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This is a stacked milkyway image made from 10 x 60sec images.
Stacked in Nebulosity and Processed in Photoshop.
Images were taken last year in August, when the milkyway was close to horizon, pretty surprised to see the details retained as the image was shot when the milkyway was about to enter the muck.
Also, is an annoted image that zooms into few objects in the milkyway core which can easily be imaged using a DSLR.
The image was shot using Samyang 24mm on Canon 6D and tracked using Jonathan's Vixen Polarie.
This focus stack turned out better, although the constant wind was giving me a hard time. Still room for improvement, and maybe next time under better environmental conditions.
1 of many stacks can be found dotted around the Pembrokeshire coast.
I used a 25 Second exposure to blur the movement in the water.
Canon EOS 6D
Mitutoyo M Plan APO 5x 0.14 + Raynox 250
Tiempo exposición: 2,5" - ISO100
Canon Auto Bellows
Stacking
Nº de fotos: 200
Pasos: 40 µm
Magnificación aproximada: 4,12x
This amazing stack is at Cathedral Cove Beach, Coromandel Peninsula, NZ.
Very many thanks to Nick Twyford www.flickr.com/photos/67654596@N04
I spent a number of memorable days in his company visiting various locations around Coromandel.Peninsula and out to West coast beach's
On this occasion we trekked down to Cathedral Cove from Hahei with our torches at 0430hrs hoping to find an empty beach and catch a sunrise. Unfortunately no clouds.
A magical time..
f11 24mm iso100 79 sec
Filters B&W ND 110 and Lee 0.9s grad
These huge sea stacks are located at Duncansby Head, the far North Easterly point of the UK mainland, very close to John o Groats. I wasn't quite prepared for just how impressive they are in real life, they are magnificent. The beach there is fantastic for foregrounds which I've tried to capture the essence of here. The day wasn't the best for photography and so I waited until there was a hint of the coming twilight before I took the shot.
This was part of a curtailed trip doing the NC500 route and can be seen in my latest vlog here: youtu.be/AyCevz-0vUY
The North end of the Salt Lake Valley is pictured with the Great Salt Lake and ever further mountains beyond.
This is a quick and dirty stacking of 21 lightning images. The quick part is to place the images in camera raw, reduce exposure so only lightning is clearly visible, save, then stack into Photoshop, lighten resulting image then lighten exposure as necessary to bring out the foreground.
This method avoids using masks for nearly each image in the stack. The downside is that some movement (leafs, clouds, cars, etc.) will not be fixed and sharp. That's the dirty side of this technique. Sometimes the images can tolerate less post-processing.
iLightningCam2 app was used for this night display.
For a really crazy stacking of lightning, see: www.flickr.com/photos/79387036@N07/34303851190/.
Picture of the Day
Paddy Field ~ Mae Hia Area ~ Chiang Mai Province, Thailand
Nikon D5100, Tamron 18-270, ISO 200, f/10.0, 18mm, 1/80s
A double stack train for the Ports of LA and Long Beach is next in a long parade of westbounds at Verdemont. In the background, M-BARSDG rests on the main. Cargill's grain elevator is visible on the left side of the frame.
View of the electrical power smoke stacks as seen from the edge of Kohler-Andrae State Park (Wisconsin) yesterday afternoon.
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In Explore, June 17, 2025
Inntel Hotels Amsterdam-Zaandam has been labelled the most bizarre hotel in the world by news channel CNN.
This typically Dutch building consists of a stack of almost seventy traditional detached Zaan houses in four different shades of Zaan green. Here, the present is connected to the past and tradition to innovation. Five different Zaan house types can be distinguished in the facade, from workers' houses to notary houses.
A striking exception is the blue house in the upper right corner, which refers to the painting "La Maison Bleue" by the famous French artist Claude Monet during his visit to the Zaan region in 1871.
Inntel Hotels Amsterdam-Zaandam is door nieuwszender CNN bestempeld als het meest bizarre hotel ter wereld.
