View allAll Photos Tagged Static
My version of one of my favorite lesser-known heroes, if not my favorite.
I don't know why, but out of B:TAS, JLU, S:TAS, Batman Beyond and Static Shock, this was the show I remember the most of. I've rewatched many episodes of every show except this one, and I still remember this one more.
Also, there is a very cool reason for making this figure, that will have to wait until early next year. :D
Something was missing from this shot. I had to find a cherry to put on the cake. The pose was strong, I had the colors I wanted. I was missing movement.
Fortunately, I was able to play with my settings and the wind, giving this sumptuous photograph.
Model IG: @mwavita_
Test roll;
Shot in 2020 on Polaroid High Definition 400 color negative film at iso 100 and cross processed in Rodinal.
The film had expired in 2003 and the Rodinal was pretty much as old as the film :)
Semi stand development. Will add details soon.
Pologne 2015 - Jour 2, Musée National de Varsovie.
Quand j'ai vu cette rangée de statues, avec la première qui regardait plus ou moins en direction des autres, j'ai tout de suite pensé à faire cette photo. Malheureusement, le faible éclairage de cette salle du musée ne m'a pas rendue la tâche facile... J'espère tout de même que cette image vous plaira!
Je l'ai traitée pour notre blog photographie : www.lafauteaugraph.blogspot.fr
For more informations about my trip in Poland, follow the link www.lafauteaugraph.blogspot.fr
:)
my first time using kentmere pan 100 film and i am impressed. nice tone with very little grain.
no lightroom 6 processing except to attach my copyright.
nikon f4
nikkor 105mm f2.5 ai-s
kentmere pan 100 b&w
“The social pressures to perform and codes of honour that men and boys grow up with can encourage them to compete, resort to violence or take sexual risks to demonstrate their "manliness". Taught to hide their fears and emotions, they may find it difficult to reveal their true feelings and concerns. Although such gender norms are often rigid and limiting, they are not static. Positive alternatives can be cultivated.- United Nations Population Fund - UNFPA.
Forester (Adscita statices), on willowherb. Holme Fen National Nature Reserve, Cambridgeshire. Thursday 14th July 2016.
There were quite a few of these pretty little irridescent green moths flying about amongst the willowherbs at Holme Fen on Thursday. ID is probable rather than definite; they seemed to be too large to be the otherwise very similar Cistus Forester (Adscita geryon), and as there aren't any nearby populations of Scarce Forester (Jordanita globulariae) I'm fairly confident it won't be that. This one is almost certainly a female - the males have really attractive feathery antennae, but it was a struggle to get any decent photos in the breeze.
The Forester is a UK Biodiversity Action Plan Priority Species, so it was nice to find a population at Holme Fen.
Forester Moth Adscita statices, Derbyshire july 2016. Many thanks to a very thoughtful and enlightened landowner who has fenced off a corner of his field to create a wildlife rich flower meadow. Quite a few of these and lots of other butterflies and other insects.
Here's another of Ella from the park the other week. I've already posted the one of her crazy static hair, but claimed that I could in fact focus on her face as well. :) Well, here it is! Have a great weekend everyone. I'm taking Ella to the Western Washington State Fair this weekend, so it should be a blast, with maybe some more cute pics.
PLEASE COMMENT IF YOU FAVORITE
"I put a shock in your system!"
Really love this photo, not just for the figure, (which is awesome), but just for the pose and the nostalgia. i fucking loved the static shock show when i was little, ans while it might not hold up as well as other dcau shows, i still love it, and static.
We had stopped at a static aircraft display in Summerside, PEI, and as impressive enough as this Argus Maritime Patrol Aircraft was, a short older fellow standing underneath it (and getting in the way of my photo), was even more so. It turned out he was a pilot who had flown the aircraft and enthusiastically shared a fascinating personal account. He told me about the crew of 15, the onboard bunks for rest breaks, the cabin furnace, kitchen complete with oven and coffee machine, the extended patrols lasting 18 hours or more without aerial refueling, 3600 kg loads consisting of bombs, mines, spare parts, and torpedoes. His typical flights would start out late on a Monday afternoon with a mission plan and he finally returned home after debriefing on Wednesday morning. They could fly 1000 miles out to sea, remain on task for eight hours, and return to base with enough fuel to divert for another 500 miles. The four 18 cylinder engines would tick over at just 1600 RPM at cruising speed.
After talking with him, the static display on a cloudless blue sky didn't really seem to do the image any justice. Consequently, with a little back and forth between my computer and an iPhone app, I came up with this composite.
Addendum: Since posting this, I found a newspaper clipping detailing the loss of one aircraft at Summerside. Apparently, they were returning for an emergency landing with one engine out. The weather was stormy with high winds, thunder and lightning, and as they came in, a gust lifted one wing, which dipped the other into a snowbank. They were headed right for the tower and school behind it when the pilot was able to turn enough to avoid it but crashed down the runway. Three crew perished but thirteen survived.