View allAll Photos Tagged stackables
Looking at my collection is one thing but for some odd reason I particularly like watching my shoeboxes stack up. Like bricks building a house or a fort. Point is, when I see them stack I know I earned every pair with my own hardwork and effort. No handouts, no free passes. It doesn't matter if I cop exclusives or GRs. I earned what I have. That's what matters.
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch. Award-winning author Mary Doria Russell.
Made from 12 light frames (captured with a SONY camera) by Starry Landscape Stacker 1.6.1. Algorithm: Mean
My wife was shopping for a planter in the garden center. I noticed this huge stack of lawn mowers nearby and snapped a picture.
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.
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch. Dave Chappell & The Lone Stardusters.
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch.
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch.
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch.
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch. Lisa Bankman, Events & Seminars Manager.
Canon 500D lens on the end of the Sigma 150mm f2.5 macro and screwed on to the Nikon D600. All of this is mounted on a Stack Shot Rail and lit up with an incandescent clear bulb in an aluminum reflector from Home Depot. Nothing complicated, high tech or high $ about the lighting. Aperture was f11 and ISO 800.
Uncropped image that is about the size of an SD card.
Press L for black.
Stacks of a former open hearth shop at the USS Lorain Plant. This is a former plant of The National Tube Company.
Raw conversion in Capture NX, lens distortion removed with LensFixCI, Wratten 22 orange filter applied in Tiffen DFx, B&W conversion in Alien Exposure 2 simulating Fuji Neopan 100 Acros.
Howard County Library System's Evening in the Stacks: Sparkle and Spurs held on Saturday, February 23, 2013 at the Charles E. Miller Branch.
I guess you could call this my first REAL attempt at rock stacking. I found the perfect spot with tons of flat rocks... have to go back some day when it's not 8 pm and the sun is quickly getting ready for bed and all I have is my P&S. The sand, you know.
this place is called.... locally... "teaspoons"
ever heard of it? it's pretty orange and a super popular place to swim.
I guess the size of this stack is hard to tell... it was maybe (only) 15 inches high. but come on, I'm a beginner :)
From Wikipedia: The Anaconda Smelter Stack is the tallest surviving masonry structure in the world, with an overall height of about 585 feet (178.3 m), including a brick chimney 555 feet (169.2 m) tall and the downhill side of a concrete foundation 30 feet (9.1 m) tall. It is a brick smoke stack or chimney, built in 1918 as part of the Washoe Smelter of the Anaconda Copper Mining Company (ACM) at Anaconda, Montana."
The smelter closed in 1981. The stack is now part of Anaconda Smoke Stack State Park.
Photo taken May 1983.