View allAll Photos Tagged Tether

Located at Oceanside Gay Beach.

Taken at a falconry experience event. Great experience but photographing birds in flight - event tame ones on tethers is definitely challenging

Vivitar Ultra Wide & Slim ~ Kodak EliteChrome 400 (cross-processed)

 

A marvellous dual-purpose day out in London... starting off with a flickrwalk around the streets of Southwark, following the Tate's Street Art trail, and flickr-sponsored drinks and food (thank you *so* much squirrelmonkey for organising such a great event - it was wonderful to meet so many other flickrrs!), followed by Massive Attack's opening night gig at the Meltdown Festival.

 

See where this picture was taken. [?]

Setup picture... 3 flashes, 3 light modifiers, tethered shooting setup w/pocket wizard triggers.

 

Learn how to light at Strobist.

a massive limb broken off a dead tree on the cliff that'd been caught in another tree as it drifted away. i freed it & tried steering it around the corner with the canoe but it was too huge to be able to wrestle it fully outta the current so i gave up & went to make coffee.

returning to the shore for a chore later, i found it'd gotten caught in the eddy along the north shore & was more or less stuck on some rocks right where i'd wanted to push it to with the boat. got in there & hauled it close enough to be able to tie it off so it'll still be there for dismemberment tomorrow into a week's worth of firewood.

Jingster, one day your dream of cross processing will come true...

Moss showing cell walls and chloroplasts, 40x, DIC, HF B

This was some kind of radio tower that I shot at an awkward angle out the driver's side window of my car.

 

The darkness in the right side of the image is really the interior roof of my car.

 

I was surprised at how it turned out since the whole image looks as if it was taken from outer space.

 

This was not my intention when I captured this photo and that's why experimentation can be so rewarding.

 

I did add some nonsense, of course.

 

Reid Wiseman handing me a tether hook.

 

Credits: ESA/NASA

 

256A7914

Pentax ME Super

SMC Pentax-M 50mm f/1.4

Fujicolor C200, redscaled and shot at ASA/ISO 12

Home Developed in Unicolor/Argentix

Scanned with Pakon F135

"If only I weren't tethered by this oppressive leash, I would hunt me one of them yonder fat ducks for dinner. Oh, but Alas! Instead, I am forced to watch from afar and savor nothing else but the bitter taste of impotence and indignation as the webbed-footed ones openly mock and ridicule me in their fluffy, irridescent-feathered arrogance..."

 

--Excerpted from Lucy the Dog's MySpace Blog, February 2008

Our little Pomeranian Roscoe, ready to bolt at any minute!

Mamiya 6MF, Ektachrome E100SW, digitised by photographing the original 60mm transparency on a light pad; tethered capture in Lightroom.

 

"The North Ronaldsay or Orkney is a breed of sheep from North Ronaldsay, the northernmost island of Orkney, off the north coast of Scotland. It belongs to the Northern European short-tailed sheep group of breeds, and has evolved without much cross-breeding with modern breeds.

 

The semi-feral flock on North Ronaldsay is the original flock that evolved to subsist almost entirely on seaweed – apart from the marine iguana, native to the Galapagos Islands, it is the only land animal known to have such a diet. They are confined to the foreshore by a 1.8m drystane dyke, which completely encircles the island, forcing the sheep to evolve this unusual characteristic. The wall was built in 1832 as kelping (the production of soda ash from seaweed) on the shore became uneconomical. Sheep were confined to the shore to protect the fields and crofts inside, and afterwards subsisted largely on seaweed." (Wikipedia)

 

Also in the photo. is the Dennis Head Old Beacon.

 

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Ronaldsay_sheep

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_Ronaldsay

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orkney

de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orkney

16 x 20, acrylic on canvas. (sold)

 

for the All Girl Show at Twilight Artist Collective, west seattle junction location

opening reception: thurs july 10th, 6-9 pm

United States Army Bell AH-1F Cobra 'Gunships' of the Texas National Guard tied and tethered out on the ramp on a damp and dull Austin day back in November of 1998

 

There were 21 x AH-1's there that day - five of which were being robbed for spares along with 5 x OH-58 Kiowa's, 6 x UH-60 Blackhawk's and a C-23 Sherpa!

 

Back then I'd simply chanced upon this unit, proferred my passport and asked nicely at the reception desk if I could have a look around. One of their very hospitable officers very kindly obliged and chaperoned me around the flight line.

 

Imagine that happening now!

 

Scanned Kodak 35mm Transparency

  

At long last ive tethered my Ipad to the 5D.

I've used a USB cable to an Ipad usb converter gizmo.

It is possible to do it cordless via wifi but you must have a computer online in the same house.

Unfortunately I dont at my little house, but will take the laptop round at some point!

<a href="http://www.amazon.com/Vanguard-Multi-Mount-Horizontal-Mounting-

The hoodoos just right of center are linked by a cap of dolomite, a more resistant rock. From Sunset Point, Bryce Canyon.

1930's style spindizzy! All the chrome parts here are official - nothing is custom or painted!

vintage Radior, a company that existed between 1926 and 1955. I first put Solex as that has become more or less a generic term but then I looked more closely.

 

The lamb had been busy suckling when its Mum suddenly moved. He seemed somewhat surprised - until, that is, he realised she was "tooth-tethered" to the lush grass and was only a couple of lengths away.

 

Bleating his disapproval, the lamb trotted after his Mum and within seconds was once again enjoying his afternoon tea...!

 

Mum, in the meantime, carried on munching on that lovely grass...!

  

Thanks so much for the very kind and encouraging comments beneath this photo...! Your support is very greatly appreciated.

For Diego, Flickr's first spacewalker...

 

On June 3, 1965 Edward H. White II became the first American to step outside his spacecraft and let go, effectively setting himself adrift in the zero gravity of space. For 23 minutes White floated and maneuvered himself around the Gemini spacecraft while logging 6500 miles during his orbital stroll. White was attached to the spacecraft by a 25 foot umbilical line and a 23-ft. tether line, both wrapped in gold tape to form one cord. In his right hand White carries a Hand Held Self Maneuvering Unit (HHSMU) which is used to move about the weightless environment of space. The visor of his helmet is gold plated to protect him from the unfiltered rays of the sun.

 

From the Great Images Collection at NASA

[PD] This picture is in the public domain

Whitehaven , Cumbria , UK .

Not sure if I overcooked the processing on this one. It's not HDR, just a single shot with Fuji Acros Neopan

Part of the Seaside Expo. on the south bank of the River Thames.

1 2 ••• 8 9 11 13 14 ••• 79 80