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I have sorted the problem out. their was nothing wrong with blouse all along the problem lay with the skirt.
I think the blouse makes a cute mini dress what do you think?
Jules Amedée François Maigret, simply Jules Maigret or Maigret to most people, including his wife, is a fictional, pipe smoking, French police detective created by writer Georges Simenon.. Actually he is a commissaire or commissioner of the Paris "Brigade Criminelle" (Direction Régionale de Police Judiciaire de Paris).
Seventy-six novels and twenty-eight short stories about Maigret were published between 1931 and 1972, starting with Pietr-le-Letton and concluding with Maigret et Monsieur Charles. The Maigret stories were also adapted for television and radio.
The latest adaptation for television stars Rowan Atkinson as Chief Inspector Jules Maigret.
Macro Mondays Crime
The Sadr region, or IC 1318, is the diffuse emission nebula surrounding Sadr (γ Cygni) at the center of Cygnus's cross. The Sadr region is one of the surrounding nebulous regions; others include the Butterfly Nebula and the Crescent Nebula. It contains many dark nebulae in addition to the emission diffuse nebulae.
Camera: Moravian G2 8300
Filters: 31mm unmounted Optolong
Optic: Samyang telephoto lens 135mm
Mount: Vixen Sphinx
Autoguider: camera Magzero 5m, finder 8X50, Phd guiding
Frames: Ha 7nm 6X600 sec - RGB: 3X600 sec each Bin1 -20°
Processing: Pixinsight, PS
Pubblicazioni: Coelum ottobre '19
Here is the continuation of my large summer-2018 project.
I had imaged this region for about 13 nights altogether between July and October 2018. You can call me crazy, using so many nights for just one object, in a region where clear nights are rare :) But I really wanted to see if I could catch this beautiful Supernova remnant, and I'm glad it succeeded :)
Recently Pixinsight was supplied with the new Starnet++ module, which you can use to completely separate the stars from the background. I used this software to enhance the very weak nebulosity and was astonished to see how much more could be drawn from the background compared to the processing I did last year. All other processing was performed using Astropixelprocessor and photoshop.
Supernova remnants (SNR) are formed when a large star ends its life in a supernova explosion. About 300 of these remnants are currently known in our galaxy. One of the most famous remnants, the Veil Nebula, is located in the constellation of Cygnus. Although this is the most famous one in this constellation, it’s not the only SNR. Cygnus contains several obscure SNR’s, among which SNR 65.3+5.7 (also known as SNR 65.2+5.7).
SNR G65.3+5.7 was discovered by Gull et al. (1977) during an OIII survey of the Milky Way. Some parts of this SNR were already catalogued by Stewart Sharpless in his SH2 catalog as SH2-91, SH2-94 and SH2-96, but they were not recognized as being part of a bigger structure at that time. The idea that they could be part of a larger SNR was postulated by Sidney van den Bergh in 1960, but it took until 1977 for this to be confirmed.
This is one of the larger SNR in the sky spanning a region of roughly 4.0x3.3 degrees. Mavromatakis et al. (2002) determined the age of the SNR to be 20.000-25.000 years and the distance about 2.600 – 3.200 lightyears. The shell has a diameter of roughly 230 lightyears! This SNR is a predominantly OIII shell with also some H-alpha signal.
This supernova shell is quite weak and there are hardly any high-resolution images of this region. In the internet maybe 5-10 deep images of this shell can be found and, in most cases, they don’t cover the entire shell or the resolution is quite low because it was done by using photo lenses at short focal lengths. That’s why I decided to see if I could try to image the entire shell using my equipment, a TMB92 refractor in combination with a QSI583ws ccd camera. Because of its large size I needed to make a 3x3 mosaic to cover the whole region.
As so many nights were already necessary to cover the region in OIII I didn’t succeed in grabbing the H-alpha data, but on the internet I found the MDWsurvey (mdwskysurvey.org) initiated by David Mittelman (†), Dennis di Cicco, and Sean Walker (MDW). This is a marvelous project with the goal to image the entire northern sky in H-alpha at a resolution of 3.17”/pixel. I contacted them and told them of my effort to grab imagery of this SNR and they were very kind to provide me with the H-alpha imagery of this region, so that the entire SNR could be brought into view in reasonable high resolution.
This bicolor image shows a combination of about 53h of OIII data (made by myself) and 20 hours of Ha-data (made by the MDW survey) in a single image. In this way the full span of the shell can be seen in all its glory.
