View allAll Photos Tagged calculations,
Mount Kangchenjunga or Khangchendzonga with an elevation of 8,586 meter (28,169 feet) is the third highest mountain of the world. It is called Five Treasures of Snow after its five high peaks.The Tibetan words are: Kang (Snow) chen (Big) dzö (Treasury) nga (Five).
The main peak of Khangchendzonga is the second highest mountain in Nepal after Mount Everest. Three of the five peaks – Main, Central and South – are on the border between North Sikkim and Nepal.Two peaks are in the Taplejung District, Nepal.
Until 1852, Khangchendzonga was assumed to be the highest mountain in the world, but calculations based on various readings and measurements made by the Great Trigonometrical Survey of India in 1849 came to the conclusion that Mount Everest, known as Peak XV at the time, was the highest. Allowing for further verification of all calculations, it was officially announced in 1856 that Khangchendzonga is the third highest mountain.
It is widely regarded as the guardian deity of Sikkim.
The Krakow Meridian is the first Polish Prime Meridian and one of the oldest such meridians in the world. It is 300 years older than the Paris Meridian and 500 years older than the famous Prime Meridian in Greenwich, London. The Krakow Meridian known since the end of the 14th century, and first used in 1379 by the court physician and astrologer Herman of Przeworsk, to calculate the tables of divisions of heavenly bodies in the 14th and 15th centuries it was widely used as the fundamental meridian, including by Nicolaus Copernicus in his "On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres" from 1543, in which all the astronomical calculations were made for the Krakow Meridian.
The exact measurement of the value and the course of the Krakow meridian was performed by Stanislaw Pudłowski, who in 1642 - as the first in the history of science - formulated the concept of a natural unit of length, defined by the length of a free-swinging seconds pendulum. After his death this idea was developed by Titi Livio Burattini in his work "Universal Measure" of 1675, calling this unit - for the first time - the METRE.
Going back a bit to being in school - found the old "Clic" eraser and a mechanical pencil as well as my engineering graphing paper. These were my tools through my engineering education!
As I said before: No-one wants to see an Orc Rover.
These marvels of engineering don't steer at all, but rely on precise calculations of where to go, and thorough knowledge of the lay of the land.
As engineers don't like it when you hit reverse and come clambering back, because the path isn't as clear as they said, the drivers attached big sawblades to shred anything in their way, fromm trees to houses to rocks and small mountains.
In the rare chance of miscal..cu... no, that doesn't happen. If you've changed your mind en route, the tail in the back allows for a bit of steering. You ram the tip in the ground and force the rover in a curve - but as leaving holes in the ground os frowned upon, you only use that as a last resort.
Toy Project Day 2755
“Bears, it turns out, are a lot like humans. They form alliances with strangers, they make calculations about relative costs and benefits, they lay down rules and punish those who break them. They trade based on a clear system of reciprocity. They communicate using equal parts emotion, intention, and dependence on context-a combination that is essential for communication between strangers and in fact forms the basis for language.”
~ Benjamin Kilham, In the Company of Bears: What Black Bears Have Taught Me about Intelligence and Intuition ~
ttps://freshair.photography
Contact Trial Test 1
Interplanetary Travel
By the time this image reaches your hands, I will have traveled a long way in outer space. According to my calculations, 26 days will have passed according to world time. I'm on my way to the target planet. During the trip, I also get the opportunity to observe nearby planets. The next photo, I think, will be published a few days after the first photo. I will continue to give you information from my interplanetary travel. Stay tuned...
Youtube: 4K | Plutonia - Interplanetary Travel (Tunisia 🇹🇳)
"4K" Road Trip in Tunisia - Visiting Tunisia "2019"
Camera: Canon EOS Kiss X7i
Photograph by Yusuf Alioglu
Location: Outer space (space)
A lot of bushfire smoke about this morning., from bushfires burning in Victoria.
At sunrise it produced an intense red colour.
In this shot I decided to turn it in to a BW shot with an oddly named function called 'Calculations' in Photoshop
I have enough subject in Kobe life. However actually I can’t keep my schedule to take photo i imaged due to priority is eating…
After I felt something a sense of immorality, I’ve realized I can not make a miracle by calculation.
