View allAll Photos Tagged multiples

This shot is of one person playing poker. It is a multiple image composite.

Spring at RHS Wisley, Surrey, UK

Shot using the multiple exposure function on the camera.

In camera multiple exposure

 

Multiple exposure shots capturing Aya Ueto advertising for Mitsuya cider water.

 

Olympus OM2000

Tamron SP 17mm/3.5 51B

Fujicolor 100

Epson Perfection 2400

Multiple exposure image created on my iPad using Image Blender when I was `playing’ one evening.

 

I’ve been collecting together images that have some orange in them as we are going to put together another camera club photobook. I’m not sure whether this would count but I chose it because it is a bit different.

Microftalmia y catarata posterior secundaria a artieria hialoidea persistente en cachorro de Bulldog francés

Multiple exposure - Multiple exposición

And,as a bonus, in a salwar kameez as well, A look that's proving to be a fan-favourite with some of you.

P.C & Edit : Amartya Datta

Editing app : Photoshop Mix

Website : www.theimmortalarts.com

Contact : theimmortalarts2015@gmail.com

My camera has multiple exposure ability...

 

The reason my cheek looks funny is because an eyeball from another exposure is in the middle of it.

 

ha.

Last night's frost, combined with a bit of sunshine this morning created some nice water drops, which helped create some interesting sunbursts

Greenscale multiple.

The Postcard

 

A postally unused Cameracolour postcard published by J. Salmon Ltd. of Sevenoaks. The card has a divided back.

 

The narrow-boat on the left is being weighed by a weighing machine that was originally used on the Glamorganshire Canal. (..... Why is it important to know the weight of a narrow-boat? Answers on a postcard please).

 

Stoke Bruerne

 

Stoke Bruerne is a small village and in Northamptonshire, 10 miles (16 km) north of Milton Keynes. The village is typical of this area of south Northamptonshire, containing many traditional stone and thatched cottages.

 

The village's main claim to fame is its situation on the Grand Union Canal, making it a favourite destination for tourists. In the 2001 census, the population was split 196 male and 199 female in 169 households.

 

The nearby country estate of Stoke Park along Shutlanger Road is occasionally open to the public in August, but all that remains of the main house are the two east and west wings known as the Stoke Park Pavilions.

 

Walks

 

Many public footpaths cross the area around Stoke Bruerne. One such walk, taking in Grafton Regis, was the subject of a Daily Telegraph article. Other walks in and around Northampton are mentioned in the County Council Right of way site.

 

Stoke Bruerne Canal Museum

 

The village is home to one of the three museums owned and run by Canal & River Trust. The others are at Ellesmere Port and Gloucester Docks.

 

The museum is housed in a restored corn mill at the top of a flight of canal locks. The museum tells the story of Britain's inland waterways and the people who worked on them. It provides an insight into the transport system which was fundamental to the industrial revolution in Britain.

 

There are working models and 3-D displays, including a model of the short-lived inclined-plane mechanical lift at Foxton in Leicestershire.

 

Exhibits include models of working boats including narrow boats, barges, butties and tugs, painted ware and canal crafts, traditional clothing, canal-side signs and specialist tools.

 

The Blisworth Tunnel

 

About half a mile north of the village is the south portal of Blisworth tunnel - accessible by a walk along the old towpath The tunnel is 3,075 yards (2,812 m) long and is the longest wide, freely navigable tunnel in Europe. The tunnel was awarded a Transport Trust 'Red Wheel' in recognition of its industrial heritage and importance on the 22nd. August 2014 (the 30th. anniversary of the reopening of the tunnel in 1984). The Red Wheel is on the blacksmith's forge in Stoke Bruerne.

 

Stoke Bruerne's Facilities

 

There are two canal-side public houses, The Boat Inn (on the postcard), and The Navigation, both serving a variety of meals and drinks. There is a restaurant/takeaway, The Spice of Bruerne, various bed and breakfast facilities and tearooms.

