View allAll Photos Tagged headlamp
1957 Lincoln Premiere. The Premiere was known for its stylish exterior, high-grade interior and some unique features. The Premiere was one of the largest cars ever made, larger than contemporaneous Cadillacs, and with their canted headlights and scalloped fenders had styling considered by many to be excessive even in that decade of styling excess.
CR's KYN ( KALYAN ) 13620 WDG3A fitted with LED HEADLAMPS taking a small nap after powering CHAMRAJA NAGAR - MYSORE ~ PASSENGER SPL
LC :- MYSORE JN
My second Brickforge order, mainly to snatch the clear space armor, helmet and visor, but also to sample the proton packs, crowbars and nightsticks.
The quality of the proton packs is quite remarkable and the phasers are great too. The headlamp straps and night-vision goggles are a flexible rubber making them very versatile.
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Driving winds polish the ice to reveal deep fractures traversing Dream Lake.
Dream Lake, Rocky Mountain National Park, Colorado.
'Twas the morning after Christmas, and I was the first person on the trail. The temperature was 14°F with high, sustained winds and gusts well over 50 mph. I was tasked with route finding and breaking trail by headlamp. The wind had driven snow drifts across the trail and in some places I was postholing to my waist with snowshoes on. I reached the lake with time to spare, but the wind was punishing, blowing directly into my face all morning. It was strong enough to knock me over and push me across the ice at one point. At first, I was worried there the mountains would remain hidden in the clouds and blowing snow. But, as the light breached the horizon, they started to peak through. The light continued to get better all morning. I worked my way across the lake from East to West, finding interesting foregrounds. This was one of the last images I captured on the lake, and it is easily my favorite from the morning.
First light breaks over the horizon near Courthouse Butte as seen from the top of Cathedral Rocks in Sedona. This was a hike I had been planning on doing for some time, and during which I truly did not know if I would make it. I had started during complete darkness very early in the morning and had only done the trail 2 other times, the last of which was more than 3 years prior, and always with the help of some daylight. Despite having a headlamp, somehow towards the upper half of the trail when I thought the most difficult parts were past, I mistakenly followed what I thought was part of the actual path only to realize after I had climbed way up, that I was actually clinging to the side of the opposite pillar I was trying to reach. By the time I realized this, there was no path whatsoever, and looking down in any direction involved a slippery and steep slope, so I kept trying to head up, climbing over stickery bushes that pulled at my clothes (and ultimately took my flashlight as well!) and holding on to the side of this wrong pillar and kept just hoping somehow I could reach my destination through my highly detoured route. It never helps that my night vision is so poor. Finally, by some sort of miracle, I saw 2 other headlamps in the distance and realized where I needed to be. However, it was so far from where I was that I thought, even if I do make it back to the trail, I would not make it in time to capture the sunrise. To further compound things, I really did not know when I set out in the dark if this was going to be a colorful sunrise, or if there would be too many clouds to block the light. This is just not the hike to be able to wait to start by the time you could make that determination with any certainty with your own eyes as it is not the quickest climb. It was a scramble and a rush, but I finally made it to where I had seen the headlamps, although the wearers of them were nowhwere to be found. I thought sure I would catch up to them at the top of the trail and was going to thank them for their unintentional guiding lights to me. Maybe the sound of my scrambling through the slopes in the darkness so far off trail but heading toward them scared them from staying put; I don't know! I can't imagine wanting to do that hike both ways in the complete dark and not at least take in the view for a moment with the pending sunrise, but I was completely by myself at the top. But I could not believe my eyes when I finally did arrive, way up at the top of the summit. The sunrise was about to put on a spectacular show. This image and then next few images I will share will hopefully help you experience what I saw after my somewhat harrowing personal experience trying to get there.
down at the beach and some guys with some damn powerful headlamps came along to do some fishing, the light works well in this shot..
This is Headlamp, Heddy for short. She is Lottie's daughter and cousin to Baxter, Pansy and Ludo. She picked up her name as a tiny kitten because of the blazing ginger patch on her face and it just stuck!
Camera: Canon EOS 400D Digital
Exposure: 15
Aperture: f/18.0
Focal Length: 50 mm Prime
ISO Speed: 100
Exposure Bias: 0 EV
Flash: Off, Did not fire
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5 astrophotography mistakes that can ruin nightscapes.
Next to Loughrigg Fell, I’ve probably visited Durdle Door in West Lulworth more than any other landmark in England. But despite the door’s instant appeal, most viewpoints include too much beach or sky, giving the door a bloated look.
This trip, I was determined to solve the compositional riddle. Shooting in landscape helps crop out the boring sky, but overemphasizes the expanse of water. This time, I decided to shoot a vertical to fill the top half of the frame with the starry sky.
