View allAll Photos Tagged bracketing
Need a little help with an identification for this fella! Pretty impressive in size, about the size of your average mans head! Very impressive stripped fringing as well, come on you fungus folk, tell me what it is? :)
Brackets are punctuation marks used in pairs to set apart or interject text within other text.
The shape of the covers follows the pattern or the shape of the pattern is given by the covers?
This is an experiment with the shape of my notebooks between form, functionality and aesthetics.
Aesthetics is commonly known as the study of sensory or sensori-emotional values, sometimes called judgments of sentiment and taste. So everything you can write in this notebook -your thoughts, sentiments, feelings or judgments -can be part of the same experiment in interrelation with the form and functionality of the (brackets) notebook.
The covers are made with the same materials, treatment and size than my previous notebooks.
Find me on Etsy: bastiano.etsy.com
Bracket fungus. 24 October 2017. Warren Farm, Ealing, London, England, UK.
Please contact me to arrange the use of any of my images. They are copyright, all rights reserved.
Switzerland
1980
The brainchild of Assos founder, Toni Maier Moussa, this cup-and-cone type bottom bracket came with Assos crank sets. Designed to allow for side-to-side chain-line adjustment, the cups, lock rings and dust shield are all made of lightweight alloy. Even the crank bolts were through-drilled to save weight.
A "cold shoe" flash bracket engineered in our very own FPP Sudio!
Bracket mount will fit perfectly atop your folding Polaroid Land “pack” camera. The PC cord from the flash fits into the PC socket of your camera allowing the use of the Vivitar 252 or other electronic flashs (with a PC cord).
Image © Michael Raso / Film Photography Project
What is FPP?
The Film Photography Project seeks to inform, engage and inspire amateur and professional photographers working in the traditional film medium. Launched by FPP founder Michael Raso in 2009, FPP provides a forum for photographers from around the globe to share their creative output, challenges and product reviews, while promoting the viability of vintage cameras and film through frequent give-aways and exchange programs. In addition to the Film Photography Podcast Internet Radio Show, the Film Photography Project network of imprints includes the FPP Flickr Page, YouTube Channel, Facebook Group, Twitter Account, newsletter and the Film Photography Project Store.
Film Photography Pod Cast www.filmphotographypodcast.com/
Eclectic elements combine to create a charming entry. A decorative bracket and column support a full height entry. Decorated verge boards, classic trim, and shingle siding make assigning a "style" difficult.
Picture taken in Wollaton Park during the Autumn 2011.
Wollaton Park is a 500 acre historic deer park situated three miles west of Nottingham's city centre. At the heart of the park, standing on a natural hill, is Wollaton Hall. The Hall is a spectacular Elizabethan mansion designed by Robert Smythson and built by Sir Francis Willoughby between 1580 and 1588. Close to the Hall are the Formal Gardens. Within these is The Camellia House the oldest cast iron glasshouse in Europe. In the Park herds of Red and Fallow Deer roam.
For more information please visit:
www.mynottingham.gov.uk/index.aspx?articleid=1037
Chris
Very old bracket fungus on a very old tree, in the woods at Sheringham, North Norfolk. Dairy Milk Chocolate?
The brackets were painted several times. One will be set aside to use in the display. The other 19 will be restored and placed back on the building.
One of many machine mounts on the wash floor of the old Centennial Mill. The mill processed copper-bearing rock from the Centennial Mine by a series of mechanical processes: stamps, vibrating tables, rotating wash boards, and so on. Today, only the overgrown cement floor is left.
If you like my photos, please visit my photo store: David Clark Photography, or check out Cliffs and Ruins, my photo blog, for photos and stories from my explorations.
© David Clark, all rights reserved.
The Impact umbrella bracket (and the other copies) has a fatal flaw in it's design-- their tightening nob is in line with the tilt head, and the nob is is taller than the top of the bracket, so that mounting anything bigger than the the diameter of the bracket will have the same problem, it can not be tight down. Instead of modify it, I replace it with the Manfretto metal one.
Cool thing about the Manfretto bracket is that it's male stud has a hole in it, and the top tightening handle bar can be used to mount the stud into places very securely. But there's a problem with the placement of that stud hole. Looking through the handle bar hole, I can see half the stud hole showing, making me think twice before cranking the handle bar really tight.
To solve the problem, I made a new mounting stud myself. Using a 1/4 steel pipe, I drill a hole at a lower position, and tap and install a 3/8 stud on top.
Higher above the horizon above the murk and moisture. || Photo info: Taken 2020-04-07 with Canon EOS 5D Mark IV, EF100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM +1.4x III, ¹⁄₁₀₀ sec at f/8.0, focal length 560 mm, ISO ISO 200. Copyright 2020 .
A bracket fungus at the Mercer Slough Nature Trail in Bellevue, Washington, USA.
I have tentatively identified this as Trametes versicolor based on comparing it to other flickr fungi, but I am very likely wrong.
Bolts on to the two 1"BSF chassis attached towing brackets to give one central tow point and to spread any stresses. The bolts are long and have spacer collars which I have put under the bolt heads as i didn't need it further away from the panels as I had already put extensions in each of the towing brackets.
This picture shows the new antenna bracket with the mast inserted, along with my BAL leveler strapped to the backside of my spare tire, and my blue tanks strapped to my battery box. I'm trying to take the advice of keeping the outside stuff outside as much as possible.
2013 365/243
Quick trip to Lydford Gorge today. As son as I saw these fungi, I knew they'd be my 365.
Towing bracket "removed" from Stewarts ERF - It was the incorrect bracket, and "held on" with inadequate and incorrect bolts - note 3 of the 6 have bent following a short "straight Bar" journey.