View allAll Photos Tagged bracketing
Wall bracket to suit almost any application. Constructed from 40 x 40 x 5mm angle iron and totally seam welded.
This is not my picture! Apologies to whomever took it but imitation is the sincerest form of flattery. This is the bracket shape that I needed to make...
A pored bracket fungus, on dead wood. Clarkesdale, Victoria .
This one appears to have a second fungus. Possibly Pycnoporus coccineus
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Kiev-4 rangefinder with Jupiter 8M 50mm f2 lens. Ilford HP5 Plus developed in RO9 One Shot at 1+25, 7 minutes at 20ºC.
|| Photo info: Taken 2022-05-07 with Canon EOS 5D Mark IV, EF24-70mm f/2.8L II USM, 1/640 sec at f/4.5, focal length 24 mm, ISO ISO 400. Copyright 2022 .
A bracket of welded construction suitable for light aerials and short stand-off of 3" mast to wall clearance.
Fomes fomentarius (commonly known as the tinder fungus or hoof fungus) on a beech tree. Taken at Hafod Mansion Ceredigion. The beech tree these were on were reputed to have been planted by Thomas Johnes.
3 in-camera exposure bracket HDR (+-2EV)
EXIF:
Nikon D5000
AF Fisheye NIKKOR 10.5mm 2.8G ED lens
ISO-200
F/8
Various Shutter Speeds (Hand-held)
Photo and editing by Cary Jordan
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Amusing graffiti on heavy duty metal bracket in Soap Yard.
_MX38430sx
All Rights Reserved © 2022 Frederick Roll
Please do not use this image without prior permission
Bottom bracket area. Can you see the ripple effect on the seat tube? This is my biggest disappointment about this particular finish.
This clock was made in around 1890 by Lenzkirch, an Austrian company. It's a reproduction of an 18th Century bracket clock and was passed down from Trev's grandmother. With a bit of playing around, it still chimes, but isn't very accurate!
I found this Victorian oil lamp bracket in an old building. As much as I wanted to claim it as a souvenir, I left behind with the dust and cobwebs.
The lamp bracket came from the Meadows Lamp gallery, who consider it to be from 1848.
www.yelp.co.uk/biz/the-meadows-lamp-gallery-edinburgh
The embossed pattern in the background is a sample piece of a Lincrusta design known as Cleopatra RD1962.
www.lincrusta.com/TheLincrustaCollection_Product.Asp?Coll...
As can be seen there's quite a good match between the both the shapes and sizes of the Lincrusta wallpaper & the silver plated wrought brass scrolls and whorls of the lamp bracket. Is this just a coincidence, or are both derived from a common source, or perhaps even was the bracket designed to fit the Lincrusta "Cleopatra" design?
Original: DSC02965_1CX