View allAll Photos Tagged Stackables

Bnsf 7837 takes an eastbound stack toward the small town of Medill Mo.

Sea Stacks, Bandon Beach, Oregon.

 

Ah, love, let us be true

To one another! for the world, which seems

To lie before us like a land of dreams,

So various, so beautiful, so new,

 

--------Dover Beach, Matthew Arnold.

 

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Stack 49 photos

River Laxford leading to Ben Stack in morning light

Third Place Books.

Apple iPhone 12 Pro Max.

Internal time stacking app

North Shore, Oahu, Hawaii

 

The moon, stars, Milky Way, and trees...10 light-frames and 8 dark-frames stacked with Starry Landscape Stacker.

 

Sony A7R III | Sony 24mm GM | F/1.4, 16sec, ISO400

Hay Stacks.

الأعمدة المزروعة الأصفر الذهبي شفرات المشمسة الأرض المجيدة,

שלום סימטריה התבגרות קציר הרמוני פאר מענג,

sumptis agitarem mente terreneitatis paleae nuntiis cunctabundus explicatio nubibus defecisti distant arboribus adhuc,

echi sogni vigorose compenetrazione montagne sparse rugiada del mattino,

rustique surface solitaire orne odorante herbe regardant fixement forteresse maturation soupirs passent,

alegria verdes eis que da glória sootheth louvores mágicos boundlessness esplendorosa chão,

omhuldade pinnacled seger expanderande fält broder passioner färgade Höstlöv,

řítí nebesa jasné vědomí fontány blues uvažují oslnivé divoké prvky odstínů,

windingly Iðandi Lives þægileg Whispering læki bespangled reykelsi fljótandi útibú hjartfólginn,

甘い高騰乳白色の光造形ビジョンを踊っ柳のヒントをタンブリング.

Steve.D.Hammond.

Stacked bicycles by ai weiwei, Pérez Art Museum, Miami, Florida

 

Some focus stacking again. Tamron 9 + Canon 25mm extension tube. Sorry about the cobweb.. but he was got from the inside edge of the bathroom window where he had obviously met his end :-( But stunning eyes up close. Makes me think of a world map!

 

dofstacking

 

(Driven indoors by lack of light and cold :-( )

 

Popped over on the ferry to visit our friend Mark who has Leukemia currently in Southampton General Hospital. Just before his bone marrow transplant. It has been a long journey and hopefully this is the last tunnel he has to travel before finishing his treatment. There is a light at the end of this tunnel and everything is crossed at the moment.

 

HaPpY FeNcE Friday have a great weekend.

 

Got a new toy too, so trying out on the day, instant social media publishing.

 

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The first snow of the season has fallen at the highest elevations of the San Francisco peaks above Flagstaff in early October as Q LPCLAC6 passes through Maine on the western slope of the Arizona divide.

What's better than waking up to a stack of pancakes ? ...a stack of pandas of course !

Happy Mothers Day !

Three wooden spools of thread stacked with a straight pin and buttons.

 

Developed with Darktable 3.6.0. Background texture added in Photoshop.

This is my first go at stacking multiple images in Photoshop, using the 'mean' method, (7 images).

Given the conditions on the day, I'm really happy with the result I've achieved and I'm fairly close to the image I had pre-visualised.

There is plenty of room for improvement, but as a first step, I'm very happy with it.

Your comment and critique is most welcome!

 

Evening Sea Stacks. © Copyright 2021 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.

 

Sea stacks and surf on an overcast evening, Crescent City, California.

 

The circumstances of this photograph were just a bit unusual, and it is not quite the photograph that I thought I’d be making when I recently visited the coastline at Crescent City. Because the days are so long right now, we decided to go out for an early dinner, planning to head back out into the field to photograph an hour or so before sunset. The plans was not totally solid, but I had this spot in mind as one of the possibilities, as it more or less in Crescent City. We finished dinner and it was still too early for the photography I had in mind, so we did a bit of exploring before we ended up back at this post.

 

I had photographed these very rocks a couple of years ago, and this time I was imagining something with sunset light, the colorful ocean and sky, and perhaps some dramatic shadows. The conditions had something else in mind. To the north a line of clouds was arriving, likely the result of a weak incoming cold front. When it became apparent that the brilliantly colorful sunset I imagined was not to be (though something else interest did eventually happen) I rethought the mood I wanted to suggest and began to see the appeal in this framing of the scene, focusing on the foreground island with the more distant sea stacks closer to the top of the frame.

 

G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, “California’s Fall Color: A Photographer’s Guide to Autumn in the Sierra” is available from Heyday Books, Amazon, and directly from G Dan Mitchell.

Focus stacked image of a Danish 2 Kroner coin. This image was created from 100 shots at ISO 64, 90mm, f/5.3 and 1/8th second exposure using a Nikon D850 and Tamron 90mm macro lens. The images were stacked using Zerene Stacker with the Depth Map option, and then some finishing touches in Adobe Lightroom.

More cute little frogs from my SIL's place, stacked to look cheery with their funny grinning mouths. It took me several goes at stacking the frogs, they just didn't want to co-operate....

 

ANSH 123 - 4. Stack It

South Stack, Anglesey, Wales

 

South Stack is an island situated just off #HolyIsland on the northwest coast of #Anglesey. It is famous as the location of one of Wales' most spectacular #SouthStackLighthouse. The cliffs are 130m high on average. Standing here you can see sea traffic in the Irish sea between Belfast and Liverpool and Cardiff. The jagged rocks and monoliths at the base offer a spectacular view with shallow, emerald waters - and are as deadly should you trip and fall.

