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Nikon AF Micro Nikkor 60mm f/2.8D on 60 mm extension tube
focus stack of 4 images combined with Zerene Stacker (DMap)
Marchin - Condroz - Belgique
A sea stack silhouette in Lake Superior during sunrise. Tettegouche State Park, Minnesota.
Follow me:
South Stack is a tiny island off the north-western tip of Holy Island - itself an island off the north-western tip of Anglesey. It is joined to Holy island by a small suspension bridge for pedestrians, at the foot of a steep flight of 350 steps down the cliffs, and is crowned by a 90ft lighthouse, now automatically operated.
Another attempt at some astrophotography, but this time I used the university library to try give some interest or context to the scene. I probably should have waited until later to get a darker sky as I'm not too keen on the blue cast of the sky.
Having a bit of creative fun, I stacked 130x2 second images and lightened in PhotoShop 6.0. Unlike my previous examples: www.flickr.com/photos/79387036@N07/albums/72157689221737561, these clouds seemed to be moving in many directions over this 4.3 minute interval.
Anyway, I thought the pattern was an interesting abstract and worth uploading. :-)
Fresh out of the Alliance Yard, BNSF 7767 leads a westbound stack train through Hicks Field Road on it’s way out of Saginaw
Not much time for photos today as some relatives from Australia are over visiting, quick grabshot of a stack at Noss Head.
Nikon AF Micro Nikkor 60mm f/2.8D on 36 mm extension tube
focus stack of 38 images
combined with Zerene Stacker (DMap)
Rawsa - Condroz - Belgique
I am an old dawg trying to learn new tricks...I have owned my GFX100S for a year and have never tried focus stacking...geez....so, this image is nothing but, stacked the images and then experimented with the ON1 Sky Replace feature....I add the moon (brush) first, mask the edges on the mountain ridge and then apply the sky effect.
A cairn of rocks on a rainy day. Found along side a forest service road near Icicle Creek, Leavenworth, Washington
Nikon D7000
Among the most impressive sights along the Jurassic Coast are the sea stacks at Ladram Bay. The sandstones contain numerous vertical fractures and joints that were formed deep in the Earths crust during past mountain building periods. The sea picked out these planes of weakness to form caves and natural arches that have since collapsed to produce sea stacks. The “Otter Sandstone” that forms the cliffs and sea stacks were deposited in a hot dry climates in the Triassic Period about 220 Million years ago. The stacks are composed of the same rock, which is relatively soft, but they have a harder band of sandstone at their base which prevents their rapid erosion by the sea. The striking red colour of the rock is caused by iron oxide, which tells us that the layers were formed in a desert. The presence of ripple marks and channels in the sandstones, together with the remains of the long-extinct plants, insects, fish, amphibians and reptiles, show that the desert was crossed by fertile river valleys.
The “Otter Sandstone” is the richest source of Triassic reptile remains in Britain and one of the most important in the world. At the south-west end of the bay, the most common fossils in the sandstone are networks of vertical, tube-like carbonate petrifactions (rhizocretions): these represent the roots of plants that were able to survive in the harsh dry climate of the Triassic Period.[2]
The bay is sited on the same band of Sandstone that forms the oil reservoir at the Wytch Farm oilfield on the Isle of Purbeck.
Modern stone stacks on the hill above Cuween Chambered Cairn, Mainland Orkney
Sigma 14mm f2.8 manual focus
Panasonic FZ70 f6.3 1/100sec 112mm
stacked from 3 images and sharpened by wavelet filter in RegiStax V6.
A toy model of a 2CV, given to the father of a friend when buying his second real 2CV, somewhere in the 60's.
This photo was a focus stack of 6 pictures.
This is a stack of 120 images (interval 5 sec; lapse time ~10 minutes), layers darkened and lightened then blended 50%-50% with Photoshop. Since the clouds remained nearly stationary, except for a drifting contrail at top, the image almost looks like a single frame image.
The phantom jeep was unavoidable.
The Stacks of Duncansby, Duncansby Head at sunset.
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