View allAll Photos Tagged drillbits
Not that Stendhal was a DIY man that I know of, but it sort of came to mind as I put together this tabletop shot, this modern-day nature morte of sorts...
Composite shot made up of 11 focus-stacked exposures, set automatically using the built-in function on the Z7 camera. Stack processed with Helicon Focus. Nikkor Z 50mm ƒ/1.8 S lens.
And the winner is...
Excelente Martes para todos! y como siempre, gracias por pasar.
Excellent Tuesday to all! and as always, thanks for stopping by.
If you have time, View Large On Black! (recommended)
A 2.5 mm drill bit; uncropped, natural light, f16, 47mm extension tube.
Day 7 in a month long series using an Auto-Takumar (Zebra) 55mm f1.8 lens, this time attached to a Pentax Q and extension tubes.
ok... so i was tagged! It's been really hard lately... but i'm gonna try to be myself.
Ten objects within your reach
1. my camera
2. the nerdy glasses pictured above
3. 3 picture frames
4. an old antique fan
5. oil paints
6. an elephant key chain
7. 4 old sketchbooks
8. a book full of photographs of reflections
9. a packet of marching band fundamentals :p
10. the Drillbit Taylor movie
Nine things you did today
1. watched kids
2. watched Breakfast At Tiffany's
3. bought the nerdy glasses pictured above off of a small child
4. visited many people's amazing photostreams
5. went to bandfront practice
6. went swimming
7. played guitar
8. rearranged my newly painted room
9. bought the doors two disc "best of..." CD
Eight of your favorite songs (not in any specific order)
1. smells like teen spirit, Nirvana
2. rolling in the deep, Adele
3. break on through, the doors
4. who says, selena gomez
5. perfect, pink
6. for the first time, the script
7. mortician's daughter, black veil brides
8. drumming song, florence + the machine
Seven things you love:
1. my family
2. my friends & my boyfriend
3. photography ♥
4. arizona tea
5. acting
6. MUSIC
7. indie movies :]
Six things you hate:
1. the valley
2. bugs
3. bratty children
4. math
5. being lazy
6. stupid situations i have no control over
Five fears:
1. talking to strangers on the phone
2. losing people i've grown so close to
3. trusting people
4. not living up to expectations
5. going to college
Four inside jokes you have:
1. "are you trying to seduce me?"
2. "dinkleman is going DOWN!"
3. "THE STORM'S A COMIN'!"
4. "my son is gay..." :]
Three things you couldn't get through the day without:
1. my phone
2. food
3. communication & affection :p
Two favorite quotes
1. "i love you more than i could ever scream..." The black veil brides
2. "and in that moment i swear, we were infinite." "the perks of being a wallflower"
One final confession:
1. i confess, i am scared of myself... but i'm working on it.
HOLY COW! 6.000 +views!!!! thank you all so so much! :] ♥
Our last tornado of the day. We somehow got ahead of the chasers traffic jam and had just enough time to stop for this spectacular view before it roped out.
Our video of the storm: youtu.be/N0HeglAd-iE
April 14, 2012
Salina, Kansas
Knight Foundry, Sutter Creek, California, USA
I just love the Olympus M.Zuiko 75mm f/1.8. This was shot wide open.
Copyright © 2020 by Ian J MacDonald. Permission required for ANY use. All rights reserved
I love old tools and old timey things. Especially old time power tools. Back in the day powertools were so streamlined, sleek and shiny ...they looked like P-51 Mustangs or a Lockheed Electra. They looked like they should be powered by a nuclear reactor inside. I suppose it was inevitable, since they were designed by and used by guys who came back from WWII designed and used these power tools. And in those days America was a "can-do" place and it was reflected in the streamlined, Chrysler building-esque design of everything in the Atomic Age.
Title: Climax Molybdenum at Associated Oil Co., Ventura, Cal.
Creator: Robert Yarnall Richie
Date: March 1940
Part Of: Robert Yarnall Richie Photograph Collection
Place: Ventura, California
Physical Description: 1 photographic print: gelatin silver; 26.3 x 3.4 cm.