神戸に住んでると、被写体には困らない。だけど食欲に負け、スケジュール押して、イメージの写真が撮れない事がある。それを何やら背徳感に思った事もあるのですが、結局、奇跡のショットは計算では生まれない。
#神戸の空と海
#秋の空
#須磨の海
#sumabeach
Titel frei nach:
The Lion Sleeps Tonight ist der Titel eines von mehreren Interpreten zum Millionenseller gebrachten Lieds, das im Jahre 1939 vom Südafrikaner Solomon Linda komponiert und im selben Jahr von Solomon Linda’s Original Evening Birds als Mbube gesungen wurde. Quelle Wikipedia
Title based on
The Lion Sleeps Tonight is the title of a song by several artists to the million-seller, was composed in 1939 by South African Solomon Linda and in the same year of Solomon Linda's original evening birds as Mbube Sung. Source Wikipedia
________________________________________________
Matadi ist der Name des Angola Löwen Im Zoo Leipzig, Germany
und
Matadi ist die Hauptstadt der Provinz Bas-Congo, die Einwohnerzahl beträgt nach aktuellen Berechnungen 291.338 (2010) Die Stadt liegt am linken Ufer des Kongo, etwa auf halber Strecke zwischen dem Atlantik und der Hauptstadt des Kongo Kinshasa. Der Kongo ist bis zu dieser Stelle landeinwärts schiffbar, die Grenze zu Angola liegt etwas südlich der Stadt. Quelle Wikipedia
________________________________________________
Matadi is the name of the Angola lion in the Zoo Leipzig, Germany
and
Matadi is the capital of the province of Bas-Congo, the number of inhabitants is according to current calculations 291.338 (2010) the city is situated on the left bank of the Congo, about halfway between the Atlantic and the capital of the Democratic Republic of Congo Kinshasa. The Congo is to this point inland navigable, the border with Angola is just south of the city. Source Wikipedia
Mount Kangchenjunga or Khangchendzonga with an elevation of 8,586 meter (28,169 feet) is the third highest mountain of the world. It is called Five Treasures of Snow after its five high peaks.The Tibetan words are: Kang (Snow) chen (Big) dzö (Treasury) nga (Five).
The main peak of Kanchenjunga is the second highest mountain in Nepal after Mount Everest. Three of the five peaks – Main, Central and South – are on the border between North Sikkim and Nepal.Two peaks are in the Taplejung District, Nepal.
Until 1852, Kanchenjunga was assumed to be the highest mountain in the world, but calculations based on various readings and measurements made by the Great Trigonometrical Survey of India in 1849 came to the conclusion that Mount Everest, known as Peak XV at the time, was the highest. Allowing for further verification of all calculations, it was officially announced in 1856 that Kanchenjunga is the third highest mountain
Wish you all a happy and prosperous New Year 2016!
Slide rules consist of a body, a slider and a cursor and have any number of numerical engraved scales that support a variety of mathematical calculations (multiplication, division, trigonometric, exponential and transcendental computations. Prior to the development of electronic/scientific calculators, slide rules were an important instrument for performing various calculations.
Focus stck (48 images) Shot with single off-camera flash (Godox AD200/Godox XPor II L trigger), bare bulb, mounted to overhead boom, bounced off 32 inch white umbrella.
Shot for Flickr Friday -scales
Winslow Homer (American)
1836-1910
Snap the Whip
1872
medium-oil on canvas
In the years after America's brutal Civil War (1860-1865),children-as the embodiments of innocence and the promise of America's future-became a popular artistic subject.Snap the Whip,one of Homer's most beloved works,evoked nostalgia for the nation's agrarian past as the population shift to cities,and the little red schoolhouse faded from memory.Released from their lessons the exuberant bare-footed boys engage in a spirited game of snap the whip,which required teamwork,strength,and calculation-all important skills for a reuniting country.
