View allAll Photos Tagged double
#Repost @foundr ・・・ Might as well try your luck 😂or as an entrepreneur are you making your own luck? Double tap and leave a comment below! 👇 flic.kr/p/Npe2tW
I hadn't intended to do this, but I happened to have these two files open and said to myself: "Self. What the heck, let's blend them. Just for fun. Eh?"
So HSS to all of you sad Flickrites.
© AnvilcloudPhotography
The Double Cluster in the constellation Perseus is a personal favourite of mine. Easily seen naked eye in dark skies and a delight in a small telescope. Here I present it in a different light surrounded by faintly ionized (red) hydrogen gases. I acquired 16.5 hours of Ha data and blended it into the red and luminance channels. I also acquired 10 hours of LRGB data for a total of 26.5 hours of imaging. The spikes around the stars are from the spider veins that hold the secondary mirror on the telescope. It makes it looks so glittery 😊 Taken with my Ceravolo300mm telescope. 1470mm focal length with an SBIG STX 16803 CCD camera.
Double-Crested Cormorant
Many thanks to all those who View, Comment and or Fave My Photos... It is greatly appreciated... Roy
All images full frame unless the filename reflects "Crop"
Running close to 5 1/2 hours late, Amtrak's California Zephyr glides through Mendota, IL with heritage units 822 and 184 on point.
This shot almost didn't happen, as a westbound BNSF freight cleared just seconds before the Amtrak passed!
Ironic really since I was in double bubble lockdown recently with my cancer operation lol. It is a start, now to work on the focus plus the lighting! What fun.
Tugboat towing a log boom at dusk, Powell River, B.C.
Vessel photos and info by Paul: prtugboats.blogspot.com/search/label/Inlet%20Knight
Nikon FM
Kodak 400 (expired, set to ASA 200)
no. 22 of 24 exp.
Nikkor 200mm f/4 Ai (tugboat)
Tamron Adaptall-2 SP 500mm f/8 (moon)
double exposure
scanned with the Epson V300
We had a strong rain this afternoon, but the sky cleared from West to East. That usually means a rainbow, if the sun is low enough. I didn't see the double until I was processing the image.
Freightliner Shed 66953 leading 66589 with the very late running 6V54 12.54 Radlett Redland Roadstone to East Usk Yard empty hoppers, passing Kilby Bridge Junction at 19.37, 288 minutes late
When I st out from home before seven there was some sun about, but it didn't last
Running over two hours late being pathed behind both a Transpennine Express train and a Northern stopping service from Earlestown, the 6M51 empty biomass train from Doncaster Decoy Yard to Liverpool Biomass Terminal approaches Huyton station. Class 60 locos 60076 'Dunbar' and 60026 'Helvellyn' double head the train as it heads westbound under yellow signals.
Helen and I swapped rolls of film that we each exposed, and then the other exposed a second image on top the film, running it a second time through the camera. Neither of us knew what the other had done for the first layer. The resulting combination image is an unplanned serendipitous coincidence. Film used was Ilford XP2 Super.
2019-09-13 22:00-02:00
Clear, full moon, windy, 80% humidity, 11 degrees C
Double Cluster
Exposures:
58x60s L
(29+28+29)x60s RGB
Rotation:180 degrees
Camera: ASI1600MM-COOL+ZWO EFWmini, Baader R,G,B,Ha, IDAS LPS-D1, gain 200, offset 50, -20C
Lens: TS-Optics 8" f/4 UNC Newtonian with GPU Superflat 2" Coma Corrector
Mount: EQ6-R Pro
QHY 5L-II-M OAG auto guider
Software: Sequence Generator Pro, PixInsight, Photoshop
Location: Borås, Sweden
The cormorant is a fish eating water bird that dives to catch its prey. Unlike ducks and geese, cormorant"s feathers are not completely water tight and can only spend limited time in the water before it must perch with wings fully extended to let them dry.
A section of line which sees minimal use compared to the "top end" between Belgrave and Menzies Creek, the line through the Wright Forest typically has only one train - and one loco - per day. One day in early September saw the Climax Locomotive Operating Committee put on a special train from Belgrave through to Gembrook; hauled by the railway's rare Climax locomotive no. 1694 from Belgrave to Menzies Creek, then double-headed with 14A (pictured) to Emerald where the Climax was detached and 14A proceeded on its own to Gembrook. On the return from Gembrook the special train combined with the regular Gembrook service, to double-head back to Belgrave.
Pictured here is 6A - from the regular Gembrook service - leading 14A across Bridge 8, the tallest bridge on the railway.
A journey through Kuttanadu, there is more than enough on both sides of road for photographers.:)
Kuttanadu Alleppy Kerala
There was quite a variety of birds down at the lake this morning. I captured this Cormorant as it flew past.