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This nearly full frame consists of 6x8s stacked images lightened in Photoshop. This is a wider field of view of: www.flickr.com/photos/79387036@N07/48293217566/in/datepos.... Two thunderstorms were providing nice cloud to ground strikes.

It's nearly 40 miles of descending 1.25% grade from Mountainair to Belen, NM on the Belen Cutoff. Near the middle of it, the tracks traverse the narrow confines of Abo Canyon to squeeze through the Manzano Mountains.

 

Here, a short stack train rolls westward at Scholle as it prepares to enter Abo Canyon behind me. Scholle was the end of double-track from the east prior to BNSF opening a second main through the canyon in 2011.

 

Q LPCLAC6 17A (Quality Intermodal- Logistics Park Chicago [Elwood, IL] to Los Angeles, CA)

BNSF ET44C4 #3802

BNSF Dash 9-44CW #1022

 

Scholle, NM

May 18th, 2025

This week's FlickrFriday theme is: #Stacked

Le thème de ce FlickrFriday est: #Empilés

O tema desta FlickrFriday é: #Empilhados

本次 FlickrFriday 主題: #堆叠式

FlickrFriday-Thema der Woche: #Gestapelt

El tema de FlickrFriday es: #Apilado

Weather was gorgeous, windy but perfect. First try at stacking and the wind didn't help. Desert turning it's beautiful shade of brown and all the wildflowers are too.

Thanks for your comments and lookies

Sixty six moon images stacked in Photoshop and blended with the smart object median mode.

This is the tops of the triple stacks of Narragansett Electric. I've got some crazy glare reflections off my filter... crazy!

 

(Shot with N6006 with Nikon70-210mmf4@f5.6 for 120" on Kodak Ektachrome 160T)

One of the sea stacks at The Butt Of Lewis in the Outer Hebrides.

stacked with PS from 35 pics

focus bracketing with the OMD EM-1

This 79x5s interval stacked image was lightened in Photoshop. Intense fire sky displays can yield the most interesting stacked images. In this equivalent 6.58 minutes elapsed time, the start through the end of the fire sky is depicted.

 

Notice how the lenticular clouds hardly move during this duration.

 

Looking northwest.

We're back at O'Fallons, Nebraska, with an eastbound stack train underneath a glorious sunset.

Who said it had to be original ?

('Stacked' for 'Smile on Saturday')

Z7 withZ 85mm at f4, 15 Stack image. Illumination SB-800.

seen at an Odakyu line rail station, Toky

Early morning at Cathedral Cove, Coromandel Peninsula.

A view of the Big Stack from the other side showing the outline of the amazing trees growing on top of the stack. How do they survive?

f 11 26mm iso 200 25 sec.

Filters B&W ND 110, Lee 0.9s Grad.

Shot for Looking Close on Friday, theme "Heap or Stack".

 

Late winter sunset at South Stack.

Duncansby Stacks, rock pinnacles to the immediate south of Duncansby Head

On arrival At South Stack lighthouse, Anglesy, I was greeted by possibly the strongest wind I have ever encountered. Constantly having my feet almost blown from under Me and having an enduring battle to keep the lens clean from salt spray I managed to get a few usable shots !!!!

 

Sunset behind the Stack-Wolbrink Cabin as seen from the Dassler Cabin.

Stack by red -kalees au perso

Sadly this sea stack doesn't have a name of it's own. Maybe the locals have a name for it but there is not one on the maps.

I'm sure it's man made, the result of many years of slate mining.

Quite why they just left it as it is...

Maybe it was just to tough?

  

This 100x5s stacked images was lightened in Photoshop. Fire Skies are one of the best uses of this type of post-processing. In this equivalent 8.3 minute exposure, morning commuters are periodically captured (they all had a beautiful view of sunrise).

Stack of 31 shots by natural light.

50 mm + extension tubes and DIY stacking system.

M42 in Orion showing, on the right, a single frame of the 30 I stacked for the left-hand image result.

This 300x2s stacked image was lightened in Photoshop. Fire Skies are one of the best uses of this type of post-processing. In this equivalent 10 minute exposure a passing car looks like several cars as a result of these short two second interval,

 

Frames taken from: www.flickr.com/photos/79387036@N07/48964270637/in/datepos... between 14 and 4 minutes before sunrise.

Canon EOS 50D

Nikon M Plan 60x ELWD 0.70

Exposición: 2" - ISO100

Stacking

Canon Auto Bellows

MJKZZ IR Remote Motion Controller

Nº de fotos:160

Pasos de 0,47 µm

Magnificación aproximada: 50x

Made from 10 single fotos with Panasonic GH5 and Panasonic Leica DG 100-400 mm lens. The images were stacked using RegiStax programme.

A better angle on the stacks - with the sun bright due south at noon, I walked further down the coast beyond them and looked back up north instead.

217d 9 - TAC_0794~8 - Stack focus - lr-ps

empty shapes made from text

  

Stapel von Geschichten

leere Formen aus Text

Stacking Vertebrate skeleton?...

Another one from my trip to Martin's Beach. This time you can actually see a hint of the arch in the rock.

Stack mit/with 116 Bildern/Pictures mit/with Helicon Focus

 

Making of:

www.flickr.com/photos/holgerlosekann/33517341141/in/photo...

Stacked Photo of a rose out of the garden

captured in the abandoned VEB Trabant. (2015)

detail, Liam Gillick, Stacked Revision Structure (2005)

Stack Rock Fort.

Dai the Drone was with me while I did some work down in West Wales. Took my lunch at the Sandy Haven Beach car park and Dai took a quick flight out to see the Fort just off the shore.

Going to work one evening (I work nights) I saw this four-banded longhorn (Leptura quadrifasciata) which had parked for the night on an ox-eye daisy (Leucanthemum vulgare) on the lawn. Even though I was a little late, I just had to run and get the camera and snap a few shots.

 

To not be more late than I needed I put the camera in the car instead of returning it inside, so when I got back in the morning I still had the camera with me.

 

This proved quite fortunate as the beetle was still on the same flower - only now covered in dew drops!

 

Since it was sleeping I could mess around a bit and ended up with this two shot focus stack at 1.8:1 magnification where the inside of the yellow flower is showing through the water drops!

 

This species is between 11 and 20 mm in length, but this one was probably a male as it was closer to the minimum size.

A stack of hand painted coasters, a gift from a while back. One in use for another gift from Wendy many years ago, a souvenir from Kinsale, Ireland. Many thanks, dear daughters!

 

P.S. I think the glass shamrock was a gift from my niece Erin.

Being a photographer doesn't necessarily make you a funguy!

"Stilt Stack" How many photographs do you think it took to complete this shot? One? Ten? Fifteen? Any guesses?

  

Truth be told, it took one hundred and ninety five individual images to create this image! Combined, this amounts to about forty five minutes of exposure time. Normally, I would have completed this type of image with significantly less but I needed to capture all of these images for a project I am working on. You'll find out what that is in a few weeks.

  

Those of you familiar with the Falmouth area might recognize this stilt house along Shore Drive. I've lurked around here in the dark before but this is by far the longest amount of time I have spent there. What makes this spot great is that the best angle of this house (in my opinion) allows me to shoot north where the rotation of the Earth is most obvious in these great curved star trails.

A pair of stacking bottles separated and lit from above as part of a session for the Macro Mondays theme: bottle(s).

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