File: ag1982_0234_2114_5_sm_opt.jpg
Rights: Please cite DeGolyer Library, Southern Methodist University when using this file. A high-resolution version of this file may be obtained for a fee. For details see the sites.smu.edu/cul/degolyer/research/permissions/ web page. For other information, contact degolyer@smu.edu.
For more information, see: digitalcollections.smu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/ryr/id/52
View the Robert Yarnall Richie Photograph Collection digitalcollections.smu.edu/all/cul/ryr/
3 kafadar arkadaş lisenin ilk gününü mutlu mesut geçirirken okulun en serseri öğrencisinin gazabına uğrarlar ve akıllarını bir fikir gelir.Çareyi Bodyguard tutmakta bulan gençler filmin baş kahramanı Drillbit Taylor’u en uygun aday olarak seçerler ve kendilerini koruması için her yerde beraber gezerler.
www.nefilmizle.com/son-care-bodyguard-drillbit-taylor-hd-...
Copyright © 2020 by Ian J MacDonald. Permission required for ANY use. All rights reserved
I love old tools and old timey things. Especially old time power tools. Back in the day powertools were so streamlined, sleek and shiny ...they looked like P-51 Mustangs or a Lockheed Electra. They looked like they should be powered by a nuclear reactor inside. I suppose it was inevitable, since they were designed by and used by guys who came back from WWII designed and used these power tools. And in those days America was a "can-do" place and it was reflected in the streamlined, Chrysler building-esque design of everything in the Atomic Age.
after looking a what some people have in the bags form the whats in your bag group it all seem a little to perfect. so me and Sarah are randomly getting each other to take photos of what i art bag a any moment all we have to do is call each other. i got the first call at 11:00 AM this mooring but missed it! i called her back at 4:30 PM this what was in my bag:
Lens cleaning cloth but i use this to clean my lap top screen because it usually lives in this but it was not needed at the hard where store.
Contaxt T2 for taking photos
Lomo LCA also for taking photos
Bosch drill for making holes, but i have lost the chuck key and was taking to a tool shop to get a new one
New chuck key for the sum of £2.99
Duracell AA battery probably dead and cam out of my DAB or bicycle light
4 cans of fosters for hag because it coming to help with some DIY and he will need beer
iPod nano this would not normal be in my bag it would be in my pocket but the battery went dead as soon as i left the flat and that really pissed me off cos i just loaded the newest DJ Zinc Cyber clip onto it!
Receipt for some records
2 wire tacks no clue what there are doing in my bag
One heavy duty rubble bag
5 not so heavy rubble bags
Shopping list written in code only i understand
Scrapper i need two cos me and hag will be scrapping to night
Cheep paint brush for use with paint stripper
Masonry drill bit
Wall plug
200 wood screws
Price for a very nice Panasonic Screw driver
7 First Class stamps
Medication
Nito Moris paint stripper - it turned out to crap!
Bus Ticket dated 12th may
Outside the Grants Mining Museum, they had a massive drill. I had no idea that mining was big in the town.
This tool and bench area seems to have a bit of everything, and I imagine that back in the day, it had that and much more. The shops at the East Broad Top Railroad hold a trove of amazing tools, machines, parts and so on, and they're all original to the railroad. Sadly the scenic operations shut down back in 2011, and they've been looking for a buyer ever since. I swear if i ever win the lottery, I'll be the proud owner of my very own railroad!
A drilling bit sits atop the gates on the road into the old Humble Gas Plant in the Tomball Oil Field, Tomball Texas The gate is now on Humble Road. Oil and gas production was an important part of Tomball's history.
From 1907 to 1933 Tomball was a shipping point on the railroad with most of the people primarily involved in farming and ranching activities. The coming of the railroad in 1906 was followed by a post office in 1908. The town acquired its first school in 1908 . In 1913, electric lights and telephone service became widely available in the little town. By 1914 Tomball had a population of 350, a bank, a blacksmith, several stores, six hotels, and two cotton gins. Charles F. Hoffman was an early settler who operated the first general store, and J. J. Trichel was postmaster.
