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The town of Vik the Southernmost town in Iceland is famous for its black basalt sand and the imposing Reynisdrangar sea stacks.
Vik is definitely one of my favorite places to visit in Iceland not because the town has a great cafe that sells a wonderful bowl of lamb goulash but because it has so many photography opportunities on its doorstep. Just being able to walk the few hundred yards from the hotel to this beautiful beach and gaze at the majestic sea stacks is a real treat.
Thankfully the day we arrived the conditions were perfect with a nice pink glow in the sky as the sun began to set, unfortunately things went down hill rapidly thereafter as future photos will show!
Work by me from ±1978 with Yashica Matt 6x6 B&W film scanned.
Carton boxes in the factory, stacked vertical in the factory and photo rotated 1/4 right. The whole stack is seen, with true corners.
A westbound Canadian Pacific stack train crosses the bridge at Ottertail powered by a pair of GE AC4400CWs on a beautiful summer day in British Columbia on June 27, 2006.
Very clear night for Summer at Harvey's Knob Overlook Blue Ridge Parkway. Over 3 hours and 441 images stacked. www.terryaldhizer.com
Seems like this massive seastack should have a name, but I couldn't find it. ?
Another shot from our wonderful evening at Rialto Beach. I liked the way the stacks were lit up gold for a brief moment. Posted below is the view from the right of this scene.
Have a wonderful Friday!
repost for
Looking close ... on friday 3.5.2019 "Hobby"
sowing 2018, diameter of the one euro-cent coin: 18 mm
Macro Mondays 14.1.2019 "Hobby" - candidate #2
Focus stack
Nikon D3100
Helios 44M-4 58mm @ f8 1/2 sec. ISO-100
one 20mm macro extension tube
Field stack based on 13 exposures
Trying something new to me with some macro extensions tubes that I just have bought!
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
Taken from the Whitney Ridge subdivision in Cheyenne, Wyoming between 9:10 to 9:30PM during deep blue hour.
This storm was about 70 miles to my south over northern Colorado. I captured only 12 bolts out of 990- 1 sec exposures.
Composite image was accomplished using Photoshop and lightening the stack. The tower-like structures on the horizon are windmills on the Wyoming-Colorado border some 16 miles away.
Note the (lighter cloud) over-shooting storm top at center.
(Stacked Photography with Q2)
Some say love, it is a hunger
An endless aching need
I say love, it is a flower
And you, its only seed
-The Rose
Bette Midler
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.
Unused chairs at my dermatologist clinic stacked up due to physical distancing regulations. The glass wall is adorned with colourful film for privacy with branding for the building.
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.
Viewed from RSPB South Stack
North Stack (Welsh: Ynys Arw, meaning "rugged island") is a small island situated just off Holy Island on the north-west coast of Anglesey.
North Stack can also refer to the headland opposite the island. This is the site of a redundant fog warning station, comprising a number of buildings, including the Trinity House Magazine, built in 1861, where shells for the warning cannon were stored. These buildings now house a bird watching observatory, giving a view of South Stack lighthouse across Gogarth Bay, and the studio of artist Philippa Jacobs. The Precambrian quartzite cliffs of this headland, including North Stack Walls and Wen Zawn, provide one of the largest ranges of rock climbs in Britain, such as "A Dream of White Horses", "The Cad" and "The Bells! The Bells!" The climbing areas at North Stack have been documented since the 1970s in a series of local guidebooks. Leading climbers such as Paul Pritchard have put up many extreme new routes.
The stack was the site of a crash of a US Eighth Air Force B-24 Bomber on 22 December 1944 that killed the eight crew on board