View allAll Photos Tagged crest

Cherat, Northern Pakistan

 

This shows 13 crests,

 

Found this old photo, we think taken by one of my great Uncles, Rowly Baxter during the First world war - Sept 1918

 

i found this on the internet which shows 12 crests

www.flickr.com/photos/sonydude/51701890842/in/photostream/

 

Angeles Crest Highway, California

For best view, click on image...

 

I have posted a shot similar to this, but this is from when the sun was a bit higher on the horizon, showing a bigger sun star than my other shot from this comp..

Seen at the Motor Transport Museum in Campo, CA.

 

www.motortransportmuseum.org

 

Two Rollei images layered together

Nikon F100, Nikkor AF 28-85mm 1:3.5-4.5

Ilford Delta 100, ISO: 100

development: Adox XT-3 (replenished), 9:00, 20.0°C

Another 30 stud scaled ship! Much smaller than the correct size, but I really wanted to make the proportions right, especially the engines! Which was definitely one of the reasons stopping from buying the official set.

Took a long time to design this ship, but I’m happy the way it turned out!

Voici une version légèrement améliorée du Razor Crest.

 

This is a slightly improved version of the Razor Crest.

A Joshua tree and old UP code line are silhouetted by the low desert sun at 4207 ft Cima Summit as a heavy eastbound manifest rolls over the crest after climbing more than 2000 ft in the 18 miles from the base of the hill at Kelso. It was cold and windy here and the big train operating 4x1 was working hard to make the 2.2% ruling grade on one of the West's oft overlooked stretches of heavy duty mountain railroad.

 

Luck was with us as we drove up with only 30 min of daylight left on this cold clear Sunday afternoon high in the Mojave desert along the old Los Angeles and Salt Lake Route mainline.

 

Cima, California

Monday February 8, 2016

Empty coal train 799 slowly passes through the city of Powder Springs, GA with a lone D9-40CW in charge.

Crest Theatre is a heritage-listed former cinema and ballroom and now community centre at Granville, New South Wales, Australia. It was designed by Cowper and Murphy and Associates and built in 1948 by A. W. Edwards Pty Ltd. It is also known as Hoyts Crest Theatre. Following its purchase by the Australian Blouza Association, it has been referred to as Blouza Hall. It was added to the New South Wales State Heritage Register on 1 August 2003.

 

The Crest is of Quonset design with one level, vaulted ceiling auditorium, using steel frame construction and with a vestibule/amenity block running parallel to the theatre on the Redfern Street side of the block.

 

The exterior walls are of concrete with stucco finish. The corner entrance to the cinema has two facades at ninety degrees, which are lower than the main Blaxcell Street stepped facade.

 

The junction of the corner facades is accented with a tapered vertical pier with an art deco motive above the facade below the tip of the pier. On either side of the pier is the name "Crest" in script style large neon lettering. Between the lower and taller Blaxcell Street facades is a large, prominent, triangular concrete pier with five protruding circles which originally contained the letters - H - O -Y - T - S. was later replaced with the letters B - I - N - G - O, and more recently replaced again with the letters B - L - O - U - Z - A.

Source: Wikipedia

 

When I look at the letters the last "A" does seem to be a recent addition.

100 Days of Darkness 90/100.

One of smallest birds in Europe must have just arrived from Scandinavia with the strong easterly wind. It was so exhausted, it would allow me to open the balkony door of our holiday appartment to take this picture.

 

Wintergoldhähnchen

Einer der kleinsten Vögel Europas muss gerade aus Skandinavien angekommen sein, getragen vom starken Ostwind. Er war so erschöpft, dass er mir gestattet hat, die Balkontür der Ferienwohnung zu öffnen für dieses Bild.

A pair of PRLX warbonnets crest Byron Hill with CN A490. Byron, WI

I’m thrilled to share this image with you! In my latest video, I hinted at capturing a portfolio-worthy shot during my recent adventure to Crystal Crescent Beach, and here it is, a moment I’ve dreamed of photographing almost since I first picked up a camera.