Then In 1933 Tomball changed forever in just a day. On May 27, drillers struck oil west of town on the property of J. F. W. Kob. Almost overnight Tomball became a oil boom-town. In 1935, the original contract negotiated between Tomball and the Humble Oil and Refining Company (later Exxon ) gave free water and natural gas to Tomball residents for ninety years in exchange for drilling rights within the city limits. On July 6, 1933, Tomball, popularly known as "Oil Town U.S.A.," was incorporated with a population of 665. With the discovery of oil, however, this figure tripled. Soon there were twenty-five to thirty oil and gas companies producing within a five-mile radius of Tomball. Humble built a "camp" in Tomball which included housing, recreation facilities and other facilities for its workers. Tomball became famous as a city with free gas and water but no municipal cemetery. The hydrocarbon reservoirs played out and Exxon sold their interest in the late 1980s. There is still a little production from the field and the gas plant is still operational, however most of the field has now been abandoned.
Information for this caption from;.
Handbook of Texas Online, Mike Dennis and Lessie Upchurch, "Tomball, TX," accessed March 05, 2017,
Title: [Roughnecks on drilling rig floor with drilling stem, Gulf Oil Corp., Big Creek, TX]
Creator: Robert Yarnall Richie
Date: May 1939
Place: Big Creek, Texas
Part Of: Robert Yarnall Richie Photograph Collection
Physical Description: 1 photographic print: gelatin silver; 27 x 33.9 cm.
File: ag1982_0234_1994_11_sm_opt.jpg
Rights: Please cite DeGolyer Library, Southern Methodist University when using this file. A high-resolution version of this file may be obtained for a fee. For details see the sites.smu.edu/cul/degolyer/research/permissions/ web page. For other information, contact degolyer@smu.edu.
For more information, see: digitalcollections.smu.edu/cdm/ref/collection/ryr/id/51
View the Robert Yarnall Richie Photograph Collection digitalcollections.smu.edu/all/cul/ryr/
DSC_7425: Today's computer science / IT / geek rebus.
This is old drilling company data. No fracking!
Real floppy diskettes of different vintages.
Some are mine, but most I got from www.floppydisk.com in Tustin, CA, USA. Great for retro geek art projects. Not 3D printed replicas.
All I need now is my Commodore 64 with it's MOS 6510 CPU!
On a social note, did you realize that it's exactly 3 months until Christmas today?
My Dad was really into woodworking. I think he would have gotten a kick out of this one.
Here's a close-up of the headbadge of a Hercules Maestro 'Massed Start Machine', I bought recently. I don't know why the Hercules name, itself, is so small, as there is no other mention of Hercules on the frame!?
I'll probably have this frame stove-enamelled in 'petunia' & ivory as shown in the 1953 catalogue on my photostream, as I'm not a fan of green, at all!? That means I have to find an original transfer with the same design as above for the panel on the seat-tube, plus a 'Kromo' tubing transfer (I don't think H.Lloyd Cycles have one of the same type?), plus one 'chevron' type. I already have one NOS chevron!
None of the equipment fitted to the frame was original to the bike, so I have to find all the parts as shown in the '53 catalogue on my photostream (maybe slightly amended, if I find out the actual year it was made-any ideas??)
Copyright © 2020 by Ian J MacDonald. Permission required for ANY use. All rights reserved
I love old tools and old timey things. Especially old time power tools. Back in the day powertools were so streamlined, sleek and shiny ...they looked like P-51 Mustangs or a Lockheed Electra. They looked like they should be powered by a nuclear reactor inside. I suppose it was inevitable, since they were designed by and used by guys who came back from WWII designed and used these power tools. And in those days America was a "can-do" place and it was reflected in the streamlined, Chrysler building-esque design of everything in the Atomic Age.
Macro of a titanium drillbit. They are a huge improvement over the normal ones, as they cut through stuff like butter. As I am not that strong this is important to me, as the drill is already pretty heavy.
Macro Monday 26th March 2012: "Periodic Table".
Taken with iPhone 4S with the magnetic snap-on macro lens.
we have been putting up all of our pictures today at the house, and again this was a last minute thing. i had been using the drill all day long and thought why not. it did take me stopping and having dinner halfway though, to work out how to do it right. although as usual, i'm still not 100% happy with it.
D200, Sigma 10-20, SB-600 on stand above camera, Tripod, Self timer, power drill, cloned photo, no blood!
A folded piece of paper, or even a Post-It sticker are the ideal way of catching brick & plaster dust when drilling walls.