Image info:
H-alpha (astrodon 3nm, mdwskysurvey.org):
Telescope: Astro-physics AP130mm starfire
Camera: Fli Proline 16803
5 frames of 12x1200s each
OIII (astrodon 3nm):
Telescope: TMB92SS
Camera: QSI583ws
9 frames, 158 x 1200s total
The beautiful trio in Leo, M65, M66 and NGC3628, the latter with tidal stream of young blue stars by gravity interaction with other galaxies.
Takahashi FSQ106EDX, f/3.6, ASI294MC. Total of 9 hours of exposure.
We came back from our adventure to the coast a couple of day early. A tropical storm is potentially building in the gulf. For whatever reason, Hadley is bored and antsy, walking back and forth. An old fashioned method of occupying himself seems to be solving the problem.
I really cannot recall the last time I saw real cards in his hands but whatever works!
ODC: solving the problem
SOLVER & GETAR breaking down the steeze in San Bernardino, CA. 1/11
Best viewed large: www.flickr.com/photos/johnholmesfunk/5398235399/sizes/l/i...
Can You Solve A Paris MoreDoor Mystery? Name That Place! - IMRAN™
Although my literary tastes are extremely esoteric, in fiction, with the lack of time, I can only make time for political action thrillers of the Robert Ludlum type. But, I occasionally enjoy a good murder mystery movie, like "Knives Out" which I had enjoyed not too long ago. This is none of those things.
When I travel, I try to enjoy the city streets of my favorite cities, like Paris. In such walks, I will photograph the usual random cars, or signs, or doors of buildings. So this is a Paris More Door Mystery.
I usually take photos with a Nikon during major trips. Sometimes I will take an extra photo of the same spot with an iPhone, to capture the local GPS coordinates to attach to the primary Nikon photo for geotagging. Or to look up more details on a place later.
During importing Florida sunset photos into Adobe Lightroom, several Nikon and iPhone photos got imported together. The import preset automatically assigned my Florida home GPS info to all the photos, so now I have several of Paris which have Apollo Beach embedded in the metadata. This is one such photo.
Based on timestamps I know it was taken during a 30 minutes casual walk from the Invalides area to the Orsay Museum, but on one of the smaller streets. It was late afternoon on a late spring weekend, so there was no activity captured in the photo to give me a hint.
It is not even that great a building or photo as you can see. The panorama stitched from 3 handheld photos taken very close to the building make it look distorted. But think of it as OCD (obsessive-compulsive disorder LOL) that is driving me to find an answer to what this building is.
I see Latin-like words on it. They seem to be "bona aedification tres habet conditiones comoditatem fermit atem et delectation em." The very rough translation suggests this could be a school or architecture design place. The translation is not great because it is hard to tell if the Latin words are one or two words where the pillars have angled joints.
I see the number 14 on the pillars, but I also see an 8 embedded on the facade. My Bing and Google Maps exploration did not answer my question about what and where this building is exactly located.
Can you solve the More Door mystery?
© 2020 IMRAN™
Day 27 of 365
I try to add Aura to my photo blog pictures as often as I can, because it makes them more valuable to me. This time I cropped my picture purposely this way so that I could use edges of that soda pop fridge to my excuse to add this picture to 'Season of Blackness', plus it makes it a nice 'frame within frames' picture. I wish I could use Aura more often, but she has a bedtime when darkness descends and therefore I often have settle for her sleeping cat.
We haven't give Aura much products that contain added sugar (she's now 21 months). Candies, ice-cream and soda pop are a no go. I know this is very controversial topic when it comes to parenthood and while different people choose different approaches, no one knows how things turn out because children are self-acting humans and not robots which we could program. And I know this is a lost fight in the end, but we think/believe/imagine (choose appropriate word) that getting raised up with certain kind 'normal food' builds a foundation for healthy eating habits. Then when she gets older she will of course learn to eat candies as well, but when it happens she is already used to certain kind of eating habits and candies doesn't substitute something else in her mind, which might happen if we would let her eat those right from the beginning. Anyway, the point is that Aura doesn't yet know any of these things, but she is getting more and more interested about them. In café where we often go, she admires the colorful labels and many of these products are, in fact, targeted to children. This makes me think that deep down somewhere in her mind she already knows how to sort out children and adult culture from each other. There's some overlap of course, but it is still interesting to watch how she unconsciously pays attention only to things which she has some sort of possibility to enjoy and understand. It reminds me of old philosophical thesis, which claims that mankind creates only those problems which it has possibility to solve by itself. Natural wisdom of children and human kind, I guess. Which includes candies too.
