View allAll Photos Tagged TOOLS

The Electric Oscillating Tool - EOT is ideally suited for cutting softer, medium-density materials. The high oscillating frequency makes it possible to cut at high processing speeds for greater throughput.

Further details: www.zund.com/en/electric-oscillating-tool

All the right tools of an artificer lined up.

Playing around in the garage with my dads tools.

Tool Boxes

When you realize, that problem solving is the same for any system, I started in electrical and electronic Eng. Work in 3rd party computer maintenance. Then as I always had a PC from 8086 days,I pivoted to IT. Got paid badly, applied fault finding skills to fixing the cars. now I did a little Plumbing. I sometimes code in C++ for fun, need to learn Python.

Love photography, weird I the little P6000 seems to get more use that the way better DSLRs...

These are my tools, but hey, they're just tools...

 

Big, small, digital, film, instant, home made, all good tools, for different subjects...

 

--- Digital ---

Nikon D800, for pretty much everything

Nikon D200, soon to be converted in infra-red

Samsung WB2000, for parties or for exploring new places without all the heavy gear

LG VX-9600, when I have nothing else

 

--- Photo reportage ---

Nikon FE, because it's the best Nikon you can get per ounce

Leica M3, with a 50, for shooting on the street, HCBesque

Voigtlander Bessa L, for wider shots

 

--- Panoramic ---

Horizon 202, obvious, for paaaanooooraaaamaaaaas...

 

--- Instant ---

Polaroid 230, pure fun, people loves having a picture rightaway

 

--- Medium Format ---

Hasselblad 500c/m, my favourite medium format camera, shoot everything with it

Hasselblad 500c, backup

Hasselblad 500el/m, for indoors, because heavier

Yashica-A, lovely for outdoors portraits

Zeiss Ikon Nettar, bringing back the 1936 era pics

Agfa Cadet, the simplest way of shooting

Tower Model 7, better for long exposures cause of the tripod mount

Kodak Brownie Target Six-20, for 620 film

 

--- Historical Cameras ---

Kodak Brownie Flash Synchro, for shooting flashbulbs

Kodak Brownie Holiday Flash, very nice size on 127 film

Spartus Miniature, smaller size on 127 film

Kodak Instamatic X-15, for shooting magicubes

Kodak Tele-Disc, for disc film, I have to process C-41 myself for this one

Micro 110, for 110, pretty much useless resolution wise

 

--- Lomography ---

Lomo Smena 8M, I have learned a lot about light with this one, some pretty neat tricks you can do with this one

Vivitar Ultra Wide & Slim, for shooting from the hip !

Sunny disguised camera, to get closer

Rollei Black & White Disposable Camera, for pure fun

 

--- Large Format ---

Horseman 4x5, awesome for architecture, landscapes, and portraits, one of the best cameras out there

Graflex Speed Graphic, to shoot barrel lenses, as there is a focal place shutter

Dorothea, for Hi-Res landscapes

Hannah, experimental camera that makes collages right from the exposure

Anya, anamorphs a half sphere into a rectangle, spectacular

Berenice, for perspective corrected architecture shots

Merlin, for fun

Benedicte, to prove that creativity is more important than the camera to make interesting photos

I love old vintage tools.

NASA's SpaceX Crew-7 astronaut Jasmin Moghbeli in training at the tool lab at the Neutral Buoyancy Laboratory on Oct. 19, 2022. Credit: NASA/James Blair

und da fuhren echt grad die bullen vorbei. aber weil ich mit fettem stativ da war, sah das wahrscheinlich zu professionell aus, um illegal zu sein....!!!

make art, not war!

An old woodworking shed. It reminded me of my Poppa's shed with the lack of electric tools and home made storage solutions from found containers and scraps of wood.

I've often been told to look upon a good tool as an investment...

