View allAll Photos Tagged stackables
Stack of oversize books, including two atlases of the imaginary! Plus a large, vintage atlas (bottom of stack), a hardback copy produced in the early 1990s of George Stubb's Horse Anatomy (I so snatched this one up when I found it!) and a book detailing heritage trees of the Great State of Texas.
Used book finds, Fall 2011.
In Derbyshire lead mines the material that was mined that was waste was known as deads. This was either stacked up within the mine or brought up to the surface.
One of Derbyshires hidden gems. This mine is open to the public on the first Sunday of the month. www.goodluckmine.org.uk/index.html
A Westbound stack train with BNSF power holds at the interlocking, lots of reefers on the first block of cars...the clip-on gen-sets are converted from A-Line trailer reefer units by shortening them.
Materials from a school project in Evesham. Photos taken by students through the town and along the river were merged using the Focus Stacking tools in Photoshop. They were then printed out for use in a giant collage.
Each member of the marching band gets some spending money on bowl trips. EACH MEMBER. we're talking several tens of thousands of dollars. This is just one stack.
These are all leftover eight stack triangles from making stacked quilt tops! They do pile up! Thinking about a way to use some with a minimum of trimming involved.
Apterygida media (Forficulidae)
An earwig, in Danish called "Bush Earwig", Buskørentvist.
A little smaller and a little less common than the European Earwig, Forficula auricularia
Beautiful little animal and so well camouflaged when he's sitting like this in an old flower, sleeping the day away, with his pinchers pointing up, looking like a part of the plant.
74 exposures stacked in Zerene Stacker, DMAP/PMAX.
f/3.5, 1/13 sec, ISO200
Olympus OM-D E-M5, 60mm 1:2.8 Macro
Always nice to get the first group of blocks on the design wall, especially when I'm adding some bold color like the yellow and turquoise. The dark blues for the sashings and some of the block triangles are scrappy because I didn't have enough of any one blue in that general shade, which is fine with me because I like that look.
I'm going to try these two fabrics together in some stacked octagons. Hopefully, there will be enough contrast to make the Kaleidoscope circles show in the design.
This fabric has a very large repeat and I have four repeats of it. I'm going to use it to make some stacked backgrounds for stars.
This is 10 images at 2.5s, 10 at 3.2s, and 10 at 4s, clipped and leveled in Aperture 2.1, and stacked in WinImages. All were shot at Æ’/2.8 and ISO 3200 with an EOS 40D and Canon's 100mm Æ’/2.8 macro lens around 4:15 AM April 3rd, 2008 from a tripod with 2s shutter holdoff. Focus was manual on Jupiter. The 100mm, at Æ’/2.8 wide open, is almost impossible to focus on a star.
The dumbbell nebula is 0°15'12", which makes it about as small a deep space object as I'd care to try and shoot without a long lens and a tracking mount; at magnitude 7.30, it isn't exactly bright, either. Add in the inability to see any stars at all to focus, and frankly, I feel pretty good about this result. :-)
If I ever add the Æ’/2L 135mm to my Canon lens collection, I may try for this again; that's another stop of light sensitivity along with more magnification.
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch. Celebrity Bartender Paul Skalny.
Stacked books, polymer clay pendant. It is just over 1 inch (3 cm) tall.
I usually make much bigger stuff but I love these little books. They make me smile.
I continue experimenting with focus stacking
In this session of shots (33 shots) I connected the flash
Grills seem to give these rusty, old cars personality. McLean`s Auto Wreckers. Rockwood, Ontario. Canada. May 2016.
Ventilation stacks in the fog at the Schreiber Industrial Park along the Allegheny River in New Kensington, Pennsylvania.
Information in stacks exposed on walls by the local common area.
Photo by Marlon del Aguila Guerrero/CIFOR
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Day 4 - 31 day challenge 2013. A 54 image stack (f8, 1/50s, flash) of a hundreds & thousands biscuit. The texture of the biscuit top is quite interesting. Used Zerene stacker again - PMax image.
The stacks of flat silkscreened sheets of paper have since been turned into desk calendars desk calendars. Do I hear a sigh? I think I do :)
5 Good things::
1: Fridays! 2: Spiced wine at the Christkindlmarket at the Daley Plaza 3: Accepting that everything cannot be perfect all of the time 4: Grandpa's good news 5: Janessa's good news... HOLY!