Der Laitièrenbrunnen (lait = frz. Milch) ist ein von der Bronzefigur eines Milchmädchens bekrönter großer Findling. Die Bronze war 1827 ein Geschenk an Prinz Carl von Preußen, dritter Sohn von König Friedrich Wilhelm III., der das Anwesen 1824 erworben hatte,von seiner Schwester Charlotte (Zarin Alexandra Fjodorowna)
in St. Petersburg und ist der Zweitguss einer Plastik von Pawel Sokolow im Park von Zarskoje Selo. Dargestellt ist die sprichwörtliche „Milchmädchenrechnung“ der Fabel von Jean de La Fontaine. Das heutige Glienicker Milchmädchen ist ein neuer Abguss, der 1987 in der Sowjetunion geschaffen wurde.
Informationen zur Geschichte des Parks sind unter diesem Link zu finden:
www.spsg.de/schloesser-gaerten/objekt/schloss-glienicke/
The Laitière or Milkmaid Fountain (lait = French for milk) is a large erratic block crowned by the bronze figure of a milkmaid.The bronze was a gift to Prince Carl of Prussia, third son of King Frederick William III, who had acquired the estate in 1824, from his sister Charlotte (Tsarina Alexandra Fyodorovna) in 1827. It is a duplicate of a sculpture by Pavel Sokolov in the park of Tsarskoe Selo and depicts the the fable by Jean de La Fontaine that led to the expression "A milkmaids calculation" which corresponds to the English proverb "Don't count your chick(en)s until they hatch." Today's Glienicke Milkmaid is a new cast created in the Soviet Union in 1987.
Informationen zur Geschichte des Parks sind unter diesem Link zu finden:
www.spsg.de/schloesser-gaerten/objekt/schloss-glienicke/
Information about the park's history can be found at the following address:
“It does not do to leave a live dragon out of your calculations, if you live near him.”
― J.R.R. Tolkien, The Hobbit
Iron Photographer 240
1 - a card
2 - a small figurine
3 - square format
It was a typical day for young Skippy. He got up, quickly put on his play clothes, hugged his family, grabbed his helmet (and a vatrushki), and raced outside towards his beloved Neva River.
Skippy had been working for days and days and days on a new project... out behind the house, across the creek, past the tree with the broken trunk from the big wind storm, and near the friendly but cautious sheep. He was filled with excitement.
This day, he knew, would be a good day.
The little man stayed up late the night before. Checking and double checking his calculations. The rocket was ready. He had the fuel. And his raygun would provide the spark he needed to achieve lift off.
Brave little Skippy puts his little hand to his face, making sure he has on his goggles and his helmet.
He crouches down and aims...
This day, he knew, would be a good day.
Be inspired by the new collection from Apple Fall, especially created for Shiny Shabby. It's called ”Al Fresco Dining".
Thank you Mister Apple for always providing me with fuel for my imagination!
Location: Neva River
To Quote Dr. Emmett Brown:
"If My Calculations Are Correct, When This Baby Hits Eighty-Eight Miles Per Hour... You're Gonna See Some Serious Shit."
...He Saw Some Serious Shit
Remember Do Not Just View, Fave & Comment If You Dare;)
Thank You In Advance
Cheers.
FACEBOOK || INSTAGRAM || CONTACT || LEAVE ME A NOTE!▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬
Co conspirators Dali and Deborah decided to take advantage of the calculations that Rick Whitacre made for capturing the moon rising over Half Dome.
While this, and the photos below are HDR (high dynamic range) compilations, no reframing, realigning or other shenanigans were undertaken to create this image. The moon is exactly in the correct spot exactly as it was shot.
I conduct an approximately monthly webinar that details how to find "the spot" to capture moonrises and sets like this one. You can join the Interest List here.
By the way, there was NO alteration of the moon and foreground size in this image. That is, this is the correct and actual size of the moon. No changing of focal length was done.
© Copyright 2012, Steven Christenson
BLOG || Events || FaceBook || Twitter || 500px
All rights reserved. Curious what "all rights reserved means?" it means that without written permission you may not: copy, transmit, modify, use, print or display this image in any context other than as it appears in Flickr.
Hubble’s measurements of today’s expansion rate do not match the rate that was expected based on how the Universe appeared shortly after the Big Bang over 13 billion years ago. Using new data from the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope, astronomers have significantly lowered the possibility that this discrepancy is a fluke.
