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Strobist assignment on specular highlights. Screenshot of a bunch of shots. All slight variations on a theme: using specular highlights to shape a black object.
Highlights from the 2015 season. The design of the After Effects intro was not created by me, but all clips were shot and edited by me. License to use the music was paid for by LCSC to ASCAP/BMI.
Due to Flickr's 3 minute limit, please go to YouTube for the full version. www.youtube.com/watch?v=mnybAlVxykw
A revamp of an older MOC and their hoverboard. I wanted more emphasis on small highlights this time. The board can also switch between a show mode and a stealth mode.
First Version: ohlookitsanartist.deviantart.com/art/Bionicle-MOCs-Cyber-...
Strobist assignment on specular highlights. All slight variations on a theme: using specular highlights to shape a black object.
Can anyone help identify this insect? Thanks it is a Red Rim AKA: Crimson-banded Black Butterfly -Nymphalid Biblis hyperia
This picture is taken through a glass viewport into the insertion device. The view shows the end of the magnet array with copper flex tapers. The orange glow is from an internal heater coil which is in the process of activating one of the Ultra High Vacuum pumps.
A weekend of Tea Duelling, a mini Cooper’s Hill Cheese Rolling, and Hobby Horse Show Jumping were some of the highlights of last weekend’s Steampunks in Neverland event.
Organised by Steampunks of Gloucestershire, the event was centred around Kingshill House in Dursley and attracted participants from across the county. The steampunk aesthetic is based around 19th century science fiction that incorporates industrial steam-powered machinery, and steampunk literature is often set in alternative history of the Victorian era.
Matt McCall, the group’s chairman, told Stroud Times: “We’re here for two days and celebrating the science fiction and fantasy of the mid-Victorian period, although science fiction has its roots way back. The first proper science fiction novel of the modern era was Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein; it’s not a horror novel.
“A lot of authors that were writing fantasy had a go at science fiction – even Tolkien and CS Lewis – so today’s theme is Neverland, based on the Peter Pan story. We’re aware the original stories are not quite the way Disney tells them, but it does encourage people to read and stretch their imagination. We’ve got a number of people dressed as pirates and a Peter Pan here today. We’ve even got a shadow running around. It’s all about stretching your imagination and enjoying yourself – there are no rules, so you can’t be wrong.”
The event is meant to be fun – which it clearly was: “We’re here to make people laugh, to make people enjoy themselves and come out of their shells a little bit,” explained Matt.
“A lot of our members are neurodivergent. We have a huge cross-section of community, some of which comes from the LGBTQ+ community as well. We've got a lot of people with disabilities who are very, very isolated and one of our members was saying quite recently how she’d moved to Gloucester and become involved with us and she’s now going out places and doing things – it was like she had found her tribe.”
Rach Hall, a full-time artist and one of the group’s directors, spoke about her late autism diagnosis: “As an adult you’re taught you’re not allowed to play any more, it’s not something we’re encouraged to do, but that’s what we do – we get together and play and do silly things and it gives you a reason to enjoy life outside the structure of everyday life and work.
“Our mission statement is very focussed on making sure everybody feels safe – we only use disabled accessible venues and we’re aware of how we communicate with our neurodivergent members.
“It gives us a space to be ourselves.”
Steampunks of Gloucestershire, founded in 2016, has a team of seven directors and is a CIC (Community Interest Company) whose focus is to run community events. There are around 2,000 members and events can attract anywhere between several dozen, right up to 2,500-3,000 people.
HIGHLIGHT ONLY
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fo r t h e F U L L version ^^ I d o n o t
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Fischer-Tropsch synthesis is important for producing ultra-clean, premium transportation fuels from syngas derived from biological matter. One major challenge to commercial use of biomass and coal are stringent syngas cleanup costs because of its many impurities. Syngas often has many impurities, and ridding the gas of these impurities efficiently is a high priority for cost- and energy-saving in the syngas production process. By investigating potential impurities, researchers from the University of Kentucky are pinpointing ways to reduce costs and emissions from the syngas production process.
Learn more at: www.lightsource.ca/news/media_release_20150522_1.php
Canon 550D with 100mm/f.2.8 Macro USM lens. Nikon 77mm Circular Polarizing Filter II. Tripod mount.
ISO 200, f2.8, 1/320th sec. This 100mm lens is exceptional for the price. Great clarity throughout and no color fringing at all. The red at the top is an oak tree in full colors reflected in a pond located in Rusk County.
That's Noodlers Firefly highlighter ink. Even if it does look a bit like a urine sample from a radioactive mutant.