 

These #Precambrian cliffs are one of my favourite in the whole of UK, and are home to some of the most important sea bird colonies in #Wales. During June and July the sea cliffs here are packed with sea birds - mainly auks including puffin, razorbill and guillemot.

 

From the cliff tops here you can look down and watch the birds swimming, as they fly underwater in search of fish and sand eels.

 

During the breeding season up to 3,000 Guillemots and 700 Razorbills will nest here, precariously balancing their eggs on the narrow ledges.

 

You'll also find a small Puffin colony here and predatory Great Blacked-backed Gulls swooping down to grab chicks from any unattended nests.

 

Aside from the bird life, #SouthStack is also famed for its plant life and one plant in particular, can only be found here in the whole of Britain.

 

The plant in question is known as the Spathulate Fleawort and is a rather plain yellow flower, not dissimilar to a tall daisy with yellow petals. You'll find it growing along the edges of the sea cliffs, so tread carefully.

Another one of my staple abstracts I took a few weeks ago...

 

This time I set up stacks on my laptop and that is what the checkered design is underneath the staples themselves haha.

this one is a 3 shot focus stacked image

A Macro Mondays submission on the topic 'Redo". A redo of my original "stacks" image of forks, this time from the other end.

Original image

www.flickr.com/photos/lsydney/52699590248/in/photolist-23...

 

An experiment that turned out well -- the Moon, taken with a stack of optics. Blog post coming up shortly...

 

Copyright © 2020 Seldom Scene Photography, All Rights Reserved.

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Finally getting a proper snowfall around here...just in time for me to be completely sick of winter.

This was taken on 1st September 2013 when I had the opportunity to pop over to Anglesey, North Wales to a location called “South Stack”. It is a 7x HDR image that was processed using photomatix and lightroom.

For more information about South Stack see the Wiki site:

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/South_Stack

Palmer, Alfred T.,, photographer.

 

Smoke stacks

 

1942

 

1 transparency : color.

 

Notes:

Title from FSA or OWI agency caption.

Transfer from U.S. Office of War Information, 1944.

 

Subjects:

World War, 1939-1945

Smokestacks

Industrial facilities

 

Format: Transparencies--Color

 

Rights Info: No known restrictions on publication.

 

Repository: Library of Congress, Prints and Photographs Division, Washington, D.C. 20540 USA, hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print

 

Part Of: Farm Security Administration - Office of War Information Collection 12002-28 (DLC) 93845501

 

General information about the FSA/OWI Color Photographs is available at hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.fsac

 

Higher resolution image is available (Persistent URL): hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/fsac.1a35070

 

Call Number: LC-USW36-374

  

Resolution lens test with the Olympus OM Zuiko Auto Macro 38mm f/2.8 @f/4

Ratio 6:1

Stacked from 324 images, step length 0.005mm.

Sony A7R III, 42 MP

For me an excellent lens, it is sharp up to the corners.

Not bad for a lens from 1980.

A stack or sea stack is a geological landform consisting of a steep and often vertical column or columns of rock in the sea near a coast, formed by wave erosion. Stacks typically form in horizontally-bedded sedimentary or volcanic rocks, particularly on limestone cliffs. Stacks are formed over time by wind and water, processes of coastal geomorphology.

 

They are formed when part of a headland is eroded by hydraulic action, which is the force of the sea or water crashing against the rock. The force of the water weakens cracks in the headland, causing them to later collapse, forming free-standing stacks and even a small island. Without the constant presence of water, stacks also form when a natural arch collapses under gravity, due to sub-aerial processes like wind erosion. Erosion causes the arch to collapse, leaving the pillar of hard rock standing away from the coast - the stack. Eventually, erosion will cause the stack to collapse, leaving a stump. Stacks can provide important nesting locations for seabirds, and many are popular for rock climbing.

 

The stacks above are part of the world-famous Twelve Apostles in Port Campbell National Park, seen in glorious early morning sunshine. The Twelve Apostles are a collection of limestone stacks by the Great Ocean Road in Victoria, Australia. Their proximity to one another has made the site a popular tourist attraction.

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

This cicada was perched vertically on a cement wall, at the Montreal Botanical Garden. It had rained previously, which is why it was still a bit wet.

 

Pentax D-FA 100mm F/2.8 Macro plus Raynox DCR-250, with off-camera diffused Yongnuo YN-560 III. Probably around 1:1. Five-shot handheld focus stack, with EXIF from the first shot.

 

IMPORTANT:

If you would like to use this photo in a way that is appropriate under its Creative Commons license, you are welcome to do so, but please make sure to credit me by my real name and Flickr handle, and please also include a link to the Flickr page of the photo, as well as a link to the relevant Creative Commons license text. I have put examples of proper attribution on my profile page. Optionally, you may also send me a little note about your use... :)

 

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(IMGP4695-99_ZSDMap_RCrEtc2)

The Lakenheath based HH-60G {5) relocated to Aviano in July 2018.

I love playing with solids! Jacquie said she wanted this to be a colorful quilt, so I added in a few additional colors. I was going to make a few blocks to add to the stack, but then decided it would be fun to build on a few of the blocks Jacquie originally made. I used three of her blocks, added a bit of fabric to get them all the same height and then added the bottom diagonal section. Hope it works for you Jacquie!

(pardon the poor iphone photo!)

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