View allAll Photos Tagged inverting
I developed my first roll of 120 film today and hung it to dry in the basement. Inverting the image revealed my cousin and his wife at Milikin University a couple months ago. I'll print up a proper version on paper one of these days. First I'll have to find a negative holder big enough. The film developed was Arista.edu, taken with a No.1 Pocket Kodak camera.
1. NC - Randolph County - Lake Lucas, 2. NC - Fort Macon Archives, 3. Sunset - Memorial Day Weekend - Sunday, 4. NC - Carolina Beach Archives, 5. NC - Carolina Beach State Park Marina at Sunset, 6. Decided to Post A Sunrise Shot before Logging Off, 7. I Know I Should Go to Sleep ..., 8. NC - Harkers Island Sunset,
9. Leaving Fort Macon, 10. Playing Around More with Shutter Speed - 1/25 sec, 11. NC - Bird in Flight over Harkers Island, 12. Ethan, 13. NC - Harkers Island Sunset, 14. NC - Passing through the Interior of Fort Macon, 15. NC - North Carolina Zoo, 16. "Peek A Boo - I See You",
17. NC - Randolph County - The Pisgah Covered Bridge, 18. "Dress for Success.", 19. NC - Kure Beach Pier Sunrise, 20. NC - Marina at Carolina Beach State Park, 21. After the Memorial Day Sunrise, 22. A Prayer for my Neighbors, 23. CO - Colorado - Rocky Mountains, 24. UT - Utah - Salt Lake Valley & Wasatch Mountains,
25. CA - Intense Sunset, 26. NC - Randolph County - Pisgah Covered Bridge, 27. Happy Jake, 28. CA - Crystal Cove State Park, 29. UT - Wasatch Mountains East of Ogden, 30. flickr.com/photos/8568267@N08/2367993600/, 31. Happy Easter, 32. flickr.com/photos/8568267@N08/2317177535/,
33. NC - Hatteras Island - Frisco, 34. Sunrise ...., 35. Early Evening Moon & Sunset over Randolph County, NC, 36. NC - Randolph County - Asheboro - Old Court House, 37. NC - North Carolina Zoo - Arctic Fox, 38. Details, details, details ....., 39. Version 2 - It's Beginning to Feel a Lot Like Winter ..., 40. SC - Hilton Head - Sunrise #3,
41. Miss Kitty, 42. It's Beginning to Feel a Lot Like Winter...., 43. SC - Hilton Head Island - Late Afternoon, 44. SC - Hilton Head Sunrise #3, 45. Veterans Day Sunrise #1, 46. Fall Finally Comes to Randolph County NC, 47. NC - Randolph County - Pisgah Covered Bridge #4, 48. A Photojournal - Sick Day - Photo #2,
49. One More Time...., 50. More Ethan, 51. NC - Kure Pier, 52. Ethan - Funny, 53. Good Bye, Old Baldy, 54. NC - The Village Chapel on Bald Head Island #1, 55. NC - Manteo - The Elizabethan Gardens, 56. Sunrise at the Cape Hatteras National Seashore,
57. Ethan on top of the Laundry Cabinets, 58. Lines, Curves, & Angles #4, 59. NC - North Carolina Zoo - Randolph County, 60. Moe Close Up, 61. NC - Asheboro - North Carolina Zoo - Flower, 62. The Chapel at Orton Plantation, 63. The Carolina Beach Marina, 64. Dudley's Sunrise - Carolina Beach
Created with fd's Flickr Toys.
Foto realizada con objetivo invertido a f11 y flash de anillo para evitar sombras fuertes, trÃpode y cable disparador.
Buscaba una profundidad de campo "media" con el fin de destacar un poco la flor en segundo plano pero sin quitar protagonismo a la de primer plano donde querÃa resaltar los estambres y su polen situandolo lo más cerca del "punto fuerte" del tercio derecho.
Her's an X-Ray of the insides of the alleged 1,000,000 volt spark generator that really 'only' gives about 100,000 volts. It is housed in a tube that's backfilled with potting compound so the only way to see what's inside is to wreck it with some quite nasty chemicals - or just take an X-Ray.
On the left, with three terminals, is the inverter transistor. The big squarish thing is the transformer, with the primary (low voltage) winding on the left and the high voltage winding, in several sections, on the right.
