View allAll Photos Tagged globe
Wet Plate Collodion Tintype 8x10
Goerz Dagor 240/7.7
f22
4min
小高湿板写真製作所
Daisuke Kodaka Wet Plate Photography and Alchemy
Sat. the 5th Early Morning Walkabout cut short. Tripped Face First into the Sidewalk.
Deep Gash on Left Eyebrow. Broken Left Pinky and Abrasions on both Knees.Limping back to My Cave.
Hollywood Farmers Market, Ivar Avenue, Hollywood, California
The Impossible Project PX 680 - V4C Black Paste Opacification Test Film
L/D wheel set to neutral.
Shot in morning shade - 80F & humid.
Shielded.
Put in box to develop.
For cruise passengers the Globe Tavern, just up from the Public Jetty in Stanley, Falkland Islands, is ideal for a last pint before re-boarding.
A globe is a three-dimensional, spherical, scale model of Earth or other celestial body such as a planet or moon. While models can be made of objects with arbitrary or irregular shapes, the term globe is used only for models of objects that are approximately spherical. The word “globe” comes from the Latin word globus, meaning round mass or sphere. Some terrestrial globes include relief to show mountains and other features on the Earth’s surface.
The fog was incredibly thick this evening, and I had to point my camera downwards just to avoid getting water on my lens. Not because of rain, but because of the humidity. Do check out the other photo of the globe that I got the same evening.
Very simple setup: An alight globe standing on a clean, reflective glas table in an ordinary room. (no special darkening was applied, it was night. :) )
No Flash, f14 aperture, 0.4 sec exposure ISO100.
an old project of mine to build
a globe...i started this back in 2002
and have been lugging the pieces
around ever since, finally done :-)
the globe is about 20inches in diameter
made from fiberglass and filled
with foam, the map parts are built
with the Generic Mapping Tools
and glued on...
the "making of" pictures
below were taken by Red Zena
We're Here! : *maps everywhere*
I don't know how, but my wife managed to snag this awesome globe that pivots on two axes. It has raised topography and beautiful colors. Unfortunately it doesn't have a date on it, but it still has the USSR on it, so it has to be older than 1990. Based on Gilbert Island and Phoenix Island on the globe, it was probably made in 1979.
This globe hangs in our bathroom. It was there when we moved in, and we like it a lot, so it's going to stay.
The Globe of Science and Innovation is a large wooden structure symbolizing planet Earth, designed by T. Büchi and H. Dessimoz in 2002. It has been a CERN landmark since 2004. The sculpture in front of the globe is "Wandering the Immeasurable" by Gayle Hermick.
The Globe of Stockholm. The tracks is for elevator to grand view on its northpole. Bad luck for us they where not lifting the weekend we visited (which was NOT mention on the website :/)
Twitter: tehaha Portfolio: www.ahaphotography.net
A Globe Roll with top-tube brake set up for the media event. See this comment below for more details on the photo. Bike Hugger attended the Globe Launch. This is one of the many bikes we saw.
echinops bannaticus, one of the many flowering globe thistles. Greyish-green spikes turn into pale blue overlapping florets. The globe itself is about two and a bit inches in diameter, so the neg is more than twice life size.
toyo45cf, wollensak raptar 101mm lens, 4x5" Ilford FP4+ film, f8, 1 second exposure, natural light, uncropped
Globe Holidays YN07OPG, a 2007 Volvo B12M Plaxton Paragon, was seen in Halifax Town Centre, whilst operating a service X12 to Oldham for the Halifax Heritage Bus Day. This coach was new to Logan, Dunloy before passing to Moffat & Williamson, Fife where it carried registration FSU 395 for a time.
I was visiting Metalab after attending 29c3 and they let me use their lazzzor.
I was inspired to create a map using the Dymaxion projection from xkcd:977. Once the pieces came out of the laser cutter it was clear that they'd look great as an isocohedral globe. Here it's just taped together, but I hope to bevel the edges and install hinges on some edges and magnets on others. The idea being that it can be flattened out into (near enough to) the Dymaxion Fuller projection and then pulled up into the globe.
Although I very much dislike all this persnickety scissor-work, there's something strangely compelling in these models. The polygons have curved edges, circle arcs, that curve even when the developable surface of the polygon does not. It's like a paper globe where the flatness gets distributed more evenly -- a geodesic sphere made with curves, as it were.
A template for the persnicket-tolerant. (If you have sharp eyes, you'll note little dots where the connectors meet the sides. I find that if I pierce the paper there with a pin, the scissors better know where to stop.)
Shakespeare's Globe is a reconstruction of the Globe Theatre, an Elizabethan playhouse in the London Borough of Southwark, on the south bank of the River Thames that was originally built in 1599, destroyed by fire in 1613, rebuilt in 1614, and then demolished in 1644. The modern reconstruction is an academic approximation based on available evidence of the 1599 and 1614 buildings. It was founded by the actor and director Sam Wanamaker and built about 230 metres (750 ft) from the site of the original theatre and opened to the public in 1997, with a production of Henry V. The site also includes the shell for a reconstruction of the Blackfriars Theatre, another Elizabethan theatre, due to be completed and opened in November 2013 as the Sam Wanamaker Theatre.