Learn more about this discovery here
Credits: NASA, ESA. Acknowledgement: Josh Lake; CC BY 4.0
2.8:1 by the calculations I've done. oshiro 60mm 2:1 macro @ 2:1 plus 49mm macro tubes. Used the internet for a calculator.
Opel Blitz truck for transportation, mr tank crew guy and brickarm for size reference, this is in the 1:45th scale if my calculations are correct,
I got up at 5 this morning thinking today will be the perfect day to capture the sun rising under the Granville Bridge. By my calculations the sun was going to light up the pillowy bottoms of the clouds under and around the bridge in a fiery splash of oranges, pinks and reds. Awesome, I thought. But my hopes were once again dashed by the fact that the Fraser valley is usually a lot more cloudy than the West side of Vancouver. This, of course, means that the rising sun is going to light the tops of the clouds instead of the bottoms of the clouds. Since I only brought a 10 foot step ladder to set my camera up on, I didn’t have much hope of seeing the fiery clouds that I came for. Oh well. Such is the way of the landscape photographer.
Trujillo is a city, with a population of 20,780 (2020 calculation), and a municipality on the northern Caribbean coast of the Honduran department of Colón, of which the city is the capital.
The municipality had a population of about 30,000 (2003). The city is located on a bluff overlooking the Bay of Trujillo. Behind the city rise two prominent mountains, Mount Capiro and Mount Calentura. Three Garifuna fishing villages—Santa Fe, San Antonio, and Guadelupe—are located along the beach.
Trujillo has received plenty of attention as the potential site of a proposed Honduran charter city project, according to an idea originally advocated by American economist Paul Romer. Often referred to as a Hong Kong in Honduras and advocated by among others the Trujillo-born Honduran president Porfirio Lobo Sosa, the project has also been met with skepticism and controversy, especially due to its supposed disregard for the local Garifuna culture.
Christopher Columbus landed in Trujillo on August 14, 1502, during his fourth and final voyage to the Americas. Columbus named the place "Punta de Caxinas". It was the first time he touched the Central American mainland. He noticed that the water in this part of the Caribbean was very deep and therefore called the area Golfo de Honduras, i.e., The Gulf of the Depths.
The history of the modern town begins in 1524, shortly after the conquest of the Aztec Empire in an expedition led by Hernán Cortés. Cortés sent Cristóbal de Olid to find a Spanish outpost in the region, and he established a town named Triunfo de la Cruz in the vicinity. When Olid began using the town as his base for establishing his own realm in Central America, Cortés sent Francisco de las Casas to remove him. Las Casas lost most of his fleet in a storm, but he was nevertheless able to defeat Olid and restore the region to Cortés. Upon assuming control, Las Casas decided to relocate the town to its present location, because the natural harbor was larger. At the same time, Triunfo de la Cruz was renamed Trujillo. His deputy, Juan López de Aguirre was charged with establishing the new town, but he sailed off, leaving another deputy, named Medina, to find the town. In the coming years Trujillo became more important as a shipment point for gold and silver mined in the interior of the country. Because of its sparse population, the city also became a frequent target of pirates.
Under Spanish rule Trujillo became the capital of Honduras, but because of its vulnerability the capital was changed to the inland town of Comayagua. The fortress, Fortaleza de Santa Bárbara (El Castillo), which sits on the bluff overlooking the bay, was built by the Spanish around 1550. Nevertheless, it was inadequate to really defend Trujillo from pirates—the largest gathering of pirates in history took place in the vicinity in 1683—or rival colonial powers: the Dutch, French, and English. The town was destroyed several times between 1633 and 1797, and during the eighteenth century, the Spanish all but abandoned Trujillo because it was deemed indefensible,
When Honduras obtained its independence from Spain in 1821, Trujillo lost its status of capital city permanently first to Comayagua, which lost it to Tegucigalpa in 1880. From this same period onwards, Trujillo began to prosper again.