Dit oer-Hollandse gebouw bestaat aan de buitenkant uit een opeenstapeling van bijna zeventig traditionele losse Zaanse huisjes in vier verschillende tinten Zaans groen.
Hier wordt heden verbonden met verleden en traditie met vernieuwing. Er zijn vijf verschillende Zaanse woningtypen te onderscheiden, van arbeidershuisjes tot notariswoningen.
Opvallend afwijkend is de knalblauwe woning in de rechterbovenhoek, deze verwijst naar het schilderij "La Maison Bleue" van de beroemde Franse kunstenaar Claude Monet tijdens zijn bezoek aan de Zaanstreek in 1871.
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All rights reserved. Copyright © Martien Uiterweerd. All my images are protected under international authors copyright laws and may not be downloaded, reproduced, copied, transmitted or manipulated without my written explicit permission.
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In playing around with my new 50mm lens, I find myself looking for ANY foto opportunity just to experiment with the lens.
This is a set of sport stacking cups. We have some world class stackers here in Heppenheim. Here you can see the world record by Robin Stangenberg from my hometown (please don't forget to come back to my picture and leave a comment ;-): player.broadbandvideo.com/asxgen.asp?ShowOrClip=c&Med...
Post-sunset, blue hour view of multiple sea stacks on Bandon Beach on a clear but windy summer evening. I used a 10-stop filter to extend the exposure to get a smooth glaze on the water's surface.
Elegug is Welsh for Guillemot, a smallish black and white sea bird found in what looks like the thousands, in colonies roosting on the limestone rock sea stacks that can be found just off the Pembrokeshire coastline
Black and white imagery seemed apt for these wonderful birds. Amazing place to wander around, great place to shoot.
Oh, another one of those stitched panorama macro shots where the subject is to large to fit in frame, right?
Wrong. This blunt stretch spider (Tetragnatha obtusa) is absolutely small enough to fit in frame (as can be seen here: www.flickr.com/photos/tinyturtle/52807137438/), but since the top and bottom was just pure white, I figured I could get away with cropping that away and make this a 21:9 image.
And the trickery doesn't stop there. This is also rotated 180 degrees as I found this one upside-down in the veranda ceiling so I had to get a stool (which was a little too high) and shoot this with the camera upside down, pressing the shutter button with my left pinky finger (my mom took a photo of me looking very elegant here: www.flickr.com/photos/tinyturtle/52806686381/).
This is a focus stack, but instead of just taking multiple shots while moving or shifting focus ever so slightly, here I actually lowered the camera and rested between two shots because of the awkward position and still somehow managed to get the exact same angle and focus where it was needed - I'm as surprised as anyone!
Looking closely at this spider, you can see what will be its doom. On the back of it, there is a larvae of the parasitic wasp Acrodactyla quadrisculpta which has attached itself and will eat of the spider - but not enough to kill it until the larvae is ready to pupate.
The memory card evolution (in terms of physical card size) stacked on a 2" optical cube - complete with dust and fibres because I couldn't be bothered to try and remove it all!
My photo - Apps Repix, Laminar, Leonardo, Stackables
This is my morning walk - the right side is our walking path
With a long intermodal train in tow, CP 8747 races eastward past the 10,600 ft siding at Gap, Alberta. The train has conquered the climbs of Rogers Pass and Kicking Horse Pass, so from here it's all a gentle downgrade along the Bow River to Calgary.
In the distance are the peaks of Mt Lawrence Grassi and Ha Ling Peak, part of Bow Valley Wildland Provincial Park.
CPKC Stack Train
CP ES44AC / DRF-44 #8747
CP AC4400 / DRF-44 #8507
(Mid-Train DPU) CP ES44AC / DRF-44 #8726
Gap, AB
August 26th, 2025
Inukshuk-inspired stack of stones.
Active Assignment Weekly: A bug's view
What it took: Brightness reduced a bit.
Our Daily Challenge: Made of stones
Effetto Bokeh
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30:365 [01/30/2010]
for my friend bats...
the folks at Nestle' are kind enough to provide a high altitude recipe for those of us living on top of the world. without it, our tollhouse cookies just wouldn't be the same.