View allAll Photos Tagged spaces
(photo with an APO-Rodagon-N 105mm F1:4, Enlarger lens on 4 inch bellows)
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© VanveenJF Photography
this is not a store. here I will put something that was created by me or my partner.
if you like anything, please feel free to take it home. I am very happy if you can feel at home here.
please send a note card to maclane mills,maclane cioc or marimari yuitza if you have anything. the answer might be delayed since the log-in time is not consistent, but I will answer it without fail.
regenboog
“I'm choosing happiness over suffering, I know I am. I'm making space for the unknown future to fill up my life with yet-to-come surprises.”
A recently created space from a former derelict site.
www.north-norfolk.gov.uk/news/2024/march/new-community-sp...
The Narcissus from Alien where Ellen Ripley leaf the Nostromo in a smaller version.
For plans look on my repbrickable account
This panorama of the International Space Station is a wider view of what ESA astronaut Luca Parmitano was capturing on camera during the first of a series of historic spacewalks that took place in November 2019.
Author, journalist and researcher Lee Brandon-Cremer created this photo by stitching together three images taken by Luca as he made his way to the worksite during the first Extravehicular Activity or EVA to service the Alpha Magnetic Spectrometer (AMS), the Station’s dark matter detector.
"For every spacewalk there are thousands of images taken. Sometimes a few images jump out at me,” he explains. “One day I realised I could stitch these images together to expand the scene and show what the astronaut sees in a broader sense.”
To create this view, Lee first went looking for images with common points. This proved tricky: of the 1000 or so images he scanned, he found three that could be worked into two expanded photos of the Space Station.
He then joined and lightly edited the images to create a smooth photograph, a technique referred to as “stitching”.
In the final image you can see the white panel radiators that keep the Space Station cool. The spacecraft on the left is a Soyuz. On the right is the Kibo module, with Japanese flag visible. The Space Station is flying to the right in this picture.
Nowadays we are spoiled for space imagery. From satellites circling the Earth and spacecraft taking selfies to astronaut snaps from the International Space Station, there is no shortage of photographs at which to marvel – and they are easy to access.
Aside from the critical role these images play in aiding scientific studies of Earth, the Solar System and outer space, they are important tools for science communication and public engagement.
One advantage of space imagery made public is how it engages citizen scientists and students all over the world. Take two projects as examples:
Cities at Night asks residents to identify major cities at night as seen by astronauts from the Space Station to help map out and combat light pollution. The Climate Detectives school project tasks students with investigating a local climate problem and proposing a solution by studying Earth observation satellite imagery.
For others like Lee, the images are a source of inspiration and creativity.
“It’s truly thrilling for me to recreate these broader views and it makes me wonder how many more unique views like this one captured by Luca are hiding in space agency archives,” Lee adds.
Download the high resolution image in the link above.
Credits: L. Brandon-Cremer
.. share a bottle of red with a friend, or just hang out petting the cat. Whatever you wish to do is fine by me!
Follow me... please? :D ♥
Check out the event's flickr too! BellaTECH.
Take a look at the official blog as well: The Imaginarium!
For visual listings of the full inventory at this month's Imaginarium, click here!
-Hisa- Newland House
Petite Mort- HC Brass Coffee Table,
Petite Mort- HC Zebra Rug,
Petite Mort- HC Brass Candlesticks,
Petite Mort- HC Chaise Lounge
Petite Mort- Red Wine Tray (touch tray for glass),
Petite Mort- HC Corset Print,
Petite Mort- HC Vase & Books,
Petite Mort- HC Table Lamp,
Petite Mort- HC Angel Canvas,
Petite Mort- HC Studded Side Table,
Petite Mort- HC Lounge Chair,
Petite Mort- HC Brass End Table,
Petite Mort- HC Crystal Chandelier
+H-D+/Le PC *Kitty Galore* Cat D - +Half-Deer+
.:Abedul:. Sheer Curtains / Texture Change
dust bunny . hanging plants . double planter
dust bunny . potted cheese plant
'I think Space Bot did not look very happy when we closed the capsule...'
'Perhaps next time we should do a window in those capsules. The astronauts might like that too'
'I always said design 47-C was better...'
'Well, this one will do for now.'
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History on repeat...
Seattle, UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 2024
The Space Needle is Seattle's most recognizable structure, an architectural landmark built for the 1962 World's Fair, designed to embody the optimism and aspirations of the Space Age of the 1960s.
1. History and Design
Origin: It was conceived by hotel executive Edward E. Carlson, who sketched his initial idea on a napkin in 1959, inspired by a broadcast tower with a restaurant in Stuttgart, Germany.
World's Fair: It served as the center piece for the 1962 World's Fair (Century 21 Exposition), themed "The Age of Space."
Architecture: Its futuristic design, featuring three slender steel legs and a "flying saucer" shaped top, was completed in a record 400 days. The structure was engineered to withstand winds up to 200 mph and earthquakes up to 9.0 magnitude.
Height: The tower stands 605 feet (approximately 184 meters) tall, with its saucer-shaped "top house" at about 520 feet.
2. Visitor Experience
Panoramic Views: The top of the tower offers visitors 360-degree panoramic indoor and outdoor views of Downtown Seattle, Mount Rainier, Puget Sound, and the Cascade and Olympic mountain ranges.
The Loupe (Rotating Glass Floor): Following major renovations, the top now features The Loupe, the world's first and only revolving glass floor on an observation tower, which reveals previously hidden views of the structure and the city below. This level also includes The Loupe Lounge, a cocktail and culinary experience.
Outdoor Observation Deck: The upper level also features an outdoor observation deck surrounded by all-glass barriers (installed during the renovation) for unobstructed views.
Still looking at pondweed (Potamogeton sp) in a flooded ditch, but in these three shots, I was concentrating on the space in between the leaves. There were some great shapes, reflections and shadows.
Window reflections, Canary Wharf
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