Ps. Still considering different options regarding how to change course of my photo blog to something more easily to update.
Year of the Alpha – 365 Days of Sony Alpha Photography: www.yearofthealpha.com
NGC 891 is an edge on spiral galaxy that lies some 30 million light years in the constellation Andromeda. Its appearance is similar to how the Milky Way would look from a distance. Many more distant galaxies are also visible in this image.
Details:
Scope: TMB130SS
Camera: QSI690-wsg8
Guide Camera: Starlight Xpress Ultrastar
Mount: Mach1 GTO
RGB: 42x5min each - super-luminance made from RGB frames
Software: SGP, PHD2, APCC, Pixinsight
10.5 hrs total exposure
This is a composition of broadband filters and narrow data with a RC 10" and Apogee U9
L: 34x900s
RGB: (22, 10, 22)x900s
Ha: 67x900s
Processing: R. Colombari
Data: C. Iaffaldano
____________________________________
NGC 206 is a bright star cloud in the Andromeda Galaxy. It is notable for being the brightest star cloud in Andromeda as viewed from Earth.
Features[edit]
NGC 206 is the richest and most conspicuous star cloud in the Andromeda Galaxy as well as one of the largest and brightest star formation regions of the Local Group.[2] It contains more than 300 stars brighter than Mb=-3.6.[3] It was originally identified by Edwin Hubble as a star cluster but today, due to its size, it is classified as an OB association.[4]
NGC 206 is located in a spiral arm of the Andromeda Galaxy, in a zone free of neutral hydrogen and has a double structure, with one region that has an age of around 10 million years and includes several H II regions in one of its borders and other with an age of between 40 million years and 50 million years that includes a number of cepheids. Both parts are separated by a band of interstellar dust and include hundreds of stars of spectral type O and B.[5]
Source: Wikipedia
LEGAL DISCLAIMER: I Do Not Condone Any Acts Of Vandalism Nor Do I Participate In Such Criminal Activity. I Am Simply An Observant and Take Photos Of This Graffiti You Have Come Across. ALSO I Will Not Condone Any Usage Of My Photos To Support Any Legal Matter Involving These Acts Of Vandalism Therefore YOU ARE NOT WELCOME TO VIEW OR TAKE THIS MATERIAL For ANY Purpose...
FINALEMENT J'AI GAGNE !!!!
texture problem has solved
left: PNG, right: TGA (24bit)
「テクスチャをPNGでなく、他の形式にしてみたらどうか」
というアドバイスに従ってTGA形式で作ってみた。
左のうさぎはPNGのテクスチャ、右はTGA。
ありがとうございます!!!!
失敗例
gyazo.com/a5acfa924907224400f73db7c6db4bee
・耳が曲がっていない
CurvをApplyし忘れていた。
Object modeの時しか曲がらず、Edit modeになった時に耳が真っ直ぐになることには気づいていたものの、UPするときには曲がってるだろうと思い込んでいた。
・片耳が透明
平面で作った耳をミラー反転させた結果、右耳は裏の透明部分が表に出ている。(Solidifyに気付く前にうpした例なので)
厚みをつける時、外側につけるか、内側につけるかにも気をつける必要あり。
12mm iso 200 1/60 f/11 + 2 yn560III 1/1 in softbox
triggered with rf603
two shots on tripod- one for subjects - one for stars
lightroom & photoshop
Longreach, Queensland, is 620km west of Rockhampton, at the junction of the Capricorn and Landsborough Highways. The Aramac Creek flows southwards, joining the Thomson River which runs generally south-west through the Longreach district.
The Longreach district was explored by the New South Wales Surveyor-General, Thomas Mitchell (1846) and by Edmund Kennedy (1847). The pastoralist-explorer William Landsborough reported favourably on the district's pastoral prospects, and in 1863 the first pastoral lease was taken up by the vast Bowen Downs station. Several others followed soon afterwards. The district's centre was Aramac (1869), and it was governed by the Aramac local-government division (1879).
Railway Boom:
Considerable optimism surrounded the new settlement: town lots were auctioned and sold briskly, and by 1890 there were three hotels, several stores and tradespeople, a progress association, and a police station. The opening of the railway line in 1892 spurred further development, and thrust Longreach into the industrial upheaval of the age; whereas the 1891 shearer's strike had been based at Barcaldine, the 1894 strike was called at the new railway terminus, Longreach.
