View allAll Photos Tagged Stackables
Time to decide on the setting triangles. I'll decide if I'm going to group these blocks for a light area or leave them random like this after I have the setting triangles done.
Stacks of memories through this door which was once the entrance to Collingwood Library - including to a dusty stack
© Anne Holmes
Elegant stacked wedding cake, too bad we didn't get a photo with the cake topper of flowers on it....
made a couple of different passes at stacking and subtracting dark frames. this has a short dark subtracted from each exposure.
First attempt at multiplicity stacking.
I did this because I was reminiscing about the movie Identity.
"What a sausage fest." -@LuPach
"Oh, you have so many looks." -Homer Simpson
made a couple of different passes at stacking and subtracting dark frames. this one has a long dark subtracted from the merged stack.
"Them smoke stacks reaching like the arms of God into a beautiful sky of soot and clay."
Watch the depressing story on the high cancer rates in Tonawanda, NY - video.wmht.org/video/2364999803
Here's an easy way to measure the headset stack height required for a frame.
Please see the headset drawing for measuring instructions for determining headset dimensions.
Lots of chimney stacks on the roofs but nowadays many homes do not have coal burning fires! I took this during my walk into Troon, this morning and it was very cold with a strong wind blowing from the sea but you do not see smoke rising from the chimney pots!
Our Daily Challenge ~ On The Rooftops ...
Stay Safe and Healthy Everyone!
Thanks to everyone who views this photo, adds a note, leaves a comment and of course BIG thanks to anyone who chooses to favourite my photo .... Thanks to you all!
I made a large bunch of randomly stacked buttons... I love having these ready to use. I have been neglecting my buttons... time to play with them again!
The Otto E. Eckert Power Station reflects in the Grand River at night. The reflecting pool here is the impoundment for the dam at the power plant.
Photographed using a Nikon F on Kodak Vision 3 500T 5219 tungsten balanced motion picture film. Developed by The Camera Shop in St. Cloud, MN using a modified C-41 process.
Drystone wall on the approach to Levant Mine on the Atlantic Coast of Cornwall.
The chimney stack in the background is part of the remains of the compressor and power house.
More impressive than the depth of the mines at Levant, is that they extend so extensively under the ocean. With the old style of digging only where the valuable material can be found, the tunnels actually extend back up from the lower levels beneath the sea bed.
It is said that at certain levels in bad weather it was possible to hear the rocks on the sea bed moving about above the mine.
Two UP Stack trains meet in Traver, CA. This is a small town of about 700 people along the SR-99 "valley" corridor of the Central Valley of California. Traver is known for its grain exports.
Today these two stack trains waste no time blazing through town, even with an older Southern Pacific (now UP) loco second out on the Westbound (Compass North) train.
©FranksRails Photography, LLC.
This is why I stack multiple frames for my pictures of jupiter.
From left to right:
1) A typical single frame
2) After stacking 95 frames
3) After wavelet sharpening in registax and some brightness/contrast adjustment.
See here for the final image with extra contrast and moons added:
www.myrecipes.com/recipe/stacked-chicken-enchiladas
2 tablespoons canola oil $
8 skinless, boneless chicken thighs (about 2 pounds) $$
1 teaspoon ground cumin
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt $
1/4 teaspoon ground red pepper
2 cups chopped white onion
8 garlic cloves, minced
1 (15-ounce) can organic whole peeled tomatoes, undrained and crushed $$
1 cup chopped fresh cilantro, divided
3 tablespoons fresh lime juice $
1 (7-ounce) can salsa verde
Cooking spray
12 (6-inch) corn tortillas
3 ounces shredded pepper-Jack cheese (about 3/4 cup)
6 tablespoons Mexican crema
Preparation
1. Place a small roasting pan in oven. Preheat oven to 425° (leave roasting pan in oven as it preheats).
2. Heat a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add oil to pan; swirl to coat. Sprinkle both sides of chicken evenly with cumin, salt, and pepper. Add chicken to pan; sauté 3 minutes. Turn chicken over, and place in the preheated roasting pan. Add onion, garlic, and tomatoes to pan; bake at 425° for 15 minutes or until chicken is done. Cool. Shred chicken; toss with tomato mixture.
3. Combine 3/4 cup cilantro, juice, and salsa verde; spread 1/4 cup salsa mixture in the bottom of an 11 x 7-inch glass or ceramic baking dish coated with cooking spray. Top with 4 overlapping tortillas, half of chicken mixture, and 1/4 cup salsa mixture. Repeat layers. Top with remaining 4 tortillas and remaining salsa mixture; sprinkle evenly with cheese. Bake at 425° for 15 minutes or until golden; sprinkle with remaining 1/4 cup cilantro. Top each serving with 1 tablespoon crema.
Note:
Julianna Grimes,
March 2014
Serves 6
Recipe Time
Hands-on: 45 Minutes
Total: 1 Hours
Nutritional Information
Calories 385
Fat 17.3 g
Satfat 4.9 g
Monofat 7.3 g
Polyfat 3.7 g
Protein 25.4 g
Carbohydrate 32.2 g
Fiber 4.3 g
Cholesterol 111 mg
Iron 1.9 mg
Sodium 645 mg
Calcium 151 mg