View allAll Photos Tagged Tether
Seen on Falconhigh's stand in the Master's Garden in St. Cross Hospital, Winchester during the Michelmas Fair. Black Barn Owls are very rare in the wild as when their dark feathers start to develop their parents, seeing something dark in the nest tend to mistake it for a rat and immediatly kill them. This one was hatched and reared in captivity.
You can compare the differences with the usual Barn owl at www.flickr.com/photos/catrionatv/32206696278
In the Philippines, the 6,000-year--old sport of cockfighting has been transformed into a fully-legal billion-dollar industry. Known locally as sabong, it takes place in 2,500 dedicated stadiums across the country and kills an estimated 30 million roosters a year.
Kayaks tethered to the pier at Lovers Reach of the Pieman River, for the pretty stroll up to Lovers Falls.
Corinna, west coast of Tasmania.
As much as my hobbies have me being connected to some form of technology 24/7, I've never been the type of person to have to check Instagram or post to Facebook all day long. However -- and I'm not sure if it's because I've been obsessed with blogging or because I got the iPhone 6 recently -- I'm constantly feeling the need to be on my phone for whatever reason, when in fact there's no reason for it at all. And frankly, I'm not okay with it. So that's where this photo comes into play. My love for photography started with my passion to need to be outside and be close to nature and just disconnect. I love just wondering through the woods (even if it is 97 degrees) by myself and letting my imagination do it's own thing. Kind of like my own personal secret garden, but really just some trees and way too many mosquitoes.
Encadeado á vida por un fío invisible, todavía lembro todo pero quizáis fose mellor esquecer. Ó final hei cruza-la mesma porta.
Os meus pasos han se-los teus, os corazóns o mesmo sentir, a dor ha desaparecer cando xa non estea aquí. Hei marchar cando non haxa sitio para min.
Hei ensucia-los pés nesta terra, pero darán igual os meus pecados, terei a eternidade para purgalos unha vez cruce a mesma porta.
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Chained to life by an invisible thread, I still remember it all but maybe forgetting would be better. In the end I'll cross the same door.
My steps will be yours, hearts the same feeling, pain will disappear when I'm no longer here, I will leave when there's no place for me.
I will get my feet dirty on this soil, but my sins won't matter, I'll have all of eternity to purge them once I cross the same door.
Evening sun filtering through the trees at Morgan Creek Park, Cedar Rapids.
Aerial Pano, pictures taken using a tethered quadcopter and Ricoh GR camera.
File: Morgan 14124-27_tm.jpg
Body paint and pigment on Wally De Backer, 183 x 50 cm approx.
Photography by Miles Standish
Read about the project here:
King Chapel on the Cornell College campus stands on the top of a hill in Mount Vernon Iowa and was constructed in 1882.
Photos for this this black and white infrared aerial panorama were taken using an autonomous tethered quadcopter (see flickr TetherQuad Album).
File: Pano 0229-237 post tm_bw No Tower 16x9 b.jpg
Body paint and pigment on Wally De Backer, 183 x 50 cm approx.
Photography by Miles Standish
Read about the project here:
The tug Jupiter with ropes, at Penn's Landing across from Pier 3 on the Delaware River in Philadelphia.
Body paint and pigment on Wally De Backer, 183 x 50 cm approx.
Photography by Miles Standish
Read about the project here:
Rental dinghies tethered in rows. This was taken on a particularly smoggy day in Hong Kong. The grain that somehow came from the processing helps to convey the conditions at the time.
I am mystified by the grain, all the Kodak BW 400 CN I have had processed before this film did not suffer from grain like this.
Taken with a Konica Auto S3.
Mr. Pingstone built his own lathe and milling machine to produce this engine.
The engine measures 10 inches high, 9 inches wide, and 5 inches long including the flywheel. With a bore of 32mm and a stroke of 37mm this 29.75cc (1.8 cu in) engine burns gasoline on spark ignition. It utilizes a pressurized dry-sump lubrication system, a pressurized fuel system, and Mr. Pingstone’s custom designed gear-driven over head cam. He fabricated all of the parts including the castings for the crankcase and gear box and machined everything else from bar stock. The head (as well as the cylinder) is machined from solid cast iron with 3/4 inch ports and manganese valves measuring 7/8 inch in diameter. The valves are set at 45 degrees, each captured by two springs and retained with split collets.
Then the engine was sent to Edgar T. Westbury in 1933 for his analysis and comments which were later published in The Model Engineer and Practical Electrician in March of 1934. After the engine was returned to Mr. Pingstone he made several modifications to the cylinder and head, and fabricated a new carburetor before mounting it into his tether boat. Housed within the boat is the split fuel/oil tank each with its respective inline filter, as well as a pull starter and an electric switch to turn off the ignition.
See More Model Boat Engines at: www.flickr.com/photos/15794235@N06/sets/72157641089388694/
See More 1-Cylinder Engines at: www.flickr.com/photos/15794235@N06/albums/72157656174064422
See Our Model Engine Collection at: www.flickr.com/photos/15794235@N06/sets/72157602933346098/
Visit Our Photo Sets at: www.flickr.com/photos/15794235@N06/sets
Courtesy of Rod and Elsie Pingstone
Paul and Paula Knapp
Miniature Engineering Museum
Sujal leaves the safety of line and goes rogue. He reaches the end of his tether.
website: mojo-photography
blog: mojo-photo
twitter: SimianRainbow
With one of the cheapest data in the world, it is not surprising to see everyone glued to their phone.
-- Wirgin Edixa Reflex II Camera, or Edixa Reflex (unmarked) A -- (S/N 89xxx) -- 1954-1959
-- ISCO-GÖTTINGEN WESTANAR 1:2.8/50 (S/N 379xxx)
-- Waist-level finder
Body weight = 717g (with finder)
Taken with a Canon T2i/550D and Canon 100mm f/2.8 Macro lens at f/5.6. 65 1/30-second exposures at ISO100 in a focus stack (DoF stack) were combined with Zerene Stacker using DMap mode. Shooting was done tethered to a PC using the Canon EOS utility. Focus stepping was done by pressing the live view ">" focus button once between each exposure in the stack.