View allAll Photos Tagged development,
One of my favorite clips showing a staged gag where Leaonard Nimoy in costume from Spock's Brain is handcuffed at gunpoint while reading the headline of the LA Times from July 11th 1968. On this day Benjamin Spock was sentenced to a two year jail term for supporting draft evaders and declaring the Vietnam war unconsitutional in the famous Boston Five trial. This is the exact same time as the thrid season episode Spock's Brain was filmed, hence the costume. A great reminder of the political climate of 1968 in addition to the production of Star Trek.
Aerial view of Beeston Park in Beeston St Andrew, on the outskirts of Norwich in Norfolk. There is soon to be a huge housing development to the south of the site. Beeston Park aerial image
www.edp24.co.uk/news/23419753.beeston-park-mystery-buyer-...
The Wild Animal Sanctuary is making a area for the Coyotes I thing they said. The trees are in the area where water will flow. The back section is for the Fox's which 7 are placed. Tree's, water flow, dirt mounds plus concret pip sections covcered with dirt, more than evough room for everyone.
The depressing sight of the small housing development in the village, which is creating a lot of mud, great heaps of the stuff and muddy, clay coloured water streaming down the road.
125 pictures in 2025 (63) muddy
The west side of the island, near to Playa Blanca in Lanzarote. Much development stopped during the 2008 financial crash.
2012
LG Development’s HUGO masterplan includes the construction of mid-rise buildings at 751 N. Hudson Ave. and 411 W. Chicago Av. The two mixed-use structures will each stand 9 stories and will collectively house roughly 19,000 square feet of retail and 227 apartment units. The 751 N Hudson Avenue building will accommodate 134 residences; 411 W Chicago Avenue will house the remaining 93 units. Completion is scheduled for third-quarter 2023.
The two buildings replace parking lots and will be narrowly separated by 415 W. Chicago Ave, a masonry 1930 low-rise building. The seemingly vacant building is reminiscent of the building containing a cleaner (who owns it) and Bella Luna that remains at the south end of the One Chicago development because the woman refused to sell.
~ ny.curbed.com/maps/williamsburg-brooklyn-new-york-develop...
Run Day - 2/21/2019, Hunters Point South Park, LIC, NY.
Apple iPhone 7 Plus
iPhone 7 Plus back dual camera 3.99mm f/1.8
ƒ/1.8 4.0 mm 1/5300 25
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This B Series Leyland National was new as a Leyland development vehicle in 1978 and remained unregistered for over a year, it never leaving the confines of the Lillyhall factory.
It passed to Ribble once Leyland had finished with it and became their 686 and as it had never ventured on a public highway it gained a 'V' suffix registration.
The bus is seen here leaving Leigh bus station in 1990 bound for its home base of Bolton.
This is a massive development in Saanich, which is home to the Home Depot. This is the old Save on Foods grocery store that's been now torn down.
aerial view of the construction of the Mill View Orbit development in Dereham - Norfolk UK aerial image
trying some macro...
old beroflex AF 35-70mm lens from an old minolta dynax 3ix cam. as i don't have any adapter on my e-mount, i used some piece of toilette paper roll :).
proceed in darktable
Location: Wang Lung Street, Tsuen Wan, Hong Kong
Nikon S3
Cosina Voigtländer S Nokton 50mm f/1.5 Aspherical
Arista Premium 400
Kodak D-76 (Stock)
8 min at 20ºC
I've been searching the last two years a way to turn digital raw into pastel like Fujifilm 400H Pro colors.
I've failed a million times and thought that it's impossible since film reacts to light differently each time vs. digital sensor.
I've come close, but the results vary between lighting situations from bad to excellent. But now I've really cracked something cool.
This particular preset + method editing 8bit jpg (now raw) has been revolutionary discovery. I've gotten excellent results every time and the pictures are always blooming with bright pastel like colors.
I'm about to write this to my blog and release this updated 400H preset in the next few days.
I'm documenting the development of this spider. It's been in the same spot for weeks now. It has been making a new web daily.
This is a massive development in Saanich, which is home to the Home Depot. This is the old Thrifty Food liqueur store that's been torn down now.
IN ENGLISH BELOW THE LINE
Vista de la vall del riu Ripoll al pas per Sabadell.
Foto presa amb una Kodak No.3A Autographic Special, model B, fabricada entre el 1921 i el 1934. Placa de gelatinobromur J.Lane Speed Dry Plate, @25; revelada amb HC110 i escanejada amb Epson V800.
Fa decades, segurament més de 50 anys, que la fotografía en plaques de vidre havia passat quasi completament a la historia. Només sembla que en quedava alguna producció puntual (Agfa?) per a fotografia científica especialitzada. L'altra opció, encara vigent però molt complicada és fer-se un mateix les plaques, però ja he vist que millor ni ficar-s'hi. Però fa un parell d'anys, un enginyer nord-americà, J. Lane, decidí vendre les plaques que es feia ell, amb tant d'exit, que s'ha establert l'unic (crec) proveidor de plaques de gelatinobromur del món. Les produeix en moltes mides, des de minuscules de format 35mm, fins a ultra-gran format, com "full plate" o més i tot. Aquestes plaques son "rapides", ja que tenen una ISO de 25 (les altres que té son de ISO 2), i vaig poder fer aquesta foto sense trípode.
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Down there runs the Ripoll river, in Sabadell. In the cliffs of the eastern side began the history of my hometown, with the ancient name of Arraona.
Picture taken with a Kodak No.3A Autographic Special (model B) camera, made in 1921-1934; J. Lane Speed Plate dry plate, @25; developed with HC110 and scanned with an Epson V800.
For decades, probably more than 50 years ago, dry plate photography had gone almost completely into "old" history. It only seems that there was some limited and expensive production (Agfa?) for specialized scientific photography. The other option, very complex is to make the plates yourself, but better not to try. A couple of years ago, an American optical engineer, J. Lane, decided to sell the dry plates he had already made, with such success, that he has established the only (I believe) supplier of dry plates in the World. He produces them in many sizes, from minuscule 35mm format, to ultra-large formats, such as "full plate" or more. But these are his "speed" plates, rated at 25 ASA, so you can take your pictures handeheld.
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