View allAll Photos Tagged clockwork
This came from a cheap dollar store 7 segment LCD display wristwatch I won at an arcade at least 10 years ago. It had an external crystal oscillator, so that should not be located in this chip. From what I remember this watch had two buttons, could display the date as well as have timers.
This was encased in a black goop (similar to calculator chips) which I was able to heat up and remove the chip from. Lighting was done by shining a single LED down the other eyepiece of my microscope in order see more details.
Colour correction was performed in Photoshop because the LED washes out most of the colours.
This chip is around 1mm^2.
Camera: SONY A6000
Number of Images: 12
Panorama Y Axis: 4 Images
Panorama X Axis: 3 Images
ISO: 100
Shutter Speed: 1/25"
Overlap: 50%
Microscope Objective: 10X
Microscope Eyepiece: DSLR Mount
Grid Used: 4x4 (Panning Movement Aid)
Capture Motion: Serpentine
Stitching Software: Microsoft ICE
Stitching Projection Mode: Planar Motion with Skew
Additional Software: Photoshop for colour correction
Image Type: PNG
Image Quality: 100%
Sunrise at Clingmans Dome; Great Smoky Mountains National Park, on the North Carolina / Tennessee border
blog about this photo: starmountainmedia.com/filmsblog/filmsblog-may-2013-clingm...
© starmountainmedia.com
Nikon D600 + Nikkor 16mm f/2.8 lens
A blast from my cosplay past - Ensign Persano of the Imperial Steamship 'Enterprise'.
My wife and I are currently pondering costumes for this year.
my husbands newest pocket watch. he prefers old or antique Elgin 's but the precision workings of this new model 17 Jewel Skeleton Hunter Case Gentlemen’s Pocket Watch caught his attention...manufactured by E & C we believe..
Here's the full cover for A Clockwork Orange.
At this point, I'm leaning towards having all of the extra info about the books printed on a band that will wrap around all three of them, holding them together as a set.
Assignment for the photography school; abstracts and interpretations of fruit with studiolight
I used the table in my living room, a large mirror, one flash (remote controlled on a tripod), a common lamp and a few drops of water
Our Daily Challenge ... movie poster.
112 Pictures in 2012 ... #69 ... title of a film
Created with the addition of free graphics and fonts from the internet.
half page illustration for fake magazine article- Stanley Kubrick's A Clockwork Orange
ACO belongs to Kubrick (i think) and the guy who wrote the book
done in black W&N ink with nib on bristol board
This looks so much better offline, in jpeg form a lot of the colors aren't coming through. It's a pity because I had so much fun dodging and burning her curls.
Another sceen from Clockwork Orange, Alex meets his droogs at the bottom of these steps.
my web site
Due to an temporary plateau and scaffolding art project on the rooftop of the Oude Kerk (Old Church) in Amsterdam it was possible to come as close to the Clockwork of the church as never before.
The Garden Which is the Nearest to God
The celebrated Japanese artist Taturo Atzu (formerly Tatzu Nishi) is known for its spectacular but most alienating projects. After New York and Singapore this summer Amsterdam's turn. From June to September 2015 he realized a temporary platform on the roof of the Oude Kerk (Old Church). It offers visitors a unique view of the Red Light District. At the same time he opens an architectural domain where the public normally has no visibility.
Taturo Atzu's temporary plateau was externally accessible via a scaffold structure. Even the climb up was really an experience. Once there you had a unique view of the intricate grid of the old city center of Amsterdam. Another surprise was the confrontation with the impressive slate roof landscape that was not previously seen as close. With its two massive peaks, the roof of the Old Church is one of the largest roof areas of Europe.
Huyskamer Amsterdam
The Garden Which is the Nearest to God refers not only to the classical image of the church as a meeting place. This project also included the gradual adjustment from religious to cultural location. The fact is that the Ancient Church traditionally nicknamed "huys chamber of Amsterdam 'carries. this title is undoubtedly a source of inspiration for Taturo Atzu. After their hallucinogenic climb up the visitors entered an airy living room. Here they came face to face with the angel-shaped weather vane. A bit further, around the so-called storm washers, they could take part in a conversation pit, with their noses on top of the clock. It was an experience that calls into question the actual significance of the monument and the tension exposes between public and private space.
About Taturo Atzu
The Japanese Taturo Atzu (Nagoya, 1960), whose work on this scale has never before been exhibited in the Netherlands, is also known under the names Tatzu Nishi, Tazu Rous, Tazro Niscino, Tatzu Oozu and Tatsurou Bashi. His spectacular projects testify to a long fascination with opposites meet. Typically Atzu by definition temporary settings, with the intimacy of home or hotel rooms, around public and often national monuments. By creating such widespread astonishment Taturo Atzu represents the relationship between society and the individual in question. In his work he explores the personal relationship of ordinary people to the Great Story of history
Taken by: Emiel Dekker (emield.myportfolio.com/)
inspired by Stanley Kubrick's "A Clockwork Orange"
[diffused strobe; enhanced macro of a railway timepiece innards]
Polymer clay, resin, mica powders, watch parts, grommets, wire. Created using watch parts purchased from master polymer clay artist Christi Friesen sealed under master polymer clay artist Lisa Pavelka's Magic-Glos resin (good stuff!).
During the Ghost Month
(Aug 7 and will last until Sept 4.) the gates of Hell are opened, releasing ghosts, and spirits including those of the dead with permits to roam the living world.
For the local Chinese who believe in this, the festival has always been held to pay respects to the dead, and to seek protection and good luck from the ‘Tai Su Yah‘ (King of Hades)- the ruler of the underworld.
Long hours of prayers beginning early each day through late at night for almost a month are conducted in an intense manner with massive offerings of food offered up to Tai Su Yeah.
Huge quantities of joss papers are also offered to Tai Su Yeah, as well as roasted pigs, goats, chicken, ducks and traditional Chinese cakes miku, moho, gem biscuits, fruits and flowers.
The intensity of the practice stunned me. Never have I seen so many people offering up prayers to any deity as this before..and this being the King of Hades.
Protection and favour seems to be the main purpose in all I witnessed.
More surprising was the presence of the young - I'd expected to see the seniors as the majority, but no; it was mostly attended by those below 30; teens and kids included...