View allAll Photos Tagged double
After a few of my images were in the paper last week they asked me for a feature and ran a double page spread today.
The section of track laying in the right-of-way gives a glimpse at what the Lurgan Subdivision looked like at the turn of the century. The once double-tracked main is now largely single tracked thanks to a decline in traffic on the former Western Maryland route. D773, the local that works Chambersburg, is seen here heading back to Hagerstown and travels the Lurgan Sub out and back on weekdays. The only other traffic is a twice-daily intermodal train (Q015/Q016) to and from the intermodal facility in Chambersburg. Just past the crossing signals where the train is crossing Leitersburg Road was where a bi-directional WM signal bridge stood (Wingerton); it fell in the years after the second track was removed.
Arches National Park in Utah is one of my favorites. This is a picture of Double Arch. Notice that if you look inside the front arch, there is a second arch at about a 90 degree angle to the prominent one in the the front of the picture.
Double-banded Plover
Charadrius bicinctus
April 8th, 2022
Port Fairy, Victoria, Australia
Canon EOS R5
Canon EF 600mm f4L IS III USM lens
Canon EF 1.4x III Extender
It's amusing to watch these birds when they are resting & decide to hop around on one leg.
These stocky little plovers spend the cooler months in Australia, before migrating to New Zealand for the warmer breeding season, where they are known as Banded Dotterels.
This is Ralph Lauren's ranch in Ridgeway, Colorado. Apparently he leaves the hay bales out extra days just for photographers. They were on a different field the day before this. We got lucky as they took them away the night after we got there. If we stayed a few days we would have gotten the bales on this field, but I like that we got the process shot of it instead and still got the bales from the day before!
To see my growing gallery from the trip go here to see some shots that are only published on my site: photography.tobyharriman.com/Photography/Fall-Colorado-Trip/
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nothing crazy here, just a double exposure of a friend. still learning how to do this process but excited to see where it goes when I use it a bit more frequently next season. I guess winter is good for one thing, learning!
5d3
85L
natural light / double exposure
(Thanks to anyone who has asked about how Poppy is doing. She's fine :) We just have be careful for a while that she doesn't bite or chew anything which means all her toys are put away for the time being. We have to tire her out with as many walks as possible).
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OK, here's the deal ---
Sometime around 8:AM we made it over to
the mud cobra field. Why so late you ask ?
Because yesterdays run to the monkey
temple really burned both of us out.
And the rains had diminished ;-)
In this photo the bike is facing back
down the trail/road we come in on.
And yes we left the bike and walked
into the mud cobra field for safety
reasons. Mr Murphy had set
a nasty trap for us as the
field was a real soggy
mud sucking swamp.
Ha Ha on Mr Murphy ;-)
When arriving I swung the scooter around
facing back down the easy part of the trip.
Old habit, in case a fast escape is needed.
The orange and green fence pickets
and green block wall surrounds the
now abandoned birdhouse you've
all seen in past photos. It's also
the last of any kind of half-
ass road/trail usable
most of the time.
This spot is where I also turn into the field.
And for now it's also the spot where I don't
turn into the field ! Reason the dogs are on
their way back is quite simple. We had just
walked all the way from the semi-shelter an
of course they were way out front. So when
they arrived at the scooter/sidecar they kept
right on going instead of waiting for me. Not
a problem, when I arrived at the scooter I just
slid into the saddle and let out a sharp whistle
& they came back at their own pace of course.
Soon all three dogs were loaded into the
sidecar and we are on our way back to
basecamp. I was to tired to wash the
dogs or scooter/sidecar. No# 1 was
waiting with their breakfast. Now
as mr heiney likes to say -----
"a tired dog is a good dog."
So this tired old dog is ready for a nap too.
Thank You.
Jon&Crew.
Please help with your temple dog donations here.
www.gofundme.com/saving-thai-temple-dogs.
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Double-crested Cormorant. Backlighting can be difficult to work with, but can provide wonderful results if used correctly!
Double-heading 2-10-2 steam locomotives bring train No. 91 into Fleming Yard. The train will pick up a block cars off of NAPM's Santa Fe Merchandiser, and then continue west over the Southgate Mountains. The San Francisco Chief passes on the main line next to the yard.
The locomotive models belong to NAPM member Terry Kimes. The 2-10-2 steam engines — appropriately known as the "Santa Fe" type — are from Broadway Limited and the EMD F3 and F7 diesels are from Walthers.
Photo by Mark Mathu. The scene was captured during NAPM's 40th anniversary celebration in 2017.
Visit the HO scale club on-line at www.napmltd.org.
The delightful combination of snow, mist and hazy sunshine as China Rail 'JS' class 2-8-2s Nos.5731 (Datong works 1960s) and 6315 (Dalian works 1980s) make light work of a Tongua to Hunjiang mixed freight at Daoqing on 20 November 1999.
© Gordon Edgar - All rights reserved. Please do not use my images without my explicit permission
These beautiful butterflies were the most amazing color.
They are the Pipevine Swallowtails. Wonderfully iridescent.
Change your angle and they changed their colors.
