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© All rights reserved Arben Basha. Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit written permission.
âCrazy Tuesdayâ ,
âMonitoring and/or Measuring Instrumentsâ ,
Thermometer,
Humidistat,
Macro,
Reflection,
United States,
Pennsylvania,
Winter.
"Calibrando la Noche".
Created for "Lines and Angles" Challenge in Creative Digital Art Community.
Querétaro-México.
Textures : my own.
© All rights reserved.
This image may not be copied, reproduced, distributed, republished, downloaded, displayed, posted or transmitted in any form or by any means, including electronic, mechanical, photocopying & recording without my written permission. Thanks.
No measure of time with you will be long enough, but let's start with forever. azartaisce ♥
Style credits at jangsungyoung.com
Boldness, Honesty, Responsible, Dependable, Strength, Patient, Gentle, Decisive, Wisdom, Integrity, Passionate, Courage, Protective, Loving.... are some of the characteristics....and, well, also, a nice pair of shoes and drives a niiiice car ♥
haha and I love to take his pic! ♥
The little black cormorant (Phalacrocorax sulcirostris) is a member of the cormorant family of seabirds. It is common in smaller rivers and lakes throughout most areas of Australia and northern New Zealand, where it is known as the little black shag. It is around sixty centimetres long, and is all black with blue-green eyes. The little black cormorant is a small cormorant measuring 60–65 cm with all black plumage. The back has a greenish sheen. In breeding season, white feathers appear irregularly about the head and neck, with a whitish eyebrow evident. The plumage is a more fade brown afterwards. Males and females are identical in plumage. The long slender bill is grey, and legs and feet black. The iris of the adult is green and the juvenile brown. Immature birds have brown and black plumage. The little black cormorant ranges from the Malay Peninsula through Indonesia (but excluding Sumatra) and New Guinea (including the D'Entrecasteaux Islands) and throughout Australia. It is found in New Zealand's North Island. It is a predominantly freshwater species, found in bodies of water inland and occasionally sheltered coastal areas. It is almost always encountered in or near water. The little black cormorant feeds mainly on fish, and eats a higher proportion of fish than the frequently co-occurring little pied cormorant, which eats more decapods. 53838
Nested measuring spoons cropped to under 3 inches. Tabletop with black felt background in available light. Alternate image: flic.kr/p/2iVxh4g
I am using here an adapter and a lens (Helios 44M-7, a 58mm lens) that is not coupled with the camera (Leica M8). So, the camera does not help at all with focussing. Instead, I used a measuring tape, adjusted the lens accordingly and chose a narrow aperture (F11) to increase the chance of achieving good focus. It does work, though this is my first successful shot applying this method. In "real life", I think, I should use a portrait lens that is coupled to the camera.
Skala und Zeiger eines "Directional Gyro Radio Magnetic Indicator" (Hersteller: Aviation Instrument MFG. Corp., Houston, Texas, USA)
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Scale and hands of a "Directional Gyro Radio Magnetic Indicator" (manufacturer: Aviation Instrument MFG. Corporation, Houston, Texas, USA)
"To see a World in a Grain of Sand And a Heaven in a Wild Flower, Hold Infinity in the palm of your hand And Eternity in an hour." - William Blake
Macro Mondays, Theme: Measurement
For an image where its easier to see the scale, see:
This metal micrometer measuring gauge was one of my father's many tools; before his death he gave many of them to my husband. This tool was used for precise measurement and to measure gap widths.
After he and my mother survived active war duty in the army, they went to university. There they became concerned about government and politics the more they learned. Glad they can't see our situation now.
Inspired by #MacroMondays and #father. As shot, except to remove a bit of cyan along an edge. Approximate width 5cm/ 1.97 inches.
NB. I tried for a no-frills or bokeh approach, a more engineering streamlined look. The histogram looks okay...does it look too dark on your monitor?
my thoughts on the laowa 65mm:
www.aarondesigns.org/Laowa-65mm-f28-2x-2to1-SuperMacroLens/
shot with a fujifilm x-s10 and a venus optics laowa 65mm f/2.8 2x macro lens
i think I may branch off a wee bit from the theme days. Here and there mind you. It is only because I am getting a back log in some other areas.
Happy Window Wednesday anyway.....lol
My Closest. Funny things is this little black cat is a mini tape measure, you can just see the tab end at the feet. Happy Monday. HMM
Also a title for a Shakespeare play which was the titles inspiration. A set of 1/4, 1/2, and 1 teaspoon and 1 Tablespoon measuring spoons.
Cheers and HMM !