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I finally figured out how to layer these shots in photo-shop. Glad to be doing more skiing photography.
Rough cut of a sunflower field flyover. Cuts are there to hide interruptions in flight caused by the object avoidance system, culled from a single pass across the field.
just a bunch of sequences that ive taken over the past month ish....
song : BDE bonus track on Best day ever the album by: Mac Miller
Free photographs of sequences to use for any reason. Check out TheWriteMoms.com for more free stuff including photoshop patterns of these.
simple tap sequencer that functions like the tap / pattern clear on tr-606
In this video, the simple tap sequencer is being clocked by the tr-606. The tap sequencer is triggering a 909 kick. The highhat and snare sounds are from the 606.
Above the green button is a bi color LED, green indicating clock pulse, red indicating step 1 (BAR).
the red LED in the corner is the trigger output indicator.
as you can see, green button is the TAP record. It places a trigger pulse onto current step.
The red button is the pattern clear. while held it clears the current step.
The blue button is a step forward button (in parallel with clock input)
Thanks for looking!
Model - Laura Ann Hickey [& George].
Photographer - Laura Ann Hickey.
...All the rest of it is me too but I cba writing it. =]
Oh and it would work so much better with a child, but I have a different idea and some children at the ready for that.
"Sequence," a 1996 work in weathered steel by Richard Serra. This work is adjacent to the north lawn of the Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford University.
Video here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=ldXQvx3hCUo
The Shroomtronic is a small hand held noise-making sequencer that allows you to create a bank of 4 sounds, that can then be tapped out in real time or put into a sound loop.
With no current work or time to get out and shoot some, I thought I'd post this sequence of wave images from my August holiday in Cornwall. There's a post further back showing me about to get totally thrashed by a wave, these were the shots I was taking before and after that wetting. Once again they are non-flickr images I've used for my own personal work. They actually form a vertical triptych; one mount with three apertures stacked above each other, in a simple black frame. It's a little something I put it together as a memento of that impressive, stormy day for Jay to hang on her wall. I called the sequence 'Rolling Thunder' because as we stood there watching these man-high, walls of water racing towards us, we both remarked on the deep throated booming sound they made as they crashed onto the beach and how it seemed to rumble on long after the wave had gone, reverberating through our bodies, trembling our heartbeats... It took a few attempts before I got the right shutter speed to give the water that melted wax look I love so much but at the same time also allow for a bit of motion blur.
I've been having major issues with my browser/isp/thingamajig over the last few days; websites crashing (flickr's been a nightmare!), pages freezing or not uploading, emails failing to upload, yadda, yadda, yadda...I think my iMac's caught my cold virus...and just after my long term Apple cover has run out. Bugger! : -( This is the first time it's behaved itself since it started last week but it's still twitchy. I'm not remotely computer literate so a "nerd in friend's clothing" is coming over tonight to have a fiddle and sort it out. Which means I'll wish you all good night and a good week now and sign off, hopefully catching up during the week. Take care! :-)
For true brineyness view on the sea of L.