The first night shoot was a bit spooky with whipping, howling winds and the glowing eyes of foxes that skitted at my headlamp. Beautiful wisps of clouds flitted past the stars, giving the brightest ones an ethereal glow.
Jurassic Coast, West Lulworth, Dorset, England, U.K.
I cannot resist another lambretta shot from #biamf last weekend. This one reminds me of a frog. Bristol's 13th annual Italian Automoto Fair.
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For this weeks theme we were meant to find faces in everyday objects, quite difficult with a macro, but a great challenge.
My second shot is a very surprised looking face on my daughters head lamp that we found while we were packing her gear for camp this week. I think he's really quite cute.
HMM everyone.
I'm continuing to take full advantage of the new gym at work, sometimes before work and sometimes after... I'm still not really enjoying running, but I'm doing it... and I think I'm getting a little bit better at it. The other day the President of the company made some remark about me using the gym because everyone knew that I had made it into work and was already in the gym when they closed work due to snow and he asked me if the music was working. Music? What music? I didn't know anything about music in the gym and a couple of times I had gotten on the treadmill only to have my ipod say "Battery Low"... ugh. So, he told me that there is an ipad built into the wall where you first walk in and we can use it to play music in the gym. So, the other day I tried it out and it was great. I'm not really sure how I turned it on, or off that day, for that matter.... but it had a good play list and I enjoyed it. Today, I went in and tried to turn the music on.... but it kept saying that the wi-fi was off and it wanted me to sign in with my Apple ID...which I don't know by heart and wasn't sure I wanted to do that anyway.... and then eventually, somehow, I got the music to play.... but it was Iron Maiden and some other headbanging music.... which I couldn't find a way to turn down... or change to anything else that I would prefer to listen to... and I just figured that today, I would increase my pace and run faster, to finish earlier, just to get out of there before my ears started to bleed. I spent 30 minutes on the treadmill and enough was enough... had to get OUT OF THERE.... so I went to turn off the music and leave... but I couldn't.... turn off the music... and I couldn't turn it down... and I couldn't mute it. And one of our shooting instructors was somehow logged in to the ipad, even though she hasn't been there at work in the past week.... and I was beginning to think that someone, somewhere else was controlling this music.... so I called a friend that worked there and asked her how to make it stop... together.. we still couldn't figure it out and she told me to just leave and she would try to figure it out in the morning... and now I am only praying that our new employee, that has Mondays and Tuesdays off and is currently staying in the room above the gym, doesn't come back and try to sleep there tonight... because that place was vibrating when I left .... and because everyone knows that I am one of the only people that ever uses that gym, so there will be no question about who left the music blaring.... ugh. Did I mention that the better part of my work day was spent on the phone with our IT guy trying to get the Hunting license printer to print...and once that was working.... trying to get the things that were supposed to print out on the regular printer to STOP being sent to the Hunting license printer and being printed on little bright green pieces of hunting license paper.... and then trying to get reinstated into the Fish and Wildlife website because I was locked out ... have I mentioned that technology hates me and that everyone around me pretty much knows that by now. And have I mentioned that starting tomorrow, I may be back to running outside .... in the cold... early in the morning or late at night with a headlamp on.... after I am banned from the gym for leaving the headbanging music playing all night. Yup.... another banner day for me...
The Milky Way reflecting off of the surface of Dollar Lake on the Rae Lakes Loop of Kings Canyon National Park.
My buddy and I were backpacking the 45 mile loop over 4 days. This was our second camp site of the loop and we had just got into camp around 6pm, set up, made and eaten dinner. I had about 1/2 hour to get ready before the Milky Way became visible, this was taken at 8:30 pm that night. Unfortunately some campers on the other side of the lake were using their red headlamps, but....what are you going to do.
6 photos taken at ISO 6400, F1.4, and 13 seconds stacked for the sky and blended with one long exposure at ISO 800, F1.4, and 124 seconds long for the foreground. Both series taken with long exposure noise reduction on.
View in black to see the details.
This otherly world location is in the High Sierras is where the bristlecone thrive, so to speak. Because what other tree is there that could be dead and you can't tell. This one pointing at the rising moon is probably thousands of years old. On the flip side they can remain standing for thousands of years after death. But up here up at 12,000 ft this is a way of life, in this barren land, where the only other visible life is scrub brush. Because whipping winds with very little moisture, is not very conducive to life.
This is a single exposure taken just after sunset, with a moon that was so full, no headlamps were required to hike the 2-3 miles back to our cars.
Continuing my photos from walks around town.
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