 

The village attracts many visitors all year round, and especially during the summer months. A variety of boat trips may be booked. Most of the time there is plenty of activity on the canal, with boats going through the locks regularly and plenty going in and out of the tunnel.

 

The Railway

Stoke Bruerne had its own railway station, part of the Stratford-upon-Avon and Midland Junction Railway. It was misnamed Stoke Bruern. The station building has been converted to a private house and is just outside the village. The line of the railway, and station platform, are still visible and the Blisworth road has a railway bridge still in position near the former station.

 

Stoke Bruerne in the Media

 

Stoke Bruerne appears, along with neighbouring Blisworth, in the Ealing Studios film 'Painted Boats' (1945), filmed at the end of World War II and directed by Charles Crichton whose notable successes include 'The Lavender Hill Mob' (1951) and 'A Fish Called Wanda' (1988).

 

J. Salmon Ltd.

 

Alas, J. Salmon no longer produce postcards. Having churned out small coloured rectangles of card from its factory in Kent for more than 100 years, the company stopped publishing postcards in 2017.

 

The fifth-generation brothers who still ran the company sent a letter to their clients in the autumn of 2017, advising them that the presses would cease printing at the end of 2017, with their remaining stock being sold off throughout the following year.

 

The firm’s story began in 1880, when the original J. Salmon acquired a printing business on Sevenoaks high street, and produced a collection of twelve black and white scenes of the town.

 

In 1912, the business broke through into the big time by commissioning the artist Alfred Robert Quinton (1853 - 1934), who produced 2,300 scenes of British life for them up until his death.

 

From Redruth to King’s Lynn, his softly coloured, highly detailed watercolours of rosy milkmaids, bucolic pumphouses and picturesque harbour towns earned him a place in the hearts of the public, despite references to Alfred's 'chocolate-box art' by some art critics.

 

J. Salmon also produced photographs and cheery oils of seaside imagery captioned with a garrulous enthusiasm: “Eat More Chips!”, “Sun, Sand & Sea”, “We’re Going Camping!”

 

It commissioned the comic artist Reg Maurice (who often worked under the pseudonym Vera Paterson), to produce pictures of comically bulbous children with cutesy captions, alongside the usual stock images of British towns.

 

It was this century’s changing habits – and technology – that did for Salmon. Co-managing director Charles Salmon noted:

 

“People are going for shorter breaks,

not for a fortnight, so you’re back home

before your postcards have arrived."

 

He barely needed to say that Instagram and Facebook had made their product all but redundant, almost wiping out the entire industry in a decade.

 

Michelle Abadie, co-director of the John Hinde Collection, said:

 

“When I heard the news, I was

actually surprised they still existed."

 

John Hinde was once J Salmon’s biggest rival; it sold 50-60 million postcards a year at its peak in the 1960's, but it, too, shuttered four years previously. The licensing for its rich archive of images was sold off, and repurposed in art books.

 

However, in one sense, the death of the postcard is overstated. Like vinyl records, our fetish for the physical objects we left behind is already making its presence felt.

Michelle Abadie points out:

 

“If you go into Waterstones now, they

sell lots of postcards of book covers.

The idea itself isn’t dead – as a

decorative object, people still want

them.”

A man passes through a long hall of arches in the Sultan's Palace in Muscat, Oman.

Serenity Valley Winery co-owner Regina Ruppert reaches for a bottle of wine to serve Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012 at Tallulah's. Ruppert said she donated her time and wine to the event in part because a prospective business partner has multiple sclerosis.

People who want to get into the workforce but are facing multiple barriers to employment will have greater opportunities as the B.C. government significantly expands skills training for employment programs.

  

Tuesday 19 April 2016

 

Bhulbhule (3365m) - PK Dairy (3640m) - Pikey Peak II & Pilates Planks (4065m) - Jase Bhanjyang (3550m).