In 1860, the mercenary William Walker, who had seized control of neighboring Nicaragua, was caught and executed in Trujillo by orders of Florencio Xatruch. His tomb is a local tourist attraction.
American author O. Henry (William Sydney Porter) spent about a year living in Honduras, primarily in Trujillo. He later wrote a number of short stories that took place in "Coralio" in the fictional Central American country of "Anchuria", based on the real town of Trujillo. Most of these stories appear in his book Of Cabbages and Kings.
Credit for the data above is given to the following website:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trujillo,_Honduras
© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.
Ships Video/Log: LOCATION: MARS - Metallic Concrete Structure Located: Structure Date Calculation: 3,333,333 Earth Years Old - Log Alert / Scan Date Not Expected ~ Contact Galactic Library For Reference And Enhanced Scan Parameters.
Are the avatar own life? Some imprecisions of calculation oblige the avatars to interact for their iniciative. Here, for example, Sandplum and Carabella decide to be sat down excessively next during an interview. So much proximity generates passions for some avatars, it seems.
Obviously, this interview can be the birth of a great friendship.
Trujillo is a city, with a population of 20,780 (2020 calculation), and a municipality on the northern Caribbean coast of the Honduran department of Colón, of which the city is the capital.
The municipality had a population of about 30,000 (2003). The city is located on a bluff overlooking the Bay of Trujillo. Behind the city rise two prominent mountains, Mount Capiro and Mount Calentura. Three Garifuna fishing villages—Santa Fe, San Antonio, and Guadelupe—are located along the beach.
Trujillo has received plenty of attention as the potential site of a proposed Honduran charter city project, according to an idea originally advocated by American economist Paul Romer. Often referred to as a Hong Kong in Honduras and advocated by among others the Trujillo-born Honduran president Porfirio Lobo Sosa, the project has also been met with skepticism and controversy, especially due to its supposed disregard for the local Garifuna culture.
Christopher Columbus landed in Trujillo on August 14, 1502, during his fourth and final voyage to the Americas. Columbus named the place "Punta de Caxinas". It was the first time he touched the Central American mainland. He noticed that the water in this part of the Caribbean was very deep and therefore called the area Golfo de Honduras, i.e., The Gulf of the Depths.
The history of the modern town begins in 1524, shortly after the conquest of the Aztec Empire in an expedition led by Hernán Cortés. Cortés sent Cristóbal de Olid to find a Spanish outpost in the region, and he established a town named Triunfo de la Cruz in the vicinity. When Olid began using the town as his base for establishing his own realm in Central America, Cortés sent Francisco de las Casas to remove him. Las Casas lost most of his fleet in a storm, but he was nevertheless able to defeat Olid and restore the region to Cortés. Upon assuming control, Las Casas decided to relocate the town to its present location, because the natural harbor was larger. At the same time, Triunfo de la Cruz was renamed Trujillo. His deputy, Juan López de Aguirre was charged with establishing the new town, but he sailed off, leaving another deputy, named Medina, to find the town. In the coming years Trujillo became more important as a shipment point for gold and silver mined in the interior of the country. Because of its sparse population, the city also became a frequent target of pirates.
Under Spanish rule Trujillo became the capital of Honduras, but because of its vulnerability the capital was changed to the inland town of Comayagua. The fortress, Fortaleza de Santa Bárbara (El Castillo), which sits on the bluff overlooking the bay, was built by the Spanish around 1550. Nevertheless, it was inadequate to really defend Trujillo from pirates—the largest gathering of pirates in history took place in the vicinity in 1683—or rival colonial powers: the Dutch, French, and English. The town was destroyed several times between 1633 and 1797, and during the eighteenth century, the Spanish all but abandoned Trujillo because it was deemed indefensible,
When Honduras obtained its independence from Spain in 1821, Trujillo lost its status of capital city permanently first to Comayagua, which lost it to Tegucigalpa in 1880. From this same period onwards, Trujillo began to prosper again.
In 1860, the mercenary William Walker, who had seized control of neighboring Nicaragua, was caught and executed in Trujillo by orders of Florencio Xatruch. His tomb is a local tourist attraction.
