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Image of a westbound CSX container train made from the Bort Road bridge in North East, Pennsylvania.
Just a little tester shot to try out my new Nikkor 50mm F1.8G Lens.. Thought id try a little bokeh since every1 else is doing it lol
Hope You Enjoy!
Cute little smoke stack sticking out of the little "Over the Blue" cafe where I had lunch outside in the little garden out the back.
an image of 9 photos of a white chrysanthemum edited before being stacked to have a different colour for each layer
El Toro sailing dinghies stacked on the dock at the Center For Wooden Boats on South Lake Union in downtown Seattle.
Leica M10 Center for Wooden Boats
Galactic Center stacked. Experimented with stacking multiple exposures to reduce noise and increase detail. Definitely increased detail. Need to work on the noise reduction some more. I shot these without a tracking mount a couple summers ago at Observatory Park in Geauga County, Ohio. The stacked version uses 5 light frames plus 5 dark frames, 15 sec. ISO 4000, 24mm f3.5 stacked using Sequator (my 1st time) and processed in Lightroom. The trees along the bottom were layer blended in Photoshop from a single exposure.
Can't beat an SD60 pulling stacks in some sweet golden light with a stick! Southbound at Sussex shot off the UP bridge. This train was right behind the prior shot of the SOO SD60, however this shot got the sun.
Negative Stacking
I used to do quite a bit of negative stacking in the enlarger in the 90s when I had my own darkroom and an enlarger that would take a 4X5 negative. I was gifted with an A4 LED light tablet for my birthday and decided to try a bit of negative stacking to see if I could reprise that technique in my repertoire.
While Loch Stack has a photogenic bothy which can be used in a composition it was these trees at the telephoto end of the view which took my interest.
View of the Reynisdrangar sea stacks at Vik from Reynisfjara beach, south Iceland.
(Thank you to the Yahoo!editors who added this picture to their Scenic Shores gallery! Record one-day views for a picture in my photostream.)
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I finally found something that stayed still long enough for me to take several photos for a focus stack.
This is the first one I've tried with the mpe65 lens since I've had it.
It's 4 images taken at 2.5x and focus stacked using Zerene.
Not the best one you'll ever see, but hey, you gotta start somewhere :P
HFDF
I found this great stack of Hay bales on my drive in the country... great finds this time of year...
20 shots at 20 second interval each.
Open as layers in Photoshop via Bridge
convert to smart object
Layer average.
The result is similar to that achieved by very dark neutral density filter (i.e very long exposure resulting in blurred clouds)
actually my ND100 filter was useless because the clouds where traveling very slowly thus I could not get the effect I was looking for.
by using this technique I could get a result (almost) equivalenti to a 400 sec exposure. Impossible to get with a single ND100 filter.
Note to self: reduce time interval between shots to get smoother average
Sweet Arrow Reserve
Bellbrook, Ohio
Focus-stack of two hand-held images. Taken with Nikon D7000 ISO 400 f/11 1/250 sec. and Nikkor 105mm f/4 Micro AI manual focus lens + 27mm + 20mm + 14mm + 12mm extension tubes, off-body flash with DIY snoot/diffuser
see more at: photography.designmotion.net/blog
Walk through Borrego Badlands to Seventeen Palm Grove
Near Arroyo Solado
Anza Borrego Desert Park
California, USA
Canon eos 60D + Tamron 17-50 f2.8 inversé @17mm + Flash Venus KX800 F10, ISO 800, 1/250eme, Stack de 41 clichés sur rail Velbon Super Mag Slider assemblés avec Photoshop CS6. Grossissement final environ 4,5:1
A beach event was coming up and a stack of plastic chairs was sitting in the sun, waiting to be deployed...
The party rental place calls them “White Café Style Chairs, made for year round outdoor exposure. Plastic stacking chairs are great furniture at cafés, bistros, poolside dining and outdoor restaurants. Commercial grade plastic resin furniture is made to last with constant public use...”
The rocky tip of the Isle of Islay that curves to look out to Northern Ireland. Taken with an M42 Takumar 17mm. The EXIF says 18mm because the K3 doesn't have 17mm.
Hamilton, Ontario has a large industrial sector and, as a result, shipping is an essential element in keeping that sector operating. To that end, standardized shipping containers are used and, when they are awaiting either loading onto ships for transport to their ultimate destination or awaiting further distribution following off-loading from ships, the containers area stacked neatly, as seen here. The resulting pattern of multi-coloured ‘boxes’ is captured here in an industrial area. - JW
Date Taken: 2024-04-22
Date PP: 2024-04-24
(c) Copyright 2024 JW Vraets
If you are interested in prints or licensing of any of my images, DM me with a brief description of what you may be looking for.
Tech Details:
Taken using a hand-held Nikon D800 fitted with an Tamron 100-400mm 1:4.5-6.3 DI VC USD lense set to 290mm, ISO220 (Auto ISO), Daylight WB, Matrix metering, Shutter Priority Mode, f/6.0 (wide open), 1/800 sec. PP in free Open Source GIMP from Nikon RAW/NEF file: scale image to 9000 px wide, apply distortion correction to remove pincushion distortion, level the image, apply Tone Mapping as well as Dynamic Range Compression at default levels to bring out textures and tame the extreme brightness range, darken overall by setting Exposure Compensation to EV-0.52, boost Contrast as well as Chromaticity in L-A-B mode, adjust colour temperature by setting it to 5500K (slightly warmer), sharpen (edges only), save. PP in free Open Source GIMP: use the Contrast/Brightness tool to both increase contrast and also brighten somewhat, use the Hue-Saturation-Brightness tool to boost overall saturation, sharpen, save, add fine black-and-white frame, add bar and text on bottom, save, scale image to 3000 px wide for posting online, sharpen, save.
... the height is round about 15 mm
Macro 1:1. Focus stacking. Sony A7II (ILCE-7M2) with Tamron SP 90mm F/2.8 DI Macro 1:1 VC USD (F017E). Wide open shot f/2.8.
Used camera/lens combination and focus stacking equipment --> Focus Stacking Equipment.