View allAll Photos Tagged brackets
Calero County Park, near San Jose, California. || Photo info: Taken 2021-04-25 with Canon EOS 5D Mark IV, EF24-70mm f/2.8L II USM, ¹⁄₁₆₀ sec at f/7.1, focal length 24 mm, ISO 250. Copyright 2021.
9shooter camera bracket for connecting DSLR stills camera and hd video camera, for shooting stills and video at the same time.
Ischnoderma resinosum. Not 100% sure of ID. Don't think I've seen one like this before, though I've been giving brackets a wide berth as they can be quite tricky to ID. Probably on beech
Coisas estranhas / Strange things
@ josé ricardo 2 : obrigada, Doc, pela informação!
Fui procurar no Wikipedia: "Bracket fungi, or shelf fungi, are fungi, notable for bearing fruiting bodies (conk) as or in a "bracket": a grouping of individual mushroom caps that lie in a close planar grouping of separate or interconnected horizontal rows. Brackets can range from only a single row of a few caps, to dozens of rows of caps that can weigh several hundred pounds. These are mainly found on trees, in the forest, and can often look like mushrooms. They look like mold, with muddy coloring.
They are typically tough and sturdy and produce their spores on the tubes of the undersurface.
The term classically was reserved for polypores, however molecular studies have revealed some odd relationships. The beefsteak fungus, a well known bracket fungus, is actually a member of the agarics. Most, however, are still in the Polyporales. Other examples of bracket fungi include the sulphur shelf, birch bracket, dryad's saddle and turkey tail."
Fomitopsis betulina (previously Piptoporus betulinus), commonly known as the birch bracket or razor strop, is a common bracket fungus. As the name suggests, it grows almost exclusively on birch trees. The brackets burst out from the bark of the tree, and these fruit bodies can last for more than a year.
Fomitopsis betulina has been widely used in traditional medicines. Agaric acid found in the fruit body of the fungus, is poisonous to the parasitic whipworm Trichuris trichiura. The fungus was carried by "Ötzi the Iceman", the 5,300 year old mummy found in Tyrol, with speculation that the fungus may have been used as a laxative to expel whipworm.
Order: Polyporales
Family: Fomitopsidaceae
Genus: Fomitopsis
Species:Fomitopsis betulina
Common Names: Birch Bracket, Razor Strop
I loved the balanced design of this flash bracket after I saw it on "metropolicity"'s flickr page. I agree with him...it's awesome.
Nikon D300 with MB-D10 grip
Nikon 17-55 f2.8
"Custom Brackets" Mini-RC bracket
Nikon SC-17 TTL cord
Nikon SB-800 flash
All in all, 6lbs, 9oz.
This huge (about 3 feet diameter) bracket fungus appeared on a dead mango tree behind our house. One day, I noticed that it was "smoking" and took this photo. It appears that spores are being released.
Mount that trap table, cowbell, woodblock, or whatever your heart desires on our new accessory arm! When it’s time to pack up, this entire kit nests and fits in one 18” drum case. Check out the sweet Elite Protechtor version with wheels and detachable handle! 7x10, 9⅛x14, 15x18, 4½x14; plied maple; semi-gloss wax.
Went a bit of a fungus expedition near Pickering, came up with quite a collection. All on the Nikon D3 where the ISO versatility helps in the rather dark condityions and the trust5 manual 55mm f3.5 Ai Nikkor
Made by Nottingham Artist Blacksmith, Adrian Stapleton, this is a close up of the brackets featuring a lily made to support the hand rail in the next picture.
Saw Alexander Micek's 2G shuffle hack and thought I would try my own. The shuffle won't clip directly onto my Sony noise canceling headphones (MDR-NC50), so I needed to create a bracket to do the job. The end product works okay; the iPod is a little loose on the bracket, but it's good enough for long flights. This was a quick and dirty job, but my local hardware store has some thin stainless steel bands that might clean this hack up. Enjoy, DS
I use a flash bracket from Really Right Stuff (RRS) to keep the flash above my camera in portrait and landscape setting.
I was using the zoom bracket mode where it takes 3 pics at once...but slightly different zoom ranges. The images are smaller too. I think about 3meg.
My homemade twin flash bracket set for portrait orientation.
It is strong, fairly adjustable, and can do both landscape and portrait orientations.
Brackets on a bracket space must be in demand.
Pennington Flash has had some good fungi coming up this year and it's still there if you look.
Another cluster of bracket fungi. This is a a different type, for the brackets are smaller and more concentrated. Notes about bracket fungi appear in previous captions. (Uncle Tan's Wildlife Adventures, Kinabatangan River, Sabah, East Malaysia, Nov. 2013)