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During the Thursday night Envoy event during Photocon this year the band HeartSpace performed to give folks a chance to practice concert photography.
Today's adjustment turned on the light at the end of the tunnel. I got a powerchain on top which means we're in the home stretch. Also had another pan xray taken which the orthodontist seemed very pleased with. Although I don't share his enthusiasm, I do trust he knows what he's doing and I'd be lying if I said his confidence didn't rub off a little. I've been wearing these torture devices for 1.5 years now and they couldn't come off soon enough.
Unfortunately, today was apparently de-bracing day at the ortho's office and I was the only one without an invite. There was a big popcorn machine and a table full of goodies for the lucky ones. I walked out of the office sans popcorn, but with not only one, but three scheduled appointments. Powerchains appear to be high-maintenance !
I am very much looking forward to the day all of this is over and happy to know I'm almost there !
businessman adjusting tie - Cropped image of a businessman adjusting tie, MUA: Thao Nguyen, Clothing Stylist: Tanya Rudolpho. To Download this image without watermarks for Free, visit: www.sourcepics.com/free-stock-photography/24723869-busine...
Lo skateboarding è uno sport nato in California negli anni '50 ed arrivò in Italia verso il 1977.
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Images of sewing, embroidery and quilting projects made with BERNINA accessories. For more information please visit www.bernina.com
Paratroopers assigned to Company A, 2nd Battalion, 503rd Infantry Regiment, 173rd Airborne Brigade, adjust communications equipment, May 15, at Vaziani Training Area during Exercise Noble Partner. The exercise is happening May 11 to 26 and includes approximately 1300 participants from the U.S., Georgia and the U.K. The exercise is a reoccurring training event that takes place at Vaziani Training Area, Georgia. Noble Partner 16 is a critical part of Georgia's training for its contribution of a light infantry company to the NATO Response Force (NRF) and enhances Georgian territorial self-defense capability. (Photo by Sgt. Daniel Cole, U.S. Army Europe Public Affairs)
...i can't wait to steam all the wrinkles out. it's the best part.
the zipper on this bodice was absolute. hell. i don't really know why. for every finished costume i've sewn about 12 zippers; you think there'd be a learning curve. nope. i'm just not paying attention EVERY DAMN time.
businessman adjusting sunglasses - Portrait of a businessman adjusting sunglasses over white background. Model: Nathaniel Stevenson. To Download this image without watermarks for Free, visit: www.sourcepics.com/free-stock-photography/24715463-busine...
Copyright 2012 C. Michael McCall / Mike McCall Photography.
St. Patrick's Rugby Tournament, Daffin Park, Savannah, Georgia.
Previous: Decoding the raw files
The goal at this stage is to stretch the histogram as wide as possible across the the available dynamic range of the output image. For this picture, the value of 1.2 does it; I simply go ahead and type it into the Exposure Value box. Alternatively, I could slide the slider, but I am used enough to the EV numbers that I can just dial the approximate number right away, and then adjust it with a couple clicks on either side of the slider, if it is not right — that saves me mouse travel.
If you don't know right away how much to adjust the exposure value, move the slider to the right until the image becomes overxposed (the second line from the bottom, now showing 0.0% will show a non-zero number), and the bright spots on the image will start looking awful. Then step back until the number becomes zero again. Then, look at the histogram and if it has a sharp spike at the bright edge, step back some more. Too many pixels aggregating at the bright edge, even though not technically overexposed, will make the picture look bland. Keep moving away from the threshold of overexposure until the histogram tapers off smoothly, as the blue histogram does in the above image. That is not always possible, but a properly exposed image should allow you to do shape the histogram this way.
Did I tell you to enable the histogram view while taking the pictures? This is the reason why. This is how the histogram should have looked in the camera while the picture was taken, but I was almost facing the sun when I took it and could not see it too well. Another bit of advice following from this:
- have a piece of dark fabric to throw over your head when the ambient light is too bright
And something I came to take for granted:
- use the lens hood
This picture came out reasonably well in part because the camera had the lens hood on it. Without it, shooting at such a close angle to the sun would produce unsightly reflexes. I never take the hood off, by the way. It improves contrast in any light (if only a bit), and it protects the lens from bumping into things; I have never had to wipe my fingerprints from this lens because the hood eliminates the possibility of accidental contact.
The procedure for normalising the highlights I just described is likely to affect the darks. So, once satisfied with the highlights (in this case, in the sky), check the bottom of the range by pushing the Indicate button in the underexposed values row. What do we see here? It's looking pretty good. The only severely underexposed area is the shadow under the car, which is not important. That spot can be as dark as a black hole, for all I care. There is also an insignificant number of underexposed values elsewhere in the image — 0.7% including the shadow under the car; that's close to nothing, so whe can move on to the next stage.
The image still does not look right. The highlights in the sky are fine, but the mountain looks as if it was painted in ink. The darks are darker than they should be. That is because the standard gamma curve, which would work well with a picture shot in the daylight, is too shallow to reproduce the sunset lighting correctly.
I made these reversible, adjustable headbands from my daughter. It makes me sad to watch her grow out of things I make for her, so I made these using hardware from a bra strap, so they can be adjusted. They'll grow with her!
On a very warm June afternoon, residents of Plainfield, a southwest suburb of Chicago, and surrounding locales joined together for a short march to celebrate Juneteenth and to raise their collective voice against what they perceived as racial injustice. The march began at Plainfield Central High School and tracked near the downtown area before gathering in Settlers Park next to the village hall. Once there, the remaining hour was spent in listening and reflection upon the words of people from the community, a religious leader, and local musicians. According to my best estimate, well over 300 people showed up, many with their families and young children.
Plainfield, Illinois, USA
Intermediate volunteer needed ||| Please keep in RGB, do not convert to grayscale. Let staff adjust color/contrast and/or submit two versions so that we can unify this very large series.
DeepTow photo of a fissure at the tip of the Galapagos 95.5 W propagating rift. Depth approx 3000 m.
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Day 87, Sunday, March 28th, 2021
Adjusting the Base
Maybe because we were out walking around for a couple of hours, Anna woke up Sunday morning with pretty bad back pain again. She was having trouble standing up from a seated position and couldn’t bend her back at all. Poor baby. Her relatively new Level Sleep bed has an adjustable base so I put in the Zero Gravity position to see if would provide some relief when she went to bed. It did help a little. But honestly the bed is just too firm. It has a full one year trial period so I contacted them Monday to see about returning it. They are sending a free mattress topper to see if that helps and if not, we can still return or exchange it. I’m impressed! I ended up keeping Anna home Monday and we got in to see Dr. Katie, Anna’s PT. She was able to work on Anna’s back to get the spasm to relax.