The town grew with astounding rapidity. By 1896 there were fourteen hotels, a hospital (1893), Catholic, Methodist, and Anglican churches, a school of the arts, a pastoral and agricultural society, and several clubs and friendly societies. From a population of about 150 in 1891, Longreach was approaching 2000 in 1903.
The progress association soon expressed criticism about the Aramac local-government division's neglect of the Longreach district. Aramac agreed, and the Longreach division was severed in 1900.
Apart from Longreach's role as a railhead and district centre, it also became the centre of an area subdivided for closer-settlement farms during the 1890s. Many blocks were too small, however, and the 1902 drought proved a substantial setback. Amalgamation of blocks and the successful drilling for bore water after the drought aided recovery.
Industrial Progress:
Longreach was usually quick to embrace new technology. Motor car hire and repair businesses were opened – the Longreach Motor Co (1910) and Edwards, Martin Ltd (1910) were major businesses in both repair and body-building for vehicles. In 1919 two young airmen, P. J. McGinness and Hudson Fysh visited Longreach while surveying the Darwin to Longreach section of a proposed England-Australia air route. The men later began Qantas outback airlines at Longreach and established a large plane assembly factory. With both a railway terminus and a pioneer air service, Longreach had some claim to being a 'Chicago of the West'. The railway advantage, however, subsided when the line was extended to Winton in 1927.
In 1921 an electricity powerhouse began operation and a rudimentary swimming pool opened. Reticulated water supply was laid on from the river in 1938, replacing the mineralised bore water and enabling trees to grace the city's parks. Despite the progress, Longreach remained a goat town for another two decades, with local herds essential as a reliable fresh milk supply. Fresh vegetables were also a problem, with grasshoppers damaging local crops and the railways sometimes failing to keep up supplies.
Postwar Tribulations:
The 1920s were relatively prosperous, as were the 1950s (apart from some dry years and a shearers' strike). Much of the commercial building stock was replaced, including the shire hall (the previous two, along with local hotels and the Catholic church had burnt down). A State high school and an Olympic pool were opened in 1966 and 1967. Within a few years wool prices declined, and an investment in beef cattle was met with a decline in meat prices. The town's population, which had stayed steady during 1933 - 1947 when other outback towns had fallen by a quarter, faltered badly during the 20 years from 1961 - 1981 falling from 3800 to fewer than 3000. Fortunately, improved roads and transport, which had solved the milk and vegetable supply problem, brought outback tourism. Sensing the tourist opportunity, Sir James Walker, Shire Chair (1957 - 1990), chair of regional electricity supply authorities and of the Longreach Pastoral College garnered national support for the Stockman's Hall of Fame, which opened in 1988 on land provided by the Pastoral College. The Qantas Founders Museum, abutting the original heritage-listed Qantas hanger at the Longreach aerodrome, and a museum based in the old powerhouse (also heritage-listed) are other attractions, particularly popular with 'grey nomads'.
In addition to the aforementioned attractions and facilities, Longreach has a racecourse, showground, a Catholic primary school (1985), a school of distance education, a base hospital (1944), aerodrome, a visitor information centre, an Olympic swimming pool, five churches, several hotels and motels, and an aged persons' accommodation. The elaborate railway station (1916, similar to the Emerald station) and the goods shed (1892) are listed on the Queensland Heritage Register.
Source: Queensland Places (www.queenslandplaces.com.au/longreach).
The Grizzly and Wolf Discovery Center in West Yellowstone is the official tester of bear-resistant containers in Yellowstone. Since the containers are getting better, the GWDC sometimes gives the bears an easy one - so they try for the food reward. The good folks brought out one of the easy coolers for our crew to film for an online course we're developing.
The GWDC is a great, AZA-accredited facility that should be part of your Yellowstone visit.
24 October 2021.
English: solve
Irish: réitím
Finnish: ratkaista
*Please translate to your own language in the comments.*
#inktober #inktober2021 day 24.
Rapidograph on strathmore 100 lb drawing paper.
3 1/2 inch square.
Examples:
Gaeilge:
An té is túisce a réiteoidh an cheist, is é a gheobhaidh an duais.
(He who solves the question first will get the prize.)
Suomi:
Näin voidaan ratkaista paikallisia ongelmia.
(Regional problems can be solved.)
Toivon, että asia voidaan ratkaista.
(I hope that matter can be solved.)
Tämä on ongelma, jonka voimme ratkaista.
(It is a problem that we can solve.)