View allAll Photos Tagged hexagon
I'm not sure why I'm starting another blanket when I have so many unfinished projects! This is a hexagon motif from a Japanese book titled PRETTY COLOR CROCHET and KNIT GOODS 2, which I purchased after seeing this post (which shows this project):
www.flickr.com/photos/elizabethcat/4517647480/
I adapted the pattern a little with an extra row of off-white around the hexagons.
The Hexagons Pool (Hebrew: בריכת המשושים, Breichat HaMeshushim) is a natural pool in the Meshushim Reserve, part of the Yehudiya Forest Nature Reserve, in the central Golan Heights.
The pool, at the bottom of a canyon, is named after the shape of the hexagonal basalt columns that make up its walls. This geological formation was created by the slow cooling of layers of lava flows over a long period. When the lava solidified and cooled, it was split into polygonal shapes due to its contraction.
Minolta MD Rokkor 50mm 1.2
Aperture was open to f2.0
I've remarked in some of my posts that this lens shows a round (or football-shaped) bokeh wide open at f1.2, and slightly transparent hexagonal bokeh at f2.0. At f2.8 the hexagons become smaller, harder edged and more opaque. This is a good example of the bokeh at f2.0.
The coloured lights in the background are a combination of automobile tail lights and headlights, as well as traffic signals. The two green hexagons are the green traffic lights, the hard orange-red hexagons are tail lights, the yellow (egg yolk) hexagons are turn signals. The fuzzy bokeh further in the background come from lamps or other sources of light in shop windows. The very faint raspberry coloured bokeh are reflections of the tail lights on the wet pavement. The nominal subject in the foreground is part of a sidewalk planter at a shop doorway - pine boughs and cones sprayed with a fake frosting to resemble snow.
If I had a wish for this photo, it would be that the foreground subject be more compelling.
FactoryButteGPP[crpSq[mdl&mdl[r180]2exHDRCompo[FlareR+45forSqPSXBlackChange
The Inspiration for this Composite Abstract was an image of Factory Butte taken by Mobilus In Mobili.
www.flickr.com/photos/mobili/52436313328/
For maximum effect, click the image, to go into the Lightbox, to view at the largest size; or, perhaps, by clicking the expansion arrows at top right of the page for a Full Screen view.
Don't use or reproduce this image on Websites/Blog or any other media without my explicit permission.
© All Rights Reserved - Jim Goodyear 2022.
The camera was kindly sent by Sam Cornwell. As with several of my cameras, I mounted it on toy fan to record the Sun path. Thank you, Sam!
Camera: Solarcan by Sam Cornwell (beverage can 0.5 l)
Paper: Kodak Polymax RC, 14x18 cm
Exposure: 1 min of rotation + 5 min standing still
Developer: old weak D-76 1:1
Scanner: CanoScan 9950f
#Sechseck#….Schrauben 2 und 2,5 cm.
Ein Sechseck,auch Hexagon genannt, ist ein
Vieleck (Polygon),das aus sechs Ecken und
sechs Seiten besteht.Sind alle sechs Seiten
gleich lang,sind auch die sechs Innenwinkel
gleich groß und betragen 120*.In diesem Fall
spricht man von einem gleichseitigen oder
regulären #Sechseck#.
Für:“Happy Macro Monday“ am 28.08.2023.
Thema:“Hexagon“, (Sechseckig)
😄Thanks for views,faves and comments😄
Looking for a more interesting shape for your towers than standard squares? Take a look at this hexagonal tower technique in the newest Brickbuilt tutorial.
Tutorials | Creations | Featured Tutorials | Build Logs | Commissions
This is my finished hexagon blanket. I followed attic24 Lucy's instructions, except I left out the chains before making the circle into a hexagon.
I used undyed wool for the edge of the hexagons.
It is one meter wide and 2 meters long.
Unfortunately it is raining all the time, and I can't make a proper picture in this light.
This cylinder has a 21 LU (just over 4 studs) radius. Curved slope 16058 has a radius of just under 20 LU, so the cylinder is about as round as it gets. The core is hexagonal, based on four layers of 27255 hexagonal plates in two orientations. The clips connect each plate to the one above rotated by 60 degrees.
A small Paper Wasp nest, less than 3cm across. Not as neatly hexagonal as a Honey Bee comb, but they do their best. I had several much larger Paper Wasp nests hanging just about 30cm above the door inside my garden shed. I find Paper Wasps calm and mostly non-aggressive, unlike those asshole Yellow Jacket Wasps and Bald Faced Hornets. So I just left them alone, and they left me alone. Any time I stepped into the shed I'd talk to them and wish them a good day. My neighbours think I'm insane.
This is a portion of the top of a small wooden jewelry box. The decorative inlay is made up of mother of pearl, metal, tile and wood.
Shot for the August 28 theme of Hexagon for the Macro Mondays group.
I've discovered I live in a hexagon-free house so had to resort to these allen keys
HMM!
And hello again - It's been well over a year since I last posted in the Macro Mondays group!