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Just a simple slice from the weekend. How many picture have I taken of the swings? Had to come up with a bit of a new take on the familiar. Beyond the colours, I think my favourite part is the the 'barely there' trunks that run parallel to the chain (wish I could credit myself with the intention - but I'll happily take serendipity)
HBW
This is a shot of one of my Azalea bushes in my front yard... I have been playing with it for several days now, doing Kaleidoscopes different frames and a bunch of other funny things... Decided it was about time to move on to another toy so hope you enjoy this one !!!!
People, chained by monotony, afraid to think, clinging to certainties... they live like ants.
-Bela Lugosi
Texture
www.flickriver.com/photos/carlosporto/popular-interesting/
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A couple had watched JJ take a photo of Tim and me by the Chain Bridge, Hungary and asked if he could take a photo for them!
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Encadenados a...
Marzo
Encadenados al crecimiento desmesurado... no no ?¿ , Vacaciones de Semana Santa.
March
Chained to the enormous growth... or not ?¿ , Holidays of Holy Week.
The Chain Bridge (Hungarian: LánchÃd) on a cold foggy winter night from the shore of the Danube looking towards Pest. It was the first permanent bridge across the Danube in Budapest, and was opened in 1849.
I did quite a bit of walking along the cold Danube that cold and foggy night to get this shot, but it seems to have been well worth it. I have another shot of this same scene that has a longer exposure which blurs the water more. At some point I'll upload it, but I liked the water better on this shorter exposure.
Kodak Tri-X Pan 400 - hc110
(unfiltered, exposure unrecorded)
Hasselblad 500 C/M w/80mm f2.8 Zeiss CF Planar T*
Epson PERFECTION V750-M PRO SCANNER
(2010Xmas_Budapest_TriX_400_47601_010)
Markarian's chain had a late night to capture this didn't start imaging until 02:30 am. Taken on 12/01/2014 15 x600 secs. Counted 41 objects in total hard to believe a 80mm telescope can pick up so many galaxies. Annotated image can found here www.flickr.com/photos/nightcasper/11908347965/
Markarian's Chain is a stretch of galaxies that forms part of the Virgo Cluster. It is called a chain because, when viewed from Earth, the galaxies lie along a smoothly curved line. It was named after the Armenian astrophysicist, B. E. Markarian, who discovered their common motion in the early 1960s. Member galaxies include M84 (NGC 4374), M86 (NGC 4406), NGC 4477, NGC 4473, NGC 4461, NGC 4458, NGC 4438 and NGC 4435. It's located at RA 12h 27m and Dec +13° 10′.
At least seven galaxies in the chain appear to move coherently, although others appear to be superposed by chance.
Camera: QHY8L CCD cooled to -20C
Guiding: MaxIm DL 9x50 Finder Scope,QHY5 Mono with IR filter ( Finder Guider )
Optics: Skywatcher ED80,Skywatcher 0.85x focal reducer
Filter: Astronomik CLS Filter
Mount: Skywatcher AZ EQ6-GT GEQ & Alt-Az Mount connected to the Sky X and Eqmod via HitecAstro EQDIR adapter
Image Acquisition: Maxim DL 5
Stacking and Calibrating: Pixinsight 1.8
Processing: Pixinsight 1.8
Silver links on a watch chain.
Lumix g5, olympus 40-150 with macro tube. Desktop tripod. Lightzone software.
Our model Kimberly has a very active imagination. She wanted to do a shoot at a local cemetery with her has a witch. OK, let's do it. Fun shoot, Kim looked gorgeous and we would have stayed longer but they were locking the gates for the evening. Didn't want to be stuck there! I took these photos in early November 2020.
Here in blue, you can see 4 twisted chain stitches I worked it in the round to get the pink flower, which I really like. The purple flower is just 5 Lazy Daisy petals of ribbon floss placed over (and between) 5 Lazy Daisy petals of Rainbow Gallery Flair. Then there is the French Knot Lazy Daisy, where the tie-down stitch is a French knot instead of just a straight stitch. Each peach bud is a FKLD done around a padded straight stitch. The turquoise ribbon flower shows 6 petals of FKLD with the knots in the center. The two maroon flowers show FKLD with knots in the center and then with knots on the outer edge.