View allAll Photos Tagged stackables
Some creative stacked pebble thingys I happened across on the rubble beach at Tommy Thompson Park, Toronto.
My first attempt at focus stacking. Hand held but ended up better than individual shots. Minolta 58mm f/1.2 MC Rokkor-PG with custom EF Canon Mount.
Focus stacked pond. 7 images. Focussing gradually going back in each image. I have been practising this for a few months and this is the first one that I am happy with.
Not sure my computer liked it - I ran out of scratch disk space and it crashed.
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 Mickey Gomez.
Or, rather, stacks of parasols, hanging from trees.
It took me too long to figure out how to manually set my camera to get these to not be horribly washed out, so I think I'm going to have to experiment more with night photography in the future.
I do not mind, however, because this picture turned out perfectly!
Steam venting from an orange & white steam stack somewhere in Manhattan's mid town. A Wendy's burger joint in the background. Shot with a 35mm disposable camera summer 2004.
Around 1,100 frames stacked in Registax, and aggresively sharpened in Photoshop.
EOS 7D on a Celestron NexStar 6SE - eyepiece projection on a 7mm eyepiece.
St. James' STACK is leisure hub and official fanzone celebrating everything Newcastle United and is situated across the road from their football ground.
The venue boasts local live entertainment 7 days a week, street food traders and multiple bars.
Still adding to my cross-polarization photo portfolio. In this example of cross-polarization there are six plastic shot cups stacked on top of each other. The image was captured with a 72mm polarizing filter on my 150mm-macro lens attached to a DSLR (digital single lens reflex) camera set at ISO 400 and f/16. The final image was post-processed in Adobe Lightroom.
GPS: Approximate location, latitude 47° 26' 15.77" N, longitude 120° 20' 30.04" W.
Keywords: Cross-Polarization, and USA.
Testing the free software CombineZM that enables stacking multiple shots with different focal point to get more depth of field wile avoiding diffraction.
Test der kostenlosen Focus Stacking Software CombineZM. Damit kann man unterschiedlich fokussierte Bilder zu einem gesamten von vorne bis hinten scharfen Bild zusammenrechnen. Mehr Infos dazu gibt es auf meiner Webseite.
Misha and Sophie deal with the trauma of visiting the vet. They stack themselves like Voltron and merge with nearby furniture to become more powerful!
The staff in the gift shop at the V&A don't like you taking photos of things, despite the fact you can take photos in the rest of the museum.
I got told off for taking this one. Fools.
In the foreground the wood which still needs to be stacked, and some of it split smaller. This wood is not for the coming season, but for the next. I need to get it stacked soon though, so I can park my car under the roof.
Well I've run out of a way to describe what's happening here. I was shooting video on three cameras, taking stills with 2 cameras and loosing my mind with the beauty!
Taken outside the Norpac Cannery in Stayton, Oregon. These crates were stacked near a fence. Visit Willamette Valley Daily Photo for this and other photos.
The Stacks, an original game based on Ernest Cline's book Ready Player One. The Stacks will be released at the 2015 Portland Retro Gaming Expo!
Stack of 42 pictures at 100 microns steps.
Basic setup at 4x with stacked 100mm and reversed 28mm at f8.
More info about the setup at youtu.be/G3u-7lwRyY8
Got some nice weather today and thought I would try my first stack of a living subject. After being frustrated by a few flies which refused to sit still, I came across some wolf spiders (picture is of a male Pardosa amentata) sunning themselves on an old tyre. This is 52 images stacked, I am quite happy with the result but have to get more practice if I want to rival some of the great shots I have seen on Flickr.
Press L for big on black.
Thanks for viewing my photos, comments are much appreciated.
Equipment
Nikon D7000 @ 1/160 sec
Nikkor 105 f/2.8 @ f/4.0
ISO: 100
Hand held with natural light
Kenko 36 mm extension tube
Fifty-two stacked using Zerene stacker with final adjustments in Lightroom 3