View allAll Photos Tagged stack

Piedras en equilibrio.

Balance Stones

Stacked colored pencils, approx. 4 cm high, negative space 6 cm.

I thought these were amazing, until I found out that people were using glue. It turns out, the glue kills the fish.

I got a lot done today, getting ready for my trip to the coast on the 6th. Picked up some filters for my lenses, changed the oily in the car and washed my clothes..:) Had to get ready for work tomorrow.

#macromondays

#Stack

 

Isn't it an obvious choice to combine random objects for a theme like "Stack"? Please say "Yes, it is!" :) When I was looking for objects I could stack for the new MM theme, I noticed two smaller chestnuts on my desk which I'd collected in autumn right in front of my house (It's kind of a ritual for me to collect a few of the first fallen chestnuts in front of my house). In Berlin, many streets are lined with trees of only one kind. My house is a corner house, and the entrance is on "chestnut street", while most of our windows look out to "lime tree street", just in case you were interested ;)

 

So there I had these two chestnuts, two fairly round objects (asteroid-"round", or Mars-moon-"round", one could say), and I wondered whether they are stackable. Stackable without little helpers such as modeling clay, because I wasn't sure if we were allowed to use such "hidden tools" for the theme. To my surprise, they were stackable, "gluelessly" :) But I still needed a third or maybe a fourth object. This was the point where "glueless" turned into clueless, and I picked random objects that would both keep my stack within the 3-inch frame and which also would be glueslessly stackable on top of the two chestnuts. At first, I thought of using the small golden crown which you've seen before as an MM prop, but it kept coming off. So in the end the "winners" were the fairy light "cuff" that I've already used for the "Star" theme from August 2022, and two small carnation blossoms, because... why not?

 

My image is a single shot taken in shadow priority mode. Light sources were one LED light equipped with the semi-transparent yellow bottle cap for some warm light from the left, and another LED light directed against the gold-coloured cardboard which I've used as a backdrop. That cardboard was part of food packaging, and it has an uneven, slightly reflective surface which created some nice bokeh. Processed in DXO PL6, Lightroom (where I did some masking on the chestnut stack to bring out more details), and in Analog Efex, where I used one of the "Subtle" film types (Fundy 2) and a slight vignette to add a vintage, matte touch to the image. Again, this is on the bigger side, the height of the stack is slightly more than 6 cm / 2,36 inches, and I've cropped the image so that the width of the frame meets the three inches rule as well.

 

HMM, Everyone!

Ich hatte den Hagelzucker gerade in Gebrauch und dachte ich kann es ja man probieren ihn zu stapeln, hat geklappt ;-) 8mm Höhe hat der "Zuckerberg"

of Pringle chips on a little dish. For Macro Mondays, theme: Stack

a flower (wine and rose weigela blossom) on a mini vase on a 2019 quarter on a salmon grill plank.

This is the second building I photographed on my day downtown shooting architecture. It's called The Stack, and is near completion, but also still had construction fencing around the outside, so I could only get a straight up shot, but I really like these lines. It's Canada's first commercial high rise office building to receive a Zero Carbon award.

If you're interested in seeing the artist's conception of the entire building, here is their website. You need to scroll down to see the entire building: thestackyvr.com/

Had to try again and climb down the cliff as you never get the perfect shot but worth all the effort.

My dad always kept all of his spare nuts, bolts and screws left over from various projects. They came in handy now and then. I carried on the tradition when I got my own place. However, I never envisioned using some of the spares for photography! I had a box of these nuts that I haven’t used in years.

 

41 nuts make up this imperfect, nutty tetrahedron (3-sided pyramid).

 

Shot for Looking close… on Friday!, Nuts

Duncansby Stacks, Caithness

Mosquito on Poppy Capsule taken with Sigma 180mm plus 1,4x TC III plus extension tube - off camera soften flashgun from the right

.. With the mountain Arkle reflected in North West Sutherland, Scottish Highlands.