We were exploring a road that lead you to an old logging town in the Smokey Mountain National Park, and found these everywhere. They were all over the ground in groups of ten or more. I couldn't tell you why they were massed together like that, but it was beautiful!
22nd March 2018. As part of the West Somerset Railway Spring Steam Gala with a Great Western routes and Branches as a theme; a double headed Pannier tank movement. With GWR 57XX 0-6-0PT No.7714 [piloting] and GWR 94XX 0-6-0PT No.9466 run by the engine shed at Minehead.
27 Mars 2012, Paris.
—Double © alain-michel boley 2012
————————
personal website : alainmichelboley.wix.com/bolerophoto
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© alain-michel boley 2013 | All rights reserved
My images are not to be used, copied, edited, or blogged without my written permission.
I just learned that I can do double exposures in the camera. Of course I had to try. This is processed in both Photoshop and I-piccy.
This image perfectly represents the problems I have with 35mm film. The biggest issue for me is that it takes me so long to finish a roll. I am too methodical for 35mm anymore. I loaded this roll into my pinhole camera in August of 2022, shot 2/3 of the roll on a trip to Victoria, BC then promptly forgot about it. I set the camera aside, played with other pinhole cameras and then when I got the itch to shoot my 35mm pinhole again it was late March of 2024 and by this point I had forgotten there was even film in the camera still. I remembered quickly enough when I popped the lid of the camera and saw a roll inside rapidly soaking up all the light I was pouring into the camera. Thankfully this was not my first time inadvertently exposing a loaded roll of film and my reflexes kicked in and a dark bathroom got me the rest of the way to making sure I didn't spoil this roll. Even seeing the film once I had rewound it gave me no clue as to what I had been shooting with it when first loaded. It was not until I saw the developed negatives and realized this was a leftover roll from that Victoria trip that the pieces all came together in my memory. I guess if I am being fair, the length of time it takes me to get through a roll of 35mm is not the only issue at play here. There is also the fact that I have so many pinhole cameras that this one was able to sit out of rotation for way too long. And the fact that I really should be better about putting sticky notes on my cameras noting the film type loaded. But hey...
As far as what is going on in this image, I was using the Reality So Subtle 35R pinhole camera. It has two pinholes, one on the front of the camera and another on the back of the camera. You can expose your film either normally on the emulsion side, or through the reverse side of the film creating a redscale effect. Or, as in what I did here, you can make two exposures one via the front and then turn the camera around and make a second via the rear pinhole overlapping the normal and redscale images into a double exposure. Kind of fun and I kind of like kind of fun stuff. What else am I going to do while waiting for a drawbridge to raise?
Reality So Subtle 35R
Silberra Color 50
On our hitchiking trip on Isle of Lewis, we were introduced to the many sandy beaches on the island. And this was the most colorful place I shot on that trip.
Scotland has incredible concentration of rainbows -almost every single day I see one! And these double rainbows are not that rare.
Peak breeding condition. La Jolla, California, USA. These birds only keep these fluffy crests and electric blue skin around the eyes and mouth for a short period each year. This is the best I've ever seen it and I was lucky to be quite close to it in good light. I digiscoped this with a Nikon Coolpix 4500 through a Nikon Fieldscope.
80078 and 80136 double head at Moorgates on Saturday afternoon of the NYMR Steam Gala. Both had been re-numbered to engines that ran on this line in steam days.
Double exposure from Amsterdam, I used broken (and dearly departed) Smena 8m (focus issues) and expired Kodak film I bought in second-hand store.
Double Stud bangle:
An ethnic-organic structure, made in Polymer Clay, metal ring, polyshed by hands and wax.
Technics: faux ivory with faux tourquoise inclusion, "body" in faux leather effect.
Double Header!...
On April 28, Virgin Trains East Coast VTEC Class 91's, 91103 and 91104 pass Hornsey station on the East Coast Main Line ECML, working 1A06 0640 Leeds to London King’s Cross.
Barcelona. Catalonia.
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Holi (Hindi: होली, Nepali: होली, Punjabi: ਹੋਲੀ Sindhi: هولي) is a religious spring festival celebrated by Hindus as a festival of colours.
It is primarily observed in India and Nepal. It is also observed by the minority Hindus in Bangladesh and Pakistan as well in countries with large Indic diaspora populations following Hinduism, such as Suriname, Malaysia, Guyana, South Africa, Trinidad and Tobago, the United Kingdom, the United States, Mauritius, and Fiji.
Holi is also known as Phagwah (Assamese: ফাকুৱা), Festival of Colours, or Doḷajātra (Oriya: ଦୋଳଯାତ୍ରା) in Odisha, and as Dol Jatra (Bengali: দোলযাত্রা) or Basantotsav ("spring festival") (Bengali: বসন্তোৎসব) in West Bengal and Assam.
Holi is of particular significance in the Braj region, which includes locations traditionally connected to the Lord Krishna: Mathura, Vrindavan, Nandagaon, and Barsana, which become tourist destinations during the season of Holi.[1]
As per the Hindu calendar, Holi is celebrated on the Phalguna Purnima which comes in February or March in the Gregorian Calendar.