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I thought I would use the vignetting of this lens to creative advantage while photographing this bracket fungus growing on a dead tree along the Dowagiac River.
Photographed using a
Sony NEX-5N with the Sony 12.5-75mm f/1.8 TV zoom lens. The lens was at 75mm. I only croped in the horizontal direction.
Mumbai Weekend Shoots - a group of energetic and talented photographers. My first visit with them was to Maharashtra Nature Park.
This dried (probably dead) mushrooms caught my eyes... with sunlight peeping through the leaves above, the subject was looking interesting.
Shot in raw and post processed for exposure later. This deserves View On Black
Page one of the two page double elimination bracket we set up for the birthday Kubb tournament. I was a little worried at first that the whole brackets, teams, tournament, trophy thing was going to come off as a little excessive, but everyone seemed to really get into it.
In case you can't make out the team names (typos and shitty handwriting all mine):
* Kubbra La la la la la la la
* Kubbla Khan
* Kubblic Enemy
* Lords of Wood
* Kubra Kai
* Stanley Kubbrick
* Team Finland
* Nappy Headed Hos (oy)
Regular small pores on the underside at two magnifications (left). A vertical section along the pore axis (right). The pore spacing is around 300µm.
Finally, a use for my scrap metal pieces and screws jar. I'm always looking in there, and never finding The Screw I need. This time, I found 2 matched, shiny, perfect screws. The black ones I took out of the board wouldn't work, as they're very short, and counter sunk. I needed something long enough to go through the metal, then the counter sunk area, and then into the board.
Canon Speedlite 430EX II on a Stroboframe Quick Flip 350 flash bracket, connected to a Canon EOS Rebel T3i via a Vello TTL flash cord.
The antenna only weighs 4 pounds. The bracket weighs much more than that. Yup.
The support tube that came with the antenna doesn't fit very snug with the antenna, I'll probably add a little tape to it shim it up next time I'm up there.
I really, really don't get all the fuss about brackets, and how you use them to hold basketballs in college. Prints and other merchandise at www.zazzle.com/cartoonartprints*
A bracket that held the top of the gate to the lock walls. Lock 11 of the Illinois and Michigan Canal.
Polypores tend to have very tough, leathery or woody fruiting bodies. They are often plate-like and most grow out of tree trunks or rotting wood, although some may grow on soil. Some of these fungi are known as Bracket Fungi, because they look like shelves growing out of the sides of trees.
The pores are located on the underside of the fruiting body and as with the boletes, are lined with spores. Some of these fungi produce a new fruiting body every year, while others produce one which continues to grow year after year. These may reach a considerable size. They may also have visible rings on them which can be counted in a similar way to growth rings in wood.
4 of the 5 bracketed images, which were combined in Photomatix. Even on the most under-exposed image, the central section of the horizon is less clear than the section on the right
Named after the road of the same name, "équerre" is french for bracket. Bois de l'Équerre, Sainte-Rose (Laval), Quebec.