View allAll Photos Tagged Stackables
They were everywhere.
"You've never seen so many chairs in one place... And yet, everyone is standing! This curious show is in the courtyard of the Coulanges Hotel, in which Tadashi Kawamata has made a home to exhibit his new eccentric installation, a monumental stack of chairs, which extends from the top of the building to the cobblestones of the inner courtyard."
pentax pino 35
fixed focus, 38mm coated glass triplet lens, set shutter 1/125
3 light settings, 3 film speeds
Happy shortest day!
The moment of solstice falls tonight, December 21st, but unusually it's not until tomorrow morning that the solstice's closest sunrise will be celebrated at Stonehenge- seen here silhouetted by glow from the lights of Larkhill Camp.
202 frames layered in StarStaX from many hundreds captured; the remaining frames were lost to lens fogging. Exif shown is for a single frame.
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» LongExposures website and blog
"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).
An attempt at focus stacking an amaryllis...
My attempts at getting it all sharp in my last photo blog...read it here:
Focus-Stacking mit jeweils 10 Pics, im Dauerregen (40 l/m²), die Schmucklilie hat`es gefreut!
Focus stacking with 10 pics each, in continuous rain (40 l/m²), the lily was happy!
Stacked (comet center only), plus a few brush adjustments...came out much better than I initially expected (seeing conditions were pretty poor). Probably would have been better if I did it at 135 mm on Tuesday night, but it's something! DeepSkyStacker: 200 mm, f/2.8, 12800 ISO, 1.6 sec x 48 frames.
South Stack is famous as the location of one of Wales' most spectacular lighthouses, South Stack Lighthouse. It has a height of 41 metres (135 feet). It has a maximum area of 7 acres.
Until 1828 when an iron suspension bridge was built, the only means of crossing the deep water channel on to the island was in a basket which was suspended on a hemp cable. The suspension bridge was replaced in 1964, but by 1983 the bridge had to be closed to the public, due to safety reasons. A new aluminium bridge was built and the lighthouse was reopened for public visits in 1997. Thousands of people flock to the lighthouse every year, thanks to the continued public transport service from Holyhead's town centre.
There are over 390 stone steps down to the footbridge, and 10 metal steps (and not, as local legend suggests, 365), and the descent and ascent provide an opportunity to see some of the 8,000 nesting birds that line the cliffs during the breeding season. The cliffs are part of the RSPB South Stack Cliffs bird reserve, with a visitor centre, and bird hide at Elin's Tower. The tower provides a place to see Choughs, Peregrine falcon, Kestrel and various marine mammals like the Harbour porpoise seen at high tide, Grey seal, Risso's dolphin and Bottlenose dolphin.
This 60x14s interval stacked image was lightened in Photoshop. Fire Skies are one of the best uses of this type of post-processing. In this equivalent 14 minutes elapsed time, the start and end of the fire sky is depicted.
This was taken from the following time lapse: www.flickr.com/photos/79387036@N07/49498158871/in/photost....
As the storm neared it developed this double and then triple stacked shelf cloud. The core was getting mean looking, it was green but had been turned yellow by the reddish setting sun behind the storm. COOL!
Brilliant! Shelley's crooked cake, conceived as a stack of doughnuts, with a coffee cup balanced precariously on top.
Winter light on Scotland's north east coastline with one of the Duncansby stacks.
Despite the clear skies there was a rim of cloud along the horizon preventing me from capturing the best light.
I counted about 15 seals with cubs on an inaccessible stretch of beach at the bottom of the cliffs. It was great watching their interactions. I was disappointed to see a number of large polystyrene chunks and other litter surrounding them
The Stacks of Duncansby, Duncansby Head at dawn.
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When arriving in Ethiopia, I always wanted to take photos of the stacks by the roads. It seems I only saw them in the first one or two days, and I don't think I saw them in southern Ethiopia. Thankfully I took a clear picture in the first day.
I guessed they were Teff stacks (so I didn't even ask the guide what they were).
IMG_1030-CUU-BPN20_AE_M_CM-CLA5
Shot for Active Assignment Weekly, theme "Deep Focus"
WIT
I do a lot of experimenting with macro focus stacking, most of the time with a focus rail, and sometimes with the focus stack function on my camera. For creating the focus stack I use Helicon Focus.
For today I was planning to go to the park and try this technique on larger subjects, but unfortunately the weather is bad today. So I shot this wasp (found dead on the floor). I stuck it on a needle and created a background resembling the sun. In total 125 shots, stacked with Helicon Focus.
So here is Icarus flying towards the heat.
Maybe tomorrow conditions will be better and I can go out to the park.
Exhaust from a power plant stack literally lights up from the sun's rays early in the morning on a wintry December morning.
Hay bales shown in previous images are now stacked, awaiting transport.
Out & about in rural Norfolk uk.
A tornado warned supercell passing by Burlington, Colorado. May 27th, 2018. One of the more unexpected, photogenic storms I've encountered.
I photographed this wood stack on The Sleat Peninsula near Calligarry. The whole area used to be a big pine forest and all the trees had been cut down for timber, acres and acres of trees felled and piled up, it was quite sad to think that all these magnificent trees would be someone’s coffee table or bed frame next year. I really hope they plant more trees to replace them. We sneaked up the dirt track on a Sunday when none of the workers were around, really high up with an amazing view. When we passed the next day it was a hive of activity with loads of workers driving heavy plant machinery, and more trees falling. :-(
Sleat is a peninsula on the island of Skye in the Highland council area of Scotland, known as "the garden of Skye". It is the home of the clan MacDonald of Sleat. The name comes from the Scottish Gaelic Sléibhte (or Slèite), which in turn comes from Old Norse sléttr (smooth, even), which well describes Sleat when considered in the surrounding context of the mainland, Skye and Rùm mountains that dominate the horizon all about Sleat.
Sleat is a traditional parish that has several communities and two major landowners (the Clan Donald Lands Trust and Eilean Iarmain Estate). Sleat Community Trust (Scottish Gaelic: Urras Coimhearsnachd Shlèite), the local development trust, has purchased the Skye Ferry Filling Station at Armadale and in common with many communities is investigating the options for renewable energy production. It also owns Sleat Renewables Ltd., a timber production company. In October 2007 the Trust hosted the Highlands and Islands Community Energy Company annual conference. Recently the final section of a new double-track road through Sleat to Broadford was finished. Most teenage school-children in Sleat attend Portree High School, where there is a hostel for those who live particularly far away.
Collywell Bay at Seaton Sluice, Northumberland, contains a cross bedded sandstone sea stack known as Charley's Garden.
My first attempt at focus stacking an image, this is 15 images stacked with photoshop
Happy enough with the general result as I can seen now what it is all about, don't know did I pick an image with too much detail or use too many images as there are quiet visible artefacts around the central stalks if the Lily. but it is all about learning for the next image
Smoke Stack. Back in the olden days (when I was a kid) it was brick right to the top& I swear you could see it all over the neighbourhood.
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