View allAll Photos Tagged double
Double exposure with home made box pinhole 4x5 on Fomapan 100. Dev, in D-76 10 min. Scanned kontaktprint. Dokumol 1+6 1 min on Forte fortezzo
Double the Toni...Double the pleasure.
I didn't know I took two nearly identical photos albeit with subtle differences in each one. Which one is better? Right or Left? I'm partial to the right, but it came out just a tad blurry.
Adapt from Crisscrossed Crystals, designed by Nancy Sebestyen, pattern & instruction from Bead & Button December 2010 (this current issue.)
Well, Nancy's bracelet is one row, here I double it.
Multiple exposure of a pregnant model, with one shot slightly out of focus.
Nikon F4. Nikkor 50mm F1.2 lens. Ferrania Orto 50 35mm B&W film.
Two Christmas trees revolving in opposite directions following their own orbits.
My Christmas bird tree is in the foreground. The bird tree in a revolving Christmas tree stand from the late 50's is playing Jingle Bells.
I got this video camera for Christmas last year and today I used it for the first time.
Birds: new vintage glass wood ceramic feathers plastic cloth felt metal straw stuffed "blown glass"
One of my favorite things about my house is the concrete double wash sink in the basement. (I'm an odd duck.)
Camera: Holgaroid
Film: Polaroid Viva90 - 125 ISO
Format: 3.25 x 3.38 in. (8.3 x 8.6 cm)
location: Monza
From a 126 film I took in London when I was 11. All of the pictures were either double or triple exposures. The boy is Reuben and the silhouetted figure is, I think, his big sister Eleanor.
47367 + 47596 "Aldeburgh Festival" departs Dereham on the Mid Norfolk railway hauling a service to Wymondham Abbey.
A double exposure on Crystal Beach from our trip over New Year's weekend.
Shot using my toy Debonair camera and Plus-X 125 (expired 2009). Xtol 1:1.
After this exhausting week, this reminds me of there would always be beauty & hope no matter how bleak things are. I was super weary after changing buses 4 times due to the landslide, crossing the raging Kali Gandaki river & walking to complete the journey to Tatopani - then I saw these double rainbows.
Just incredible.
Hope to recharge, reflect & regain clarity after this weekend!
This was on Mission Creek maybe five miles before it joins the Flathead River and maybe 30 miles before the Flathead joins the Clark Fork.
Tugboat Meredith C. Reinauer pushing petroleum barge RTC 150 downbound on the Hudson River near Cold Spring, NY
Built in 2003, by Atlantic Marine of Jacksonville, Florida (hull #245) as the Meredith C. Reinauer for Reinauer Transportation Companies of Staten Island, New York.
She was the third ATLANTIC II Class ATB designed by Naval Architect Robert Hill of Ocean Tug and Barge for Reinauer Transportation.
The tug is powered by two Caterpillar 3612 main engines rated at 3,600 horsepower each taken at 900 RPM, turning two Rolls Royce new generation five bladed propellers for a rated 7,200 horsepower.
Her electrical service is provided by three Caterpillar 3306 99 kW generators at 1,800 RPMs. One generator is dedicated to the INTERcon coupler system.
The tug was constructed simultaneously with the 150,000 bbl double hulled barge the RTC 150 which was built in 2003, by Alabama Shipyard of Mobile, Alabama.
Vessel Name: MEREDITH C. REINAUER
USCG Doc. No.: 1139736
Vessel Service: TOWING VESSEL
IMO Number: 9269037
Trade Indicator: Coastwise Unrestricted, Registry
Call Sign: WDB3775
Hull Material: STEEL
Hull Number: 4245
Ship Builder: ATLANTIC MARINE, INC.
Year Built: 2003
Length: 118.6
Hailing Port: NEW YORK, NY
Hull Depth: 22
Hull Breadth: 40
Gross Tonnage: 863
Net Tonnage: 258
Owner:
REINAUER MARITIME COMPANY, LLC
1983 RICHMOND TERRACE
STATEN ISLAND, NY 10302
The Eastern kingbird can often be seen perched in open fields or forest edges, waiting for an unsuspecting insect to fly by, only to be caught midair by this beautiful flycatcher.
Credit: Charlie Lister