 

Wonderful blue skies and multiple mountain views as we headed north towards PK Dairy and then up PK / Pikey Peak, where Steffi set the pace with Pilates planks before the descent to Jase Bhanjyang, which would later be bathed in beautiful evening light as the sun set.

 

PK Dairy and Jase Bhanjyang both provided opportunities to gather information about local families who might need one of Light Education Development (LED)'s solar lights, and to do some distribution and repairs.

 

But the mountain views won the day.

 

From our first stop, just outside Bhulbhule, looking east we could see: Shishapangma - Dorje Lhakpa - Chang - Ramdung - Bigphera Go Shar - Numbur - Khatang - Karyolung - Everest - Lhotse - Nuptse - Baruntse - Pethangtse - Thamserku - Kangtega - Drangnag Ri [?] (Peak 49) - Makalu - Chamlang - Mera - Naulekh - Kanchenjunga.

 

From PK Dairy and the mani wall down at the pass before it more mountains stretched to the west: Gaurishankar - Shishapangma - Langtang Lirung - Paldor (Ganesh Himal) - Sringi Himal - Boudha Himal - Peak 29 (Ngadi Chuli) - Manaslu / Mansiri Himal - Annapurna

 

Read more on SparklyTrainers: Val Pitkethly's On and Off the Beaten Track through Solukhumbu.

 

DSC01576

この写真は多重露出スイッチの切り替えを忘れて、7,8回露光しました・・・

切り替え忘れには気をつけよう^^;

 

Zenza Bronica EC + Nikkor-P 75mm f2.8

fujichrome Velvia 100 Professional

 

@Tamagawadai-Park, Ota-ku

Multiple upload this morning, and a few shots from the balmy days of November where we were all thinking 'hey, this winter things not so bad after all, don't know what all the fuss is about' :)

 

Dog + Stick + Beach = Happiness

 

If you fancy it, you can see more photos from this day and read a little surf blog on soul-surfing.co.uk/

 

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©2011 Jason Swain, All Rights Reserved

This image is not available for use on websites, blogs or other media without the explicit written permission of the photographer.

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my website

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Links to facebook and twitter can be found on my flickr profile

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Multiple choice... Is this where we are with security nowadays?

National Multiple Sclerosis Society volunteer Phil Sachs serves himself a finger sandwich at the Sip n' Shop event Wednesday, Oct. 24, 2012 at Tallulah's. Guests snacked on food from HyVee and Serenity Valley Winery wine while socializing and browsing.

Multiple-trunk trees can be evidence of logging in the past.

Multiple exposure using Smena 8m during trip to Portland.

“Give a man a fish; you have fed him for today. Teach a man to fish; and you have fed him for a lifetime. Teach a man to sell fish and he eats steak!”—Author unknown

 

Strobist Info - SB-26 high left 85mm 1/4power, SB-25 close high left 50mm 1/4power, SB-25 right (which died I think!!) 85mm 1/4power

 

Bronica SQ-A w/ 150mm PS f/4 - Velvia 100F

 

Must remember that after I take a Polaroid test shot to flick the ME switch back otherwise this will happen!

Another in camera multiple exposure - first from under the blossoms against the sky, and the 2nd of the capitol buildings. The purple cast is mostly due to the sunset in the West, though I played that up some in post ;)

Multiple exposure (in camera) used for photography podcast #81 on multiple exposure photography

Siri supports natural language for setting multiple alarms.

 

Me: "Make an alarm for three PM"

 

Siri: "OK, I set it for 3 PM"

 

Me: "Make another for three thirty"

 

Siri: "OK, I set it for 3:30 PM"

I wandered around my yard using my canon eor r and my lensbaby velvet 56 with settings for 5 shot multiple exposure. I didn't do much post processing but did add filters with the software on my computer. I'm happy with some of the patterns that were captured.

First night we arrive at Vegas after camping for 4 days at Grand Canyon and Zion. Like all newly wed do on their honeymoon, do multiple personality shots of course.

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