 

I always thought I’d need massive waves to create an image like this, but I was wrong (though I still think it might be easier with bigger waves). What inspired me to try shooting waves that morning was the way the wind caught the spray, blowing it back into the ocean and creating a mesmerizing effect. I capture this effect better in my next video, but that spray gave the scene the atmosphere I was chasing.

 

To achieve this shot, I slowed the shutter down by stopping down the aperture, creating the dreamy motion I envisioned. From there, it was all about timing and capturing that perfect moment, which sometimes means taking a lot of shots.

This was taken at 600mm with a 1/8-second shutter speed while panning with the wave, a technique that added a sense of flow to the image.

 

I’d love to hear your thoughts, was waiting nearly 8 years for this shot worth it?

The thundering power of three GE locomotives dragging an intermodal train (Q NYCLAC6 12A) up the Yampai Sumit echoes throughout this lonely landscape. A lightning show in the distance has signified the monsoonal season has arrived.

 

BNSF 5430 --- Q NYCLAC6 12A --- Yampai, Arizona

 

jakemiillephotography.com

The was a chilly wind blowing up here at the Rowena Crest viewpoint next to the Columbia River. I got one cold hand for sure- the one with a tight grip on the tripod as I had it stood on a wall overlooking this drop. Tried really hard to capture car light trails but there was just not enough traffic on this quiet road.

Climbers contemplating their next exposed move on the spine of Matthes Crest. Yosemite High Country is in the background.

 

Over time, I started to like this composition more than the one I posted a while ago. What do you think?

 

This photo has been published in National Geographic Adventure magazine in May 2006.

watercolor on 120 g/m2 Canson paper

30/20cm - 2016

Along the Cascade Crest Trail # 2000 North of White Pass

This is how he looks when he smooths that crest down. A bit goofy.

Male Wood Duck (Aix sponsa)

My photos can also be found at kapturedbykala.com

Sulphur crested cockatoo, ACT, Australia

My completion of the Razor Crest (papaglop version).

Sony A7IV + Canon 70-200mm f4L IS USM

f10 ISO 100 1/10 200mm

 

I used to work in the Hudson Valley, and the best part was seeing the peaks lit up pink on my commute. The worst part was not being able to pull over and get a shot!

 

Today, since I have the day off work, and since it just snowed, I thought I'd drive down and show everyone what my commute used to look like.

Evens Canyon wildfire near Naches Washington.

Frodes_032021_001(2)F

The Stevens Point to BNSF Northtown Local for the CN is cresting Shoreham Hill in the neighborhood of Minneapolis of Saint Anthony Village. They are crossing 37th Ave NE currently and are about to cross over Stinson Blvd. The local runs daily and watching it come up and crest Shoreham Hill every day reminds locals like Bob Rivard and TJ Gaspers what it was like to see Soo Line trains grind up and out of their Shoreham Yard at the bottom.

 

37th Ave NE

Minneapolis, MN

01/23/2016

The final shot in Scotland of a fabulous few days sees 37607 and 37218 breast the summit in the Pass of Druimochter heading for home on Easter Monday. A first for me this, a truly wonderful spectacle, with the use of the pole allowing the summit board to be visible in the background.

The sun rises over the eastern crest of the Sierra Nevada Mountains. A storm system snows on the ridge line and buries the tallest peaks, such as Lone Pine Peak (12,949') and the apex, Mount Whitney (14,508'). Mount Whitney would be visible above the valley just to the left of the road that leads up to Whitney Portal. In the foreground huge granite boulders foreshadow the towering rock piles of the Alabama Hills just behind the photographer. To the east clouds filter the sun's light into a narrow band that slices across the range.

The idea was to upgrade the 75292 to the UCS level while keeping as much elements as possible.

 

2867 parts (51x37x20 cm / 20x14.5x7.5 inchs)

 

When I started this MOC a long time ago I was sure that we would never get a UCS razor Crest from LEGO ...

another image from exactly a year ago today, when the snow-wave was big and cresting — we’re back to freezing today, and should get snow again next week…

Bob gets to work to fitting the bank crest above the doorway

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