The three light patches are the middle of three high voltage capacitors. I don't know what the black blobs are (anothr X-Ray from a different angle suggests they are two-terminal devices and I guess they might possibly be spark gaps).
Below the right hand blob are two high voltage rectifier diodes. Their structure is interesting: you can clearly see that they're made from a stack of individual rectifier diodes (which are transparent to X-Rays) joined together with slivers of metal (dark). The wires leading out to the right carry the high voltage.
I think there may be a high value resistor between the two output wires - a sensible precaution, ensuring that the capacitors discharge over a reasonable period of time so that the device doesn't bite you when you pick it up six days after it was last used.
I haven't had the inclination to work out the output circuit, but it's a reasonable bet it's a simple voltage doubler rectifier. Those blobs intrigue me, though - they are impervious to my ~50keV X-Rays so I can't determine anything about their structure.
Comments are, as usual, welcome.
Remember this? Well this time I was on my way home from work and decided to act, once again, on the impulse to stop and take some pictures. I am glad I did too. This time I had more time and nowhere to be; so you can expect more over the next few days.
In this photo, a different part of the same park, at night
its exactly what you see.
for this print i opened my original image in paint and fliped (inverted) the colours
A photogram is a photographic image made (without a camera) by placing objects directly onto the surface of a photo-sensitive material such as photographic paper and then exposing it to light. The result is a silhouetted image varying in darkness based on the transparency of the objects used, with areas of the paper that have not received any light appearing light and those that have appearing dark, according to the laws of photosensitivity. The image obtained is hence a negative and the effect is often quite similar to an X-Ray. This method of imaging is perhaps most prominently attributed to Man Ray and his exploration of rayographs. Others who have experimented with the technique include László Moholy-Nagy, Christian Schad (who called them "Schadographs"), Imogen Cunningham and even Pablo Picasso. For more information click at en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photogram
Well, this was no ordinary aqueduct. To build a ten mile long aqueduct, 55m high, would have taken vast amounts of stone, brick, money and time and the land either side of the Eurymedon River was soft and boggy, which would have led to the aqueduct subsiding under its own weight. So they built an 'inverted siphon' aqueduct.
The water supply in the hills ran out along a conventional aqueduct as far as the first tower, where it flowed into a header tank. From here, it went into pipes (made from hollowed out limestone blocks, sealed with lime and olive oil!), which descended 40m down a steep ramp to the lower level, single tier section of aqueduct, which they crossed before climbing up the second tower and ending at a receiver tank, at a slightly lower level than the header tank. From the 2nd tower (seen here), the water ran across the final, two tiered section of aqueduct to the town, with enough fall to provide some pressure.
The aqueduct was probably built in the second half of the third century and seems to have had an active life of no more than 150 years. Towers containing water tanks would have been particularly vulnerable to the effects of earthquakes.
Pro Rider for [Blunt Scooters] Max Peters, doing an invert Air, at my local skatepark in Devonport Tasmania.
After having 4 healthy scoops of vanilla ice cream, I had washed the scoop suddenly I noticed these drops, thought it will be a good test shot for the macro mode.
(Canon EOS DIGITAL REBEL XT; 5/21/2007; 1/60 at f/5.6; ISO 400; white balance: Auto; focal length: 55 mm)
There's a reason why this isn't the sharpest photo I've ever taken. It was a reflection shot, in to moving water over a step stone, then inverted it.
Comet C/2014 Q2 Lovejoy - imaged from London on 10th January 2015
TS65 Quad scope, Atik 314L+ camera
Standard and inverted to show tail.
Royal Air Force, Eurofighter Typhoon FGR4, ZJ914
Flying Finale airshow - Imperial War Museum, Duxford, 8/10/22
Model: Alexandra Lanchester
Photographer: Darren Key (Dark Lens Photography)
Clothing: Eyeball Perry Dress by Hell Bunny / Ripleys Clothing (www.ripleysclothing.co.uk)
Inverted Cappucino with vanilla ice cream and dark chocolate sauce
Casa Rolandi Restaurant at Hotel Villa Rolandi
Isla Mujeres, Quintana Roo, Mexico
Related (in the Power of Positive Relationships group):plate decorated with chocolate