View allAll Photos Tagged multipleexposures
Whether or not this monolith, found on Yaverland Beach, Sandown on the Isle of Wight during a recent BRCC field trip, is pointing to the Moon whilst emitting some sort of unknown, alien signal is not currently known. It is also not known if this particular sentinel is full of stars. Has anyone seen Dave?
Open the pod-bay doors please Hal...
23 hand held exposures representing two minutes and thirty seconds of Saturday, 2nd June, 2018.
Will I dream?
Hi this is a 3 image in camera multiple exposure from New York earlier this year , thanks for looking :):)
3 images at 0.5sec, f/6.3, 105mm, iso 100
Multiple expusure macro processed by Affinity Photo for Mac. Shot taken in the dark room using Yongnuo Pro LED Video Light.
After I made this image, which consists of ten individual exposures, I found myself wondering about the countless billions of creatures that have lived and died in the oceans since life first emerged on Earth. Yes, I am sometimes prone to melancholia, as you may have already noticed.
And what conclusion did I draw after all of that wondering?
That the sea is full to the brim of ghosts, that’s what.
If you look long enough, you can see some of them here…
I’m not sure why, but looking at this place makes me imagine that I lived in that last house around the outbreak of the Second World War. I envisage myself looking out of the window while listening to Chamberlain announcing the war with Germany on the wireless, wondering how everything might change. A curious sense of horror and trepidation mingled with memories of lost time accompanies this conjured scenario.
But then, parallel to that, there’s also a vision of a return at the end of the war, ecstatic that it was all over and that very little had changed at Port Quin.
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Usual caveats etc.
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Nine hand-held exposures representing approximately 10 seconds of January 20th 2025, taken from the slipway at Port Quin, Cornwall.
today i tried to capture people... but the result not good for my taste hehe
i used double exposure from camera... and then removed the rest
As you know (unless you are a ‘flat-earther’), the Earth rotates about its axis. It does this at around 1000 miles-per-hour (mph) if you are standing on the equator. If you inhabit the higher or lower latitudes, then this figure will reduce as you get closer to your nearest pole.
The Earth also orbits the sun at around 67,000 mph. That’s really quite fast when you think about it - it works out at about 18.5 miles every second. But the incessant speeding doesn’t stop there. The solar system is located in the Orion Arm of our Milky Way galaxy, which, wouldn’t you know it, also rotates about its axis, this time at the really quite staggering rate of 515,000 mph or, about 143 miles-per-second.
“Enough!” I hear you cry.
Sorry, but the unrelenting race doesn’t end there either: The Milky Way is itself speeding through the infinite playground of the universe at around 1,300,000 mph. Yes. That fast. That’s about 360 miles-per-second. At that speed you could travel from the Earth to the moon in a little over eleven minutes; or you could get to Mars in about 26 hours.
Now, if you add all of those figures together - okay, I know that it doesn’t really work like that, but if you did… calculate… calculate… recalculate… check… you end up with a figure of… approximately 503 miles-per-second. That’s how fast you are moving. All of the time.
You are, quite literally, hurtling through the universe at a blistering pace.
But, if you stand still for a moment, relatively speaking, pretty soon you'll be able to feel the earth spinning beneath your feet. Just ask the flowers...
Or:
A flock (sic) of Daisies, at the Weald and Downland Museum.
Fifteen hand-held exposures representing fourteen seconds of June the 9th, 2019.
Usual caveats etc.
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NB. If I stop to consider that I have been alive for approximately 1,766,016,000 seconds, then it would appear that, so far, I have travelled… calculate… calculate… check… blimey… really? Recalculate… recalculate… check… 888,306,048,000 miles. Over 888 billion miles.
The title of the image is taken from the first line from the song 'Time Stands Still' by John Dowland (1563 - 1626), a version of which you can listen to here with Emma Kirkby and Anthony Rooley.