 

right to left

30/32mm spanner - for threaded headsets

15mm ratchet spanner - for track nuts

Cyclo pedal spanner - for, you guessed it, pedals

backnut tool - for holding the nut on chainset bolts

24mm spanner - for the campagnolo bottom bracket tool

 

If you wish to use this photo for your blog, etc that is fine. Please use an attribution of 'zzpza' and link back to this page. A comment here with a link to where you have used it would be nice too. :)

Olympus E-M10

Helios 44M-4

Tools of the trade.

colonial williamsburg, va

2 drawknives and a small axe kindly donated by Richard after hearing about my workshop fire. Also a tine from an old drag rake.

Display of tools at the Bale Grist Mill, Calistoga, California. The mill is one of only a couple of working wood-age "Evans" mills in the US.

Sometimes the best tools are just pieces of scrap from the bin. You use them once in a pinch and then they become fixtures in the shop. I use this bar all the time. It’s great for binder bolts, bridges, and front derailleur braze-ons like this one. On an unrelated note, happy new year everyone! #brazeon #flux #chapmancycles

.....can't stay away from metal!

 

Photo taken for the weekly challenge "Tools"

 

Fujica ST801 + Fujinon EBC 55mm f1.8 + Kodak UltraMax 400

The Heligan estate was originally bought by the Tremaynes in the 16th century, and earlier members of the family were responsible for Heligan House and the (still private) gardens that immediately surround it.[3]

 

However, the more extensive gardens now open to the public were largely the result of the efforts of four successive squires of Heligan. These were:[3][4]

 

Rev. Henry Hawkins Tremayne

John Hearle Tremayne, son of Henry Hawkins Tremayne

John Tremayne, son of John Hearle Tremayne

John Claude Lewis Tremayne, son of John Tremayne and better known as "Jack"

Two estate plans, dating from 1777 and sometime before 1810, show the changes wrought to the Heligan estate during Henry Hawkins' ownership. The first plan shows a predominantly parkland estate, with the site of today's Northern Gardens occupied by a field. The second plan shows the development of shelter belts of trees surrounding the gardens, and the main shape of the Northern Gardens, the Mellon Yard and the Flower Garden are all readily discernible.[5]

 

Henry Hawkins' descendants each made significant contributions to the development of the gardens, including the ornamental plantings along the estate's Long Drive, The Jungle, the hybridising of rhododendrons and their planting around Flora's Green, and the creation of the Italian Garden.[4]

 

Before the First World War, the garden required the services of 22 gardeners to maintain it, but that war lead to the deaths of 16 of those gardeners, and by 1916, the garden was being looked after by only eight men. By the 1920s, Jack Tremayne's love of Italy, which had earlier inspired the Italian Garden, led him to set up permanent home there, and lease out Heligan. The house was tenanted for most of the 20th century, used by the US Army during the Second World War, and then converted into flats and sold, without the gardens, in the 1970s. Against this background, the gardens fell into a serious state of neglect, and were lost to sight. wikipedia

12inch chocolate mud and ganache birthday cake with fondant tools, everything edible.

Taken at home in Salford Manchester.

I have been asked loads of times to do a shot of my cooking tools

This is a collection of Tools i have collected over the years as and when i needed them

this is just the stuff i use on a regular basis, I have a lot more.

 

dont' forget to share your collections!

Well known brands from Buck & Hickman Ltd.. Advertisement in The Ironmonger Diary and Hardware Buyers Guide 1961.

Tool shed with light painting in Columbia Missouri by Notley Hawkins Photography. Taken with a Canon EOS 5D Mark III camera with a TS-E17mm f/4L lens at f.8.0 with a 40 second exposure. Processed with Adobe Lightroom 5.7.

 

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www.notleyhawkins.com/

 

©Notley Hawkins

A gd workshop is as gd as the tools and equipments that it has.

Shot with DxO ONE

The cultivation of wine grapes relies on the hard work of people who toil in early morning, cold hours and in hot, bright conditions that keep those little grapes coddled in perfect conditions.

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