View allAll Photos Tagged stackables
NS 224 heads into the siding at Ferguson, with it's stacks on the head end. The first several well cars being single stacked, made for a nice perspective of the train rounding the curve.
-NS C40-9W #9509, #9525, SD70M #2599 leading power
-NS Train #224
-NS (ex-Wabash) St. Louis District, CP S12.5 Ferguson
-Along N Clark Ave, Ferguson, MO
-April 9, 2017
TT1_1490_edited-1
When I arrived at this field the area was pitch black. When the sun's light first appeared, hay stacks dotted the landscape and were the first to greet me.
Just a little tester shot to try out my new Nikkor 50mm F1.8G Lens.. Thought id try a little bokeh since every1 else is doing it lol
Hope You Enjoy!
Several closeby strikes recorded in separate exposures, stacked and blended in PS, and returned to LR for final. When the intense flash struck the antenna on the building about a block away, I was blinded by the flash and could feel the heat, it was that powerful. I had no idea what the camera captured, of course, until I looked. I was pleasantly surprised that it wasn't washed out, which was largely attributable to small f-stop and very low ISO setting.
My first attempt of DOF stacking, 10 shots with multiple focus point.Stacked with Zerene. Still long way to go.
Inventory:
My DIY light box
DCR250
Sony400v
Tripod.
Stack cats - spelled frontwards and backwards is "stack cats," a palindrome, the theme for this week's Flickr Friday.
I looked all over town for a palindrome image and just couldn't find anything. Thanks to Skyline:) for the Stack Cats idea ☺
♥ Facebook • 500px • Shutterstock • Dreamstime ♥
El Toro sailing dinghies stacked on the dock at the Center For Wooden Boats on South Lake Union in downtown Seattle.
Leica M10 Center for Wooden Boats
Galactic Center stacked. Experimented with stacking multiple exposures to reduce noise and increase detail. Definitely increased detail. Need to work on the noise reduction some more. I shot these without a tracking mount a couple summers ago at Observatory Park in Geauga County, Ohio. The stacked version uses 5 light frames plus 5 dark frames, 15 sec. ISO 4000, 24mm f3.5 stacked using Sequator (my 1st time) and processed in Lightroom. The trees along the bottom were layer blended in Photoshop from a single exposure.
Sorry for my recent inactivity; I have been quite busy, but here is something very different from the rest of my stream. I have recently been experimenting with high magnification macro. This first one is a portrait of a fly found on my desk. Magnification: about 8X, 100 stacked images.
Negative Stacking
I used to do quite a bit of negative stacking in the enlarger in the 90s when I had my own darkroom and an enlarger that would take a 4X5 negative. I was gifted with an A4 LED light tablet for my birthday and decided to try a bit of negative stacking to see if I could reprise that technique in my repertoire.
I finally found something that stayed still long enough for me to take several photos for a focus stack.
This is the first one I've tried with the mpe65 lens since I've had it.
It's 4 images taken at 2.5x and focus stacked using Zerene.
Not the best one you'll ever see, but hey, you gotta start somewhere :P
HFDF
STICKS, STACKS & SWIRLS ~ St. Joseph, Missouri USA ~ Copyright ©2013 Bob Travaglione ~ ALL RIGHTS RESERVED ~ www.FoToEdge.com
I found this great stack of Hay bales on my drive in the country... great finds this time of year...
A photo-stacked version of the 232 individual images that went to make up the time lapse video. The images were taken at ten second intervals.