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These three images in a row are not macro. They were shot with the zoom on my Minolta Z5 DiMAGE, about 20 feet away from me. Was at a rest stop along Highway 93 between Wickenburg and Kingman. Had to make do with shoving the camera lens through a cyclone fence to get a photo. It's not super sharp, but I did like the abstract, sort of monumental quality. See the next two if you are interested. I have not been able to decide which I like best so all three are here online. Part of my set "Learning to Zoom".
A worker stacks boxes of tomatoes in a holding area at the Hicks Produce Company
Collection: Appalachian Photographic Archive
APA #2008-063
Subject File: Johnson City (Tenn.) --Commerce
Repository: Archives of Appalachia
Center for Appalachian Studies and Services
East Tennessee State University
Box 70295
Johnson City, Tennessee 37614
Stacking images is challenging. First, a subject that stands still, then focusing at different distances. Thats the hard part. If the fly doesn't move and you can see that subtle change in focus, you might get something. Four images ... Canon T2i, Canon EF 100mm macro f2.8 L, Zerene Stacker, Lightroom 5.
Facing south on the former IC's main line, now CN's McComb Subdivision on the Amtrak platform at the Godbold Transportation Center in Brookhaven, MS.
The new creosote timber ties means that there will be some track work ahead on this line.
Amtrak's City of New Orleans stops here on a daily basis. Train 59, the southbound typically stops here around 12:15 PM while Train 58, the northbound typically stops here around 4:05 PM.
The 3-letter code for this Amtrak station is BRH.
During the early days of my South Bay photography, Cargill’s Newark salt plant and its surrounding crystallizer beds appeared on my map as terra incognita. From the beginning, I wanted to photograph Cargill’s facility, both for its colorful nature and its role as the last truly active salt plant in the Bay Area. The plant, originating as Arden Salt Works #2 in the 1920s, has long provided the distinctive sight of stacked salt on the edge of the former wetlands. In the current day, an annual harvest of around 500,000 tons is added to the twin mounds of salt that are 500 feet long and 75 feet high. It is a striking landmark.
In 2010, after several years of discussion, I was able to secure Cargill’s permission for five sessions to photograph their property under supervision. This set was taken late in the day with a launch site just upwind of the salt stacks. As the sun set, I was able to photograph the stacks, the salt plant, and the crystallizer beds beyond. It was an interesting time to photograph for the annual salt harvest was still underway. In this set, you can see the fleet of balloon-tired dump trucks hauling salt to the plant’s washhouse. Here the harvested salt is washed in brine and placed on a rubber conveyor belt for delivery to the stacks. The photographs also show bulldozers on top of the stacks tidying up the pile and pushing salt toward another conveyor belt that delivers salt to the processing plant. It is a busy place!
I took these documentary photographs with the permission and supervision of Cargill. Kite flying is prohibited over Cargill-controlled lands without their permission.
Down in Cornwall at the moment. Went to Zennor to find some water that I could try to smooth with an ND400 filter, but forgot to bring the correct step adapter. Doh! So I took about 20 regular shots at high speed and merged them. The camera was hand-propped on the railing of a bridge - so a little image re-alignment was needed (using Hugin) before the partial transparency merge. I just wish I had a slightly wider angle lens for this - which is now on my wishlist.
Nikon D600, Nikon 28-300VR @300, f/5.6.
53 Images Stacked, 12800 ISO @ 2sec each for a total of 106 seconds exposure time, plus 60 dark frames, 20 bias frames.
I'm not super happy with the vignetting correction, I'll have to figure out how to manage that still. Adding some flat frames would help, of course. I also have another 40 images that DSS isn't stacking in for some reason.
Overall, I'm pretty happy about the structure that's coming out for my first try at photographing a nebula with normal DSLR equipment.
Sea stacks at sunset near Point of the Arches along the Olympic Coastline. I used a 30s exposure to smooth out the rough water.
Stack Rock Fort was constructed between 1850 and 1852 to protect the waterway. It was originally designed for two decks of artillery casements, but only the first floor was completed and used as a gun deck.
these shots are from a walk around the town square in woodstock il with paul mcaleer over the weekend