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When Civil War regiments paused on a march they might stack arms. Each stack would be comprised of the rifles of "comrades in arms," which would consist of four men.
Tudor chimneys
Hampton Court Palace initially built from 1514.
Begun by Cardinal Wolsey, much of whose work survives particularly the ranges around the Base Court, the Clock Court and the Kitchen Court. King Henry VIII made extensive alterations between 1529-40, including the rebuilding of the Great Hall from 1532 the remodelling of the Chapel (1535-6) and building of Chapel Court. The extension of the kitchens and the addition of the projecting, turretted side wings to the west facade. Queen Elizabeth made some changes including the building of the privy kitchen but in 1689 William III began a major building campaign with Sir Christopher Wren as architect. This consists chiefly of the Fountain Court, to the south-east corner of the old palace, on site of Tudor Cloister Green Court, and the Colonnade in Clock Court. A little work was done under George II, including the remodelling of the Tudor range, between Clock and Fountain Court by William Kent who also completed the decorations of Queen's Staircase. The Tudor ranges are generally 2-3 storeys with mullioned windows usually of 2-4-lights. Those by Wren have 4 storeys with arched windows or arcades to the ground floors, tall, square headed windows with moulded surrounds and sometimes pediments to the first floors, round windows to the second and almost square windows to top storey, treated as an attic above a stone cornice. Further cornice and balustraded parapet above. Many surviving interiors, Tudor and later.
[Historic England]
Roasted portobello stacked with steamed spinach, orzo with sauteed zucchini, red pepper, toasted pumpkin seeds, mushroom gills, and parsley. And topped with roasted grape tomatoes!
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch.
Fort Carson, Colo -- Command Sgt. Maj. Richard Ayala, the senior enlisted advisor of the 1st Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 4th Infantry Division, stacked yogurt in the Wolf Dining Facility, Nov. 4. The 4th Infantry Division and Fort Carson Command Sgt. Maj. Michael Crosby directed the Fort Carson subordinate command sergeant majors to spend a moment in the life of culinary food specialist by serving, preparing and serving breakfast to the soldiers. (U.S. Army photo by Staff Sgt. Gene Arnold, 14th Public Affairs Detachment)
Manual stacking of 20 shots at F8, 1/60 (+ flash) and 200 ISO. with a nikon 60 mm macro.
Assembled with CombineZ.
Spider is about 8-10 mm, crop 50%.
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch.
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Lodgepole pine is being cleared from a patch of Strathspey - near the remant of the Caledonian Pinewoods that is the Abernethy Forest - leaving only the native species such as Scots pine, silver birch, rowan (mountain ash), holly and willow. It's amazing to see the landscape re-emerge as the blanket is pulled away. Apparently this pile is going to B&Q or Homebase!
Practice focus stacking on microscope pix I took with my microscope, my Canon T4i Rebel camera, a 15 dollar macro tube and a 30 dollar DSLR-to-microscope adapter.
This was my first try stacking. Hope to get better at this.
Also the one of the stuffed animals is practicing bokeh while everyone is asleep. lol.
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.
Another focus-stacked image taken using only the x10 microscope objective lens as my optics. Looking up close, the right side of the anther in particular shows some banding of in- and out-of-focus zones. I'll need to shoot more closely-spaced slices for stacks like this. (The x10 lens has no aperture control and the DOF is very small, which is particularly an issue with three-dimensional objects).