View allAll Photos Tagged Stack,
when i went to the pier last night, they had stacks and stacks of those candy contrainer things with the best candies. and i saw some of these, i wasnt able to get any though.
if posting to tumblr please provide proper credit
oh, and for now on, if you post it on tumblr, can you tag it under as hamst3rs also? sounds stupid i know. i just kinda like seeing how much notes and all it gets, and reblogging it and whatnot.
a little stack of knitted textures
1. STR Medium-weight in Black Onyx
2. Habu Shosenshi Paper and Lamb Linen in Charcoal
All of those narrow strips of color on this quilt top set in at a quarter of an inch. I really don't think I could keep a three quarter inch strip straight for any length, so I do them this way. I cut a one inch strip and sew it to the first side, press away from the one inch strip. Then sew to the second side by putting the one inch strip on the top and letting the left side of the presser foot determine the width of the finished strip. This leaves a half inch seam on the right side, which I then trim down to the correct size. If you have a machine where the needle position moves, you can make the strip even more narrow by moving the needle to the left. Does this explanation make sense?
A rock stack on the shore of Fårö island, Gotland.
These rock formations, known as raukar on Gotland, are formed over time by wind and water, processes of coastal geomorphology, the ones found on Fårö are up to 8 meters tall.
New game from Double Fine coming to Xbox LIVE Arcade and PlayStation Network.
Find out more about the game and watch the first trailer, here.
Stacks
Accession No. 20110219S / 02-19-2011 / Digital
Smoke stacks atop the Biological Research & Diagnostics (BiRD) facility, University of Alaska Fairbanks.
The uniformly clouded sky hung like a middle gray backdrop behind the stacks and they practically begged to be photographed! Like a small, close-knit family, the individuals seem to crowd together for safety against a tall, slender father figure who has braced himself for a coming storm. I enjoy anthropomorphizing objects in my surroundings through photography.
Equipment: Sony A700 camera, Sigma 75-300mm f/4-5.6 APO lens.
This is an experiment with focus stacking using the "CombineZ5" software. Works very good as I think. This image has a rather small size; couldn't get larger ones than 1600 pixels to work.
Admittedly, this image is dull. But I like the quality.
Very promising technique, but requires a tripod (at least if I do it).
Setup:
- Konica-Minolta Dynax 5D on a tripod
- Cosina 100mm f/3.5 macro lens without 1:1 adapter (it's 1:3 or something)
- Wireless flash Minolta HS-3600(D) from low left
- ISO 100, 1/250, f8, manual program
Stacked image from only two different shots. One with focus on the leaf, one with focus on the whatever-it's-called-english.
Look at the master of macro's photos: Lord V's Photostream
To go with our stacks of books? I'm thinking the students were getting a little punchy at the end of finals.
(The student here is not responsible for this stack of chairs. He was only part of my photographic investigation.)
Made with 2 charm packs of Hometown by Sweetwater for Moda, and yardage of the "solid textured cream" from the same line.
I am completely head over heels in love with this fabric line. Seriously. Everything about it. LOVE.
Federal Blue, Bauer Yellow & Bauer Orange
bauerla.stores.yahoo.net/servingware-refrigerator-stackin...
No only the loungers were stacked high but the guy managing them was well and truly stacked ~ made my 6-pack look like a pack!!
Our Daily Challenge ~ Stack ....
Thanks to everyone who views this photo, adds a note, leaves a comment and of course BIG thanks to anyone who chooses to favourite my photo .... thanks to you all.
Lufthansa Cargo, McDonnell Douglas MD-11F, D-ALCR, (c/n 48581/565), prepares to land on Manchester's runway 05L, while Virgin Atlantic Airways, Boeing 747-41R, G-VXLG "Ruby Tuesday", (c/n 29406/1177), waits at the hold prior to departure.
BNSF 3811, a ET44C4, leads a stack train through Oregon, IL on a Saturday morning. This is only one of many stacks to pass through Oregon on the BNSF Aurora Sub each day.
This water was ice cold but I got so into what I was doing that I was calf deep in it for well over an hour.
sorry
i made lots
i got up at 5.30am whilst on holiday one day to go to the cove and stack. The peace and tranquility was immense.
i built a set of 18 stacks in perfect alignment across the cove. unfortunately 18 sacks in a single line don't photograph well. they looked bloody brilliant though. as you walked in and out of the alignment you either saw one or a mass of stacks.
inspired by the master bebalance www.flickr.com/photos/rocker/sets/72157602341391436/ i tried counterbalancing stones. it made for more delicately balanced stacks.
i am going to upload the rest of the photos later. there are far too many but feel i have to put them all up.