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Sitting at La Guardia, waiting for my delayed final flight of a two week trip and anxious to finally get home. in the meantime, from my February trip....Bighorn rams spend most of their days in bachelor groups and there is frequent posturing among them to establish dominance. In this frame the male in the back has reared up on the middle ram.
I was back out in our meadow this morning. No dew today but I found this lonely Lady on a small, dried weed. It was cool out and no wind. She was quite still for me to set-up and take around 30 shots for focus stacking @ 4x magnification.
Very clear night for Summer at Harvey's Knob Overlook Blue Ridge Parkway. Over 3 hours and 441 images stacked. www.terryaldhizer.com
The other day got a nice box of oranges from a friend in FL to cheer us up. So I "stacked" them in a basket.
Smile on Saturday.
Stacked.
A photo of the moon eclipse during the totality phase from Paris so very low over the horizon. In France the eclipse was visible from 4h30 AM to 7h30 AM. This photo was done at 6h15 AM.
I'm very happy with all stars around the moon (zoom in to see them).
More to come soon.
Tamron 150-600
600mm
F6.3
ISO 2000
Sony A7S
3.2s
No stacking, only one photo
(DSC06966_DxO-2048Q100N-JPG+USH-1-BUMP90)
Shot for Window Wednesdays, Scarborough, ON Canada
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CN Q199 makes it's way north past the spring colors at North Duplainville with a couple of choice Dash-8s.
CN 2113
CN 2408
Some more experimenting with focus stacking of a black ant under my Nikon Labophot-2 microscope. Approximately 64 images were focus stacked together in Helicon Focus to create this image. The ant was photographed under side light with a 4x objective. I was impressed by how much fine detail was captured, especially in the eye, leg and antenna.
My first test for focus stacking - 10 different images - manual focused - have been added to create a sharp image.
ILCE 7M2 - 2.8-90mm Macro
A small Praying Mantis checking me out. Photographed in Maryland. Focus stack of 4 images, shot with the camera hand held. Canon 80D, Canon MPE 65mm macro lens, Canon twin macro flash. Aperture f/11, shutter speed 1/250, ISO 400.
Remaining stacks of the Bethlehem Steel plant, now surrounded by a park. The lighted walkway is normally open to the public but, alas, wasn't when we were there.
Bethlehem Steel was one of the largest producers of steel in its heyday. It was founded in the mid-19th century, prospered for a while in the railroad boom, and then branched into shipbuilding, where it supplied its steel for the Navy, in particular the (in)famous USS Maine. It later went into shipbuilding business, constructing as much as 20% of the Navy fleet during World War II. The company also supplied steel for the Golden Gate bridge. Most steel production stopped in the 1980-ies and the company was dissolved in 2003. [paraphrased from Wikipedia]
for retread thursday.
original post a year ago today
www.flickr.com/photos/it_mom/2865602390/
to view other retreads in the group