View allAll Photos Tagged stackable

A stack of interesting rocks my wife has collected.

This focus stack turned out better, although the constant wind was giving me a hard time. Still room for improvement, and maybe next time under better environmental conditions.

Mein erster Stack mit 360 Bildern

a7iii + Minolta MD Zoom 75-150mm 1:4 (1981)

I usually prefer my subjects alive and kicking but I couldn't pass up the opportunity to do a close up stack of this expired dragonfly I found in a spiders web in our gazebo eves.

I must say I was struck with how vicious its needle like hairs around it's mouth look, also imagining how terrifying the species in the Late Carboniferous period looked when they grew to over two feet from wing tip to wing tip...😬

This stacked and lightened image used 8 images taken over 8 minutes while this storm was about 16 miles away. I cropped this image about 30% from the original.

An old Norwegian myth rule says you have to put another rock onto the stack if you don't want the trolls coming.

An old Norwegian hikers rule says you have to put another rock onto the stack to mark the path.

A new Norwegian tourist rule says you have to put another rock onto the stack if you like this place and want to come back.

 

A good starting point for a series of lots of Norway photos being uploaded in the next weeks.

around Palma, Mallorca

Sony A7RIII, Sigma 105 mm Macro, focus stacking

Picture taken at The Chicken House in Branson Missouri.

Vintage luggage stacked at King's Cross Station, Universal Studios. I love all the luggage stacked, so you may see more of it. I let hundreds of people pass me in line so I could get these shots, and then I didn't even ride the train.

This 320x2s stacked image was lightened in Photoshop. Fire Skies are one of the best uses of this type of post-processing. In this equivalent 12 minute exposure the lenticular cloud was nearly stationary while the cirrus clouds were streaking as wisps. The bright white (and lighter blue) lines at middle left are the initial form of spreading contrails.

 

Frames were taken from this time lapse: www.flickr.com/photos/79387036@N07/49348161096/in/photost....

 

Picture of the Day

Some amazing looking buildings going up in New York in recent times....

Stack from 9 shots

A double stack train for the Ports of LA and Long Beach is next in a long parade of westbounds at Verdemont. In the background, M-BARSDG rests on the main. Cargill's grain elevator is visible on the left side of the frame.

Having traveled all this way I had no other option than to try and make the best of the conditions. Longexposure mono seemed best for the grey misty conditions.

Canon EOS 6D

Nikon M Plan 60x ELWD 0.70

Exposición: 2.5" - ISO100

Stacking

Canon Auto Bellows

MJKZZ IR Remote Motion Controller

Newport M436 linear stage

Nº de fotos: 100

Pasos de 1,4 µm (fórmula Nikon)

Magnificación aproximada: 50x

A stack of quite a few images of the New York Cityscape from New Jersey. The intent was to shoot a time lapse of the sunset, and that turned out well, but I think a stack of the images works pretty nicely too.

Normally I blend stacked images in Photoshop by using lighten or darken. This time I used the "difference" bending mode with 46 images. This blend resulted in extracting the wave pattern of the high thin cirrocumulus clouds. The texture is almost like a finger print.

 

Difference:

 

Looks at the color information in each channel and subtracts either the blend color from the base color or the base color from the blend color, depending on which has the greater brightness value. Blending with white inverts the base color values; blending with black produces no change.

 

Picture of the Day x 2

  

Camera: Zeiss Ikon Super Ikonta III (531/16)

Lens: Carl Zeiss Tessar f/3.5 75 mm

Film: Ilford HP5 Plus 400

Exposure: 1/150 sec and f/16, hand-held

Film developed and scanned by MeinFilmLab

Edited under Adobe Lightroom

Stacked batteries.

 

Better viewed large and thank you for your favourites.

his photo was taken at thursley common on the 18th July 2017.

 

This is stacked from 4 images using my Olympus omd 1 mark 2 and the 60m lens

Post-sunset, blue hour view of multiple sea stacks on Bandon Beach on a clear but windy summer evening. I used a 10-stop filter to extend the exposure to get a smooth glaze on the water's surface.

This is a set of sport stacking cups. We have some world class stackers here in Heppenheim. Here you can see the world record by Robin Stangenberg from my hometown (please don't forget to come back to my picture and leave a comment ;-): player.broadbandvideo.com/asxgen.asp?ShowOrClip=c&Med...

Hasselblad 501cm

50mm Distagon

ilford delta 100

Stack of pallets with Boulevard Brewing Co. Pallet Brand 7th one down.

South Stack is an island known as a Sea Stack. It was formed by the wave erosion of sedimentary rocks that once connected the island to the mainland.

The area is known geologically as the South Stack Formation. Its strata includes sandstones and interbedded shales which have been contorted by large folds and crumples. The folds can be seen in the seacliffs. Thick beds of pure Holyhead Quartzite, which forms the bulk of Holyhead Mountain, lie above these folded sedimentary rocks. Recent studies suggests the rocks appearance was caused by large scale earth movements which is not a part of the normal sedimentary process; however, this theory remains controversial. Similar evidence of upthrusts can be seen in the cliffs to the south of South Stack.

 

Colors, repetition, stacks, shadows on a small set of children's jacks

beach furniture, lagos, Portugal

focus stack of 13 images

combined with Zerene Stacker (DMap)

 

On - Famenne - Belgique

Loch Stack on the way to Durness, it was blue skies when I left Rosemarkie but I drove into grey, somehow they enhance the view on this loch, it was quiet and lonely but oh so beautiful.

Fine art prints available at: www.JxnPx.com

Thank you for supporting my art!

30:365 [01/30/2010]

 

for my friend bats...

 

the folks at Nestle' are kind enough to provide a high altitude recipe for those of us living on top of the world. without it, our tollhouse cookies just wouldn't be the same.

Another from Wednesday morning this time looking straight at the rising sun.

The memory card evolution (in terms of physical card size) stacked on a 2" optical cube - complete with dust and fibres because I couldn't be bothered to try and remove it all!

This weeks Macro Mondays theme is “Low key".

 

Simple set-up for this: just set a stack of quarters on a black poster board and pointed a light toward the stack and took the picture.

 

ISO 3200

ƒ/5

1/250

 

HMM

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