hasn't involved a macro lens and tiny fungi or lichen, but I really liked this moss covered root reaching out to the world and I happened to have my tripod with me for once, so I thought I'd give it a quick go. It was too cold to hang around for long though.

Dripping Springs, Texas, TX. Stones, rocks, fence, Texas Hill Country, iPhoneography, Hipstamatic, HipstaPrint, black and white, monochrome, grayscale.

Those of you who know me will understand why this was a difficult image to take!

For Iron Photographer 238 where the elements are

1 - a stack of three things

2 - one red thing

3 - cinematic aspect ratio

 

Hope I've got this correct having my red thing atop the stack of three things?

sugar cookies iced with royal icing, then stacked. fondant accents

Explored 10/15/08

A stack... Agatha Christie

Thanks for visit, comments and awards

 

TIP: Press L to view in light box or Z to zoom!

F Favorite

C Comment

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www.flickr.com/photos/124387056@N04/

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I used this interesting light conditions to picture the stacked wood. It was littered with a beatufil cutting-pattern.

 

I walked through there on a little hiking tour across the beautiful forrest of the "Goldene Stiege" at Mödling near Vienna.

menthol aces 16shots 1 13sec iso200 olyx20 2um.

Thanks for your comments and faves, they are truly appreciated.

1233 2019 08 13 001 file

Another "photo stack" glitch on Flickr.

four images meshed together in this glitch.

stack of filters, ICM

 

Not sure if I prefer this one or the no movement one to be fair but I usually go for the least expected so ...

HMM

  

Fuel injection stacks on a Corvette engine in a Ford Model T hot rod at Northwest Deuce Days in Victoria BC Canada.

All rights reserved ©

Stack • Haze (Ivry-sur-seine, 10/2015)

Three stacked woodpecker homes above each other maybe one family

 

stacked 2:1 macro for sharp final image

Another local artist at the San Luis Obispo Museum of Art.

Ted Lee Emrick, Emerald Tower III, stacked glass, detail

South Stack Coastline Anglesey a wonderful bird watching place with stunning cliffs, out of season climbers practice on here, it's amazing to see them dangling from their colourful ropes

Stacked rocks in Iceland. Not sure exactly where this tourist "fad" started, but we saw them several places in Iceland. On the good side, at least in this case, the Icelandic environment can be "harsh", and the lifespan of a stack itself could probably be measured in days. Maybe hours.

 

Either way, I thought it made for a good picture.

Photo of the stacks of the main branch of the Carnegie Library in Pittsburgh, through what used to be exterior windows. (The library was opened in 1898.)

 

This photo was taken from the Carnegie Museum of Natural History's dinosaur exhibit room.

 

Note that the ceilings here (and the floors of each story above them) are made from very thick greenish frosted glass which allows the light from each floor above to help light the floor below. The two lower-right windows show some of the large double-sided bookcases.

 

The windows have window seats where two patrons seem to be hanging out, away from the action in the main part of the library.

Handheld focus stack of 4 images. Shot with XT3 and Venus Laowa 60mm f2.8. Didn't have a flash with me so its a bit more grainy than I would have preferred.

A woodpile outside a Mennonite farmhouse at Black Creek Pioneer Village.

On the Greenhouse, one of the experimental architectural structures on the campus of Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo.

50ish exposures, stacked together in Photoshop.

Check it out in black

bighugelabs.com/onblack.php?id=4715075453&posted=1&am...

 

I am not so thrilled about this image. This is the first stacked star trail I've done, for a reason. I personally don't like stacked star trails, so I've only used single exposure star trails in the past. But, I wanted to give the method a try, and, here, in the location under the stars, I wanted to see ALL the stars in the star trail, and that was only possible via the stacking method.

 

As a star trail shooter, I completely see and recognize the validity and need for stacking images for night shooting. I've seen some stacked star trails that blow me away and would not be possible to get star trails in the single exposure method. But still, personally, I like star trails from a single exposure better.

 

The other factor, I cranked the ISO up for this, so I could have set the exposures to not capture so many stars.

I think as an abstract art form, this has merit. But, traditional sense of beauty seems lost to me.

 

The different colors of the star streaks are from the "temperature" of light that the stars burn at. Just like a candle gives and orange light, and a gas stove burns blue- the stars in our sky shine all different sorts of colored light.

 

Thoughts on this?

 

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