American author O. Henry (William Sydney Porter) spent about a year living in Honduras, primarily in Trujillo. He later wrote a number of short stories that took place in "Coralio" in the fictional Central American country of "Anchuria", based on the real town of Trujillo. Most of these stories appear in his book Of Cabbages and Kings.
Credit for the data above is given to the following website:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trujillo,_Honduras
© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.
The crew of 47406 London Midland and Scottish Railway Jinty 0-6-0T make last minute preparations prior to departing south bound from Loughborough with the 15:20 7S29 Vans.. by my calculations it was already late.. but hey.. wotever.
A28V4887
A surfer heads out for a surf at dusk and looks out into the sun calculating how much time of daylight is left.
He made the right move and surfed brilliantly
" Big surprise.
Has a clear calculation of more than 30 came to Vancouver to visit! "
Already 5 years not yet back to Great Vancouver area!!
We have maintained very good safe distance. Want to continue to keep safe.
How and when will also allow them to feel safe to stay much longer.
However. Hunting season has still here! ugh..
Have a great day,week,time.........
Trujillo is a city, with a population of 20,780 (2020 calculation), and a municipality on the northern Caribbean coast of the Honduran department of Colón, of which the city is the capital.
The municipality had a population of about 30,000 (2003). The city is located on a bluff overlooking the Bay of Trujillo. Behind the city rise two prominent mountains, Mount Capiro and Mount Calentura. Three Garifuna fishing villages—Santa Fe, San Antonio, and Guadelupe—are located along the beach.
Trujillo has received plenty of attention as the potential site of a proposed Honduran charter city project, according to an idea originally advocated by American economist Paul Romer. Often referred to as a Hong Kong in Honduras and advocated by among others the Trujillo-born Honduran president Porfirio Lobo Sosa, the project has also been met with skepticism and controversy, especially due to its supposed disregard for the local Garifuna culture.
Christopher Columbus landed in Trujillo on August 14, 1502, during his fourth and final voyage to the Americas. Columbus named the place "Punta de Caxinas". It was the first time he touched the Central American mainland. He noticed that the water in this part of the Caribbean was very deep and therefore called the area Golfo de Honduras, i.e., The Gulf of the Depths.
The history of the modern town begins in 1524, shortly after the conquest of the Aztec Empire in an expedition led by Hernán Cortés. Cortés sent Cristóbal de Olid to find a Spanish outpost in the region, and he established a town named Triunfo de la Cruz in the vicinity. When Olid began using the town as his base for establishing his own realm in Central America, Cortés sent Francisco de las Casas to remove him. Las Casas lost most of his fleet in a storm, but he was nevertheless able to defeat Olid and restore the region to Cortés. Upon assuming control, Las Casas decided to relocate the town to its present location, because the natural harbor was larger. At the same time, Triunfo de la Cruz was renamed Trujillo. His deputy, Juan López de Aguirre was charged with establishing the new town, but he sailed off, leaving another deputy, named Medina, to find the town. In the coming years Trujillo became more important as a shipment point for gold and silver mined in the interior of the country. Because of its sparse population, the city also became a frequent target of pirates.
Under Spanish rule Trujillo became the capital of Honduras, but because of its vulnerability the capital was changed to the inland town of Comayagua. The fortress, Fortaleza de Santa Bárbara (El Castillo), which sits on the bluff overlooking the bay, was built by the Spanish around 1550. Nevertheless, it was inadequate to really defend Trujillo from pirates—the largest gathering of pirates in history took place in the vicinity in 1683—or rival colonial powers: the Dutch, French, and English. The town was destroyed several times between 1633 and 1797, and during the eighteenth century, the Spanish all but abandoned Trujillo because it was deemed indefensible,
When Honduras obtained its independence from Spain in 1821, Trujillo lost its status of capital city permanently first to Comayagua, which lost it to Tegucigalpa in 1880. From this same period onwards, Trujillo began to prosper again.
In 1860, the mercenary William Walker, who had seized control of neighboring Nicaragua, was caught and executed in Trujillo by orders of Florencio Xatruch. His tomb is a local tourist attraction.
