View allAll Photos Tagged messy,

Lens: TV NP 101is

Focal length: 540mm

Focal Ratio: 5.4/1

Exposure: 20X30 sec

Mount: CGEM

Guiding: C5+ & SSAG

Camera: Canon T1i (500D) Un-modded

Mode: Raw

ISO: 800

White Balance: Normal

ICNR: Off

Filter: Astronomik CLS

Temp: 61F

Date:

Start Time:

Location:

Clear Sky Chart Rating:

Relative Humidity:

Seeing:

Moon Phase:

Acquisition:

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messy, though quite comfy.

  

© dancenatalyadance

Framed autographed photos of Mark Messier and Bobby Hull. M-D Building Products leather grained metal sheet used as matting.

 

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Edited Hubble Space Telescope image of the elliptical galaxy (or lenticular) M85. Color/processing variant.

 

Original caption: This atmospheric image shows a galaxy named Messier 85, captured in all its delicate, hazy glory by the NASA/ESA Hubble Space Telescope. Messier 85 slants through the constellation of Coma Berenices (Berenice’s Hair), and lies around 50 million light-years from Earth. It was first discovered by Charles Messier’s colleague Pierre Méchain in 1781, and is included in the Messier catalogue of celestial objects.. Messier 85 is intriguing — its properties lie somewhere between those of a lenticular and an elliptical galaxy, and it appears to be interacting with two of its neighbours: the beautiful spiral NGC 4394, located out of frame to the upper left, and the small elliptical MCG 3-32-38, located out of frame to the centre bottom. . The galaxy contains some 400 billion stars, most of which are very old. However, the central region hosts a population of relatively young stars of just a few billion years in age; these stars are thought to have formed in a late burst of star formation, likely triggered as Messier 85 merged with another galaxy over four billion years ago. Messier 85 has a further potentially strange quality. Almost every galaxy is thought to have a supermassive black hole at its centre, but from measurements of the velocities of stars in this galaxy, it is unclear whether Messier 85 contains such a black hole. . This image combines infrared, visible and ultraviolet observations from Hubble’s Wide Field Camera 3.

Messy desk challenge shot from @gardenglen. The neutral tones hide some of the mess. A sign accompanies the permission in another photo

Groningen Centrum, Herestraat, 09-06-2007. Deze man voerde een klein kind ijs, en genoot er zelf ook van. Toen ik deze foto nam, kreeg 'ie op z'n kop van zijn vrouw of dochter, omdat 'ie nu onder het ijs op de foto was gekomen.

 

Groningen Centre, Herestraat, 09-06-2007. This man was feeding icecream to a little child and enjoyed it himself as well. When I took the picture, he was scolded by his wife or daughter, because he would appear in this picture covered in icecream.

The mess that was my bedroom, spring 2001. Stacks of CDs, cassettes, and records, piles of books and zines and journals and zine-making supplies…yep, looks about right.

My desk at work. Remember a messy desk shows you're a hard worker & much to busy to waste time tidying up. ;-)

messy dinning room table

What do you do when the Moon is out? Why, you take pictures of star clusters! M34 is a nice big cluster with bright stars, and to me bears a resemblance to M41 in Canis Major. This image was assembled from a stack of 36 15-second exposures. All processing was done in ImagesPlus.

 

Messier 44, the Beehive Cluster. Canon 700d and 77-300mm lens at 77mm. First night trying out my Sky-Watcher Star Adventurer mount and my new zoom lens.

FGR- Stick that tongue out!

 

Messy Games at Youth!

Edited European Southern Observatory image of the galaxy Messier 61. Color/processing variant.

 

Original caption: Nuzzled in the chest of the constellation Virgo (the Virgin) lies a beautiful cosmic gem — the galaxy Messier 61. This glittering spiral galaxy is aligned face-on towards Earth, thus presenting us with a breathtaking view of its structure. The gas and dust of the intricate spiral arms are studded with billions of stars. This galaxy is a bustling hub of activity with a rapid rate of star formation, and both a massive nuclear star cluster and a supermassive black hole buried at its heart. Messier 61 is one of the largest members of the Virgo Cluster, which is made up of more than a thousand galaxies, and is itself at the centre of the Virgo Supercluster — to which our Milky Way also belongs. This dazzling beauty was first discovered in 1779, and it has been capturing astronomers’ interest ever since. Set against a dark sky littered with galaxies, this image shows the awe-inspiring M61 in its full glory — even at its distance of over 50 million light-years. This image was taken as part of ESO’s Cosmic Gems Programme, an outreach initiative to produce images of interesting, intriguing or visually attractive objects using ESO telescopes, for the purposes of education and public outreach. The programme makes use of telescope time that cannot be used for science observations. In case the data collected could be useful for future scientific purposes, these observations are saved and made available to astronomers through ESO’s Science Archive.

WEEK 19

Portrait: Messy

Take an amazing portrait of someone, make a mess while you are doing it.

 

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I wasn't really making a mess myself, but the whole area was quite drenched from the kids playing with the water :)

 

CC welcomed.

Messier 22. Apilado de 110x16 segs (29 min), f:400mm @ F/5.7, ISO 1600. Canon 1000D +Celestron 70/400, montura CG4. 10-08-12

It's clean now... i promise

Here are my "before" pictures.

Messy Games at Youth!

My coworker told me to take this picture of the guy (data center manager) who sits back-to-back of me. His desk has gotten progressively messier, and while this is not a horrible mess, it's spilling into the hallway and trips people. The main reason we took this picture is a former coworker used to have this desk, and he was a neat freak, and we wanted to torture him.

 

Take that Steve! Look at what Kevin did to your old desk! Ha ha!

2 more bookcases to go through........i am getting ride of a a lot of books......anyone in the area let me know......this is also one of my projects for today.....

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