View allAll Photos Tagged reverse
Filed the notches for Reverse, Neutral, and Forward. Machined a simple clamp to use as a file guide, a great suggestion from Ed. The Reverse Stand is SS, so filing was a little difficult. Getting the guide positioned without twisting was also finicky, but would not want to do this job without the clamp.
Somewhere on the Four Mile Trail with the base of the Cathedral Spires and Cathedral Rocks and El Capitan.
I found some old negatives and scanned and reversed them to learn who they might be, but can't say I know this fella. He does seem all alone on a deserted street, except for the photographer.. The vehicles in the background are pretty neat. Easier to see them when this is viewed large. I see, too, that the streets are dirt roads, but that might not tell you much, either. Maybe this was on a Sunday, when not too many people are out, and it is either shortly before or shortly after the noon hour, judging from his shadow. He looks like a satisfied man. Maybe that's his girlfriend taking the photo.
enjoyed the change and flow of the water.....
It is man that makes truth great, not truth that makes man great -- Confucius (551 BC - 479 BC), Chinese philosopher, administrator, and moralist
I piloted newly restored Blackpool PD3 529 for a Bus and Coach Preservation magazine photoshoot in February 2009. We took the 14A route to Thornton Social Club and after waiting for the traffic to clear, I reversed the bus into the former turning area - still in place over 30 years after the 14A ended.
This was my first attempt at reversing the 50mm f/1.8 to try and get really close to things. I'm not really sure about this one, mainly because of the oof front, but there's something I like about it.
What a mouth, have never seen this insect before. Looks straight out of a sci fi flick. Taken with a 24mm lens reversed onto a stack of 3 extension tubes. A hinged hot shoe allows the flash to lean out over the stack with a home made snoot to fire the light directly in front of the lens. Taken in Central Park, NYC.
Items on the desk we reversed, we covered with clear plastic wrap. This made it easier to see what we had done.
You've heard the old saying "Don't take any wooden nickels." This one I got when I was 8 years old in 1972, when the hamlet of Pearl River, NY was celebrating its centennial.
Taken with a reversed 24mm on extension tubes. I use a hinged hot shoe to allow the flash to lean out over the lens/tubes rig and a home made snoot lined with aluminum foil to fire the light directly over the lens and capped at the end with paper to diffuse. Most of the post processing was removing all the pollen that landed on the sensor the few times I swapped an extension tub out. Incredibly time consuming.