View allAll Photos Tagged Stack,
The stacks are book shelves containing the principal book collection of the library. In the main library, the stacks are located on floors 4 through 9.
Another image from my recent trip to Dorset. My son and i walked over the headland from Swanage to Old harry Rocks and spotted this along the way. The light play out at sea adding some drama to an already dramatic scene.
Materials: I used pancakes, cardboard, plate, blueberries, powdered sugar, shaving cream (for whipped cream).
Idea: My idea was to make the photo look like an advertisement for breakfast pancakes.
Process: I used cardboard to stack the pancakes onto one another and put some blueberries around and on it. I took the photo with a large aperture to focus more on the pancakes.
Another stacking fabric. Instead of having all of the horizontal and vertical lines, I wanted to have some diagonal lines in the blocks, so I cut the strips at a 45 degree angle. Looks like I'll have a lot of different star shapes in the blocks. If I'd been cutting this piece in the regular way, I'd have 22 blocks. Cutting on the diagonal gave me 18 blocks and I do still have the second half of the fabric left.
86 images stacked, el nikkor @ F/5.6
This little bee was caught in Utah when i was visiting family. I was hunting for some jumpers and noticed a snap dragon flower moving around wildly. Curious I peeked inside the flower and noticed this little guy stuck between the two pedals. Apparently it was just a bit to big. I cut the flower and put it into a container to take with me on my drive home. I thought it would be the perfect test subject so here it is
(as a side note this is my largest stack yet....)
After having flown in from Vancouver in the morning, I went to school and then spent a few hours in the library gathering materials for the term paper. By the end of the day, they seemed like stacks of doom rather than a happy collection of books, so I did some manipulations of the photo to convey the feeling.
This is photo #105 in my Project 365 series.
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch.
After chasing the Medford job, I had a little time to hang out on the main line north of Spencer. Within a short amount of time, this southbound stack train came roaring through.
A Volvox showing daughter colonies.
Focus stack of 11 oblique illumination images taken under the 40x objective.
Strange that under no illumination method was I able to pick up the interconnections, though some of the flagella are visible here.
Perhaps this species trades interconnections for a general continuous membrane? Upper and lower left would seem to confirm this.
A Jagged Ambush Bug and a Northern Crab Spider, hanging out on a zinnia, both waiting for a meal to come along. I wish I had the time to sit and wait with them, as it would have been interesting to wee which predator got the first meal. Andover, NJ
Six images, stacked using Helicon Focus
Stacks of memories through this door which was once the entrance to Collingwood Library - including to a dusty stack
© Anne Holmes
Elegant stacked wedding cake, too bad we didn't get a photo with the cake topper of flowers on it....
The upper instrumentation payload stack for the Magnetospheric Multiscale mission (MMS) is lifted toward the mission's lower stack in the Astrotech payload processing facility in Titusville, Florida, near Kennedy Space Center. MMS consists of four identical spacecraft that will work together to provide the first three-dimensional view of magnetic reconnection, a fundamental process which occurs throughout the universe. Launch aboard a United Launch Alliance Atlas V rocket from Space Launch Complex 41 on Cape Canaveral Air Force Station is targeted for March 12. To learn more about MMS, visit www.nasa.gov/mms. Photo credit: NASA/Jim Grossmann
About 2/3rds of my books (mostly technical, reference, science, and history) packed into boxes from our move to Japan from California a couple of years ago, finally out into the fresh air. Now I just have to find a nice bookshelf...
Edited NASA PR diagram for a stacked (eg, put into place ready for launch) Apollo Command and Service Modules, along with the Lunar Module.
made a couple of different passes at stacking and subtracting dark frames. this one has a long dark subtracted from the merged stack.