This is the wider view of Selwicks Bay, which also takes in the outline of the headland or 'grumpy troll' face staring out to sea! Wishing everyone a Happy Easter Break :-)

The South Stack Lighthouse is built on the summit of a small island off the north-west coast of Holy Island, Anglesey, Wales. It was built in 1809 to warn ships of the dangerous rocks below. It's 28 m tall and the range is 44 km.

in de serie "te gek bestek"

 

... a special b&w request for Henny

 

LIMG_2704_lr

The Duncansby Stacks lie just off the shore of Duncansby Head on the most northeastern point of mainland Britain. These towering sea stacks are believed to have stood in this position for the last 6000 years, slowly eroding away due to the raw power of the North Sea.

Vergrößerung der Tiefenschärfe durch Fokus stacking

Essai de focus stacking direct du boîtier à main levée mais avec l’appareil maintenu appuyé sur le mur. Dix prises empilées dans Photoshop. C’est d’ailleurs la seule chose que je sais faire dans ce logiciel car nous avons vu une démonstration récemment au club photo.

 

I tried focus stacking as my camera can do it. I chose 10 captures that were compiled in PS in post production. It’s about all I can do with PS by the way, having watched a demo at the photo club.

Macro Mondays,

Stack,

Wine Corks,

Six (6),

Stack 4 shots,

Macro,

United States,

Pennsylvania,

Winter.

An attempt to use 7 images to create a stacked photo.

I shot some of these for a "Cases" theme a while back but they never got posted. I figured I'd give them another try. For the Macro Mondays group, theme, "Stack". The stack measured approximately 1.25 inches tall. Just the morning sun for lighting.

 

VOIGTLANDER, 125mm f/2.5 SL, MACRO APO-LANTHAR @ f/2.5. Single image with lens shot at maximum aperture.

Powered by a pair of Heritage I SD40-2s is the westbound BNSF QDENTAC (Denver to Tacoma stack train) approaching Woodlin, Montana, on September 23, 2006. Woodlin is just east of Thompson Falls on Montana Rail Link’s Fourth Subdivision.

Fastly melting stack of ice cubes

Fetlar, Shetland, Scotland, UK

A westbound stack train rolls into the setting sun in Malone, Iowa at Mile Post 15 of the Union Pacific Railroad's Clinton Subdivision.

 

Nikon D5100, Tamron 18-270, ISO 200, f/6.3, 270mm, 1/640s

A weather system passes over the Elegug Stacks at dusk. The wind was blowing straight over my head towards the stacks as I took this shot. The sun was very intense here too and illuminating the cliff tops, but not the stacks below.

 

This is a remarkable headland in Pembrokeshire and there are so many photogenic features, Sadly with their positioning they do not make easy subjects at sunrise or sunset, but with weather conditions like this they still provide great subjects.

Bee. Photographed in Maryland.

A focus stack of 3 images, shot with the camera hand held. Canon 80D, Canon MPE macro lens, Canon twin macro flash. Aperture f/11, shutter speed 1/250, ISO 400, flash set to 1/16th power.

The "nut" man :-P

 

Stack size height: 4.5 cm

Macro Mondays: "Stack"

 

A stack of four orange plastic lids. I used a flashlight to shine a light through the stack to make the lids glow.

 

The image is about 7.5 cm (3 inches) on the long edge.

Lois Lawson-Ellis. All rights reserved.

La Lune, Stack (accumulation) de 500 images.

Caméra ZWO

Lunette Astro Professional diamètre 130 mm, focale 900 mm.

F/D 6,9.

 

Je vous invite à aller voir cette autre image de la Lune réalisée par mon professeur et ami David Legranger :

 

www.astrosurf.com/davidlegranger/picture/moon/2020_04_01/...

 

Cliquez sur l'image, patientez un peu (c'est lourd) et savourez !

(Imagé depuis la Terre)

 

Haystack in field on a sunny day with blue sky and clouds.

A Burlington Northern stack train passes Hoffman Avenue (West Hoffman) at Dayton’s Bluff in St. Paul, Minnesota, on March 22, 1986. A pair of EMD GP50s in “tiger stripe” paint bracket a GE B30-7A “B-unit” as A-B-A power for the westbound train.

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