American author O. Henry (William Sydney Porter) spent about a year living in Honduras, primarily in Trujillo. He later wrote a number of short stories that took place in "Coralio" in the fictional Central American country of "Anchuria", based on the real town of Trujillo. Most of these stories appear in his book Of Cabbages and Kings.
Credit for the data above is given to the following website:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trujillo,_Honduras
© All Rights Reserved - you may not use this image in any form without my prior permission.
Great acts of Faith are seldom born out of calm calculation, it wasn't logic that caused Moses to raise his staff on the bank of the Red Sea..
.....
About midnight Paul and Silas were praying and singing songs to God as the other prisoners listened...ACTS 16: 25
Dunlewey, Gweedore, County Donegal, Ireland
A few months ago I set out to 'Errigal Mountain' in hope of capturing The Milky Way Galaxy rising over it. On arrival that night I discovered my calculations were wrong because the Milky Way was in the opposite end of the sky from where I expected it to be . I did manage to make the most from my error & captured a scene of the Milky Way rising over Errigal from the opposite (Hikers Path) end, however it was not the iconic front on view overlooking Errigal from 'Dunlewey lake’ that everyone knows. I knew I had to re-plan the entire trip & return another night for my true visioned scene
Two months later I could see that the skies were crystal clear again & through the help of a few apps etc I could tell that there was no moon & clear weather predicted all night at below zero temperatures. The perfect ingredients for a new Milky Way hunt! Alone once again I set out "Errigal bound" in hope of capturing the Milky Way from the correct angle this time 😂
On arrival I was totally delighted! as not only was the Milky Way in the night sky where I wanted it to be but the waters in 'Dunlewey Lough' were calm with an almost perfect reflection! I finally got the image I was visualising & attempting for ages. Sometimes like everyone else I do get it wrong but it's best to learn from our errors & retry as the universe waits on nobody....
Hope you enjoy! Please Favourite & Follow to view my newest upcoming works, Thank you
Arne came over for our long planned 8x10 nerd-out, and of course, I had flowers.
We had been curious about the color shade, after that many time. Thank goodness, I forgot how my favourite calculation-tool works (if used backwards) for bellows compensation, and thanks to that, this shot was 1 1/3 ƒ-stops overexposed. Good so, as this film is sooo narrow (1/4 ƒ), and today with the age, a bit awfully in the shadows, as I found out later.
We liked this so much, we did another one in bw, and when Arne left, we shared.
gggggGerbera is for g.
FLOWER is for Arne.
This shot is on 8x10 and the flower on the real shot in hand is 1.5x larger than lifesize.
And it's one of - 1000? I think there had just been 100 boxes with 10 sheets each produced only, worldwide, of this beta-film.
A new, non-beta color just got released.
___
Roidweek 2015.2 # day 1
Sinar P 8x10 / Symmar 210mm
"Not that I much blame Duffy. Duffy was face to face with the margin of mystery where all our calculations collapse, where the stream of time dwindles into the sands of eternity, where the formula fails in the test tube, where chaos and old night hold sway and we hear the laughter in the ether dream. But he didn't know he was, and so he said, "Yeah.""
"All The King's Men", by Robert Penn Warren; published in 1946, has been made into a movie, but as usually happens, the movie, as good as it is, does not due full justice to the novel. Robert Penn Warren reportedly told historian David Blight the novel, set in America's Deep South of the 1930's, is about "Julias Caesar".
(This photo is utilizing a miniature travel chess game set that meets the MM 3" limitation.)
Oil-based ink on Japanese paper, about A4 in size.
For more on this one, you could click here. davewhatt.wordpress.com/2022/08/31/calculation-and-random...
A long exposure here,taken with a Big stopper and Little Stopper.
Calculation this should have been 11 minutes(660 sec) but got side tracked with another togger who kept me talking.
Still worked out not to bad in the end !!!!!!!
Develop your senses- especially learn how to see. Realize that everything connects to everything else.
Here is an early blue hour shot from a spot I've been to many times and shot from many angles, but for once I've manage to come away with something I like. I think the buildings in the foreground have an interesting shape that anchors the image in this instance.
Thanks for checking out my work I appreciate it.