View allAll Photos Tagged Stack,
Long exposure light painting - attempted to make 3 stacked boxes.
Attached a 6' light rope to a PVC frame and moved it to make the boxes.
Frame is essentially a 90 angle, so it was easy to make a box shape. I turned the light off in between each "box".
Recently, I have been spending an amazing amount of time working on this stacked digital projection system. We finally got it done. And I took some time to get some pictures.
Somewhere in Deer Isle, Maine, we zoomed past a beautiful shady corner where someone had stacked rocks upon rocks. We came back by the spot on our way back in to town, and I spent a while trying to get shots that included all of the stacks.
I like this picture because of the colour combinations I think that blue and pink/purple work well together. I have stacked 8 images with different focus point so the image is clear, It has better detail than the first. The image looks better on my pc than on flickr because of a reduced resolution, but on my pc you can actually see the eyes of the fly.
No hissing, no clawing: stackable cat is always well-behaved at the vet.
what the eff?!? I'm a semi-finalist in the mochimochi photo contest!
hellopineapples.blogspot.com/2008/08/surprise-im-semi-fin...
mochimochiland.com/weblog/2008/08/photo-contest-08-semifi...
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch.
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch.
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch.
Adam got into the lazy susan, found a stash of tuna cans, and started stacking them like building blocks. When he was done he started to clean up after himself, but got distracted before he'd put them all away.
All Time Favorite: I love that I took like 10 photos of Adam and he didn't even look at me. He was just that engrossed with the tuna cans. I love that when I took these photos I was thinking like a filmmaker, not a photographer. I love the light and the shadows.
Mahjong stacking
Thank you for checking out my photos, Love to hear your feedback/comments if any!
Check out my site for more photos @ jasonloongphotos.com
One more for the coffee hop!
Detail is on my blog .
I am also linking up to SSS Flickr Challenge #123 - Dimension .
SSS products:
Harvest Stencil
Title: Reading in the Stacks
Date: Undated
Description: A couple of students are checking out books in the stacks, undated.
ID: RS-4-8-H.Library.148-07-01
Copyright 2013, Iowa State University Library, University Archives
For Reproductions: www.lib.iastate.edu/spcl/services/photfees.html
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch.
Purchase a Limited Edition Print
This shot was taken using a NIKON D5000 at ISO 200, f/36, for 1/1sec
A series of stacked rocks is formally known as a “cairn” and in my part of the world they are normally found on hiking trails. The reason for them on trails is to help mark the trails for hikers. Outside of hiking they are usually used as landmarks.
That’s all fine and good.
My wife is a massage therapist and while I don’t know the first thing about massage, I am in charge of her online presence for her business. Over the years I have done tons of research that includes looking at countless other massage websites. One thing I’ve noticed is that somehow massage and stacked rocks (normally the smooth stones used for hot stone massage) go hand in hand. I have even used this photo on my wife’s Facebook page in the past.
What I’m curious about is the history between cairns and massage. How did someone decide that a cairn would be a good symbol to represent massage therapy? Any thoughts or comments?
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Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch. Award-winning author Mary Doria Russell and The Washington Post's Fiction Editor, Ron Charles.
One of the newer trains on the sub, Q117 brings it's mostly single-stacked containers north through Oshkosh.
Vegetable stack - own creation :-) using up leftovers e.g. layers of creamy potato bake, pumpkin and honey-glazed carrots. The base is a squashed-up vegetable and chickpea pattie.
Recipe source for creamy potato bake and vegetable and chickpea pattie: www.exclusivelyfood.com.au
I stacked all the photos up until it starts to zoom out. (a little more than half of a little less than 200 photos) Check out the timelapse video a few posts back.