View allAll Photos Tagged stacker
General Motors cars stacked up waiting to be hauled off to the crusher. Many with good usable parts will be destroyed. I assume many of these cars were scrapped due to the high cost of transmission replacement or other costly repairs...None of them appeared to be in a collision.
Blue Island, Illinois
Very tall pile of colorful books set against a white background (please note that I have replaced the paperback covers with craft paper which has a slightly mottled texture).
Somebody must have spent several hours building this incredible rock tower in the middle of the Poudre River last weekend. I didn't expect to see something like this, and didn't have the equipment with me to do it justice. By the time I came back at the end of the day, it was gone. Cache La Poudre Canyon, Northern Colorado. September 2008.
I'm going to make some Tri Recs stars with a stacked background and different, light traditional fabrics for the star. I like this star both ways, but I especially like it on point. We'll see what I decide to do with them.
A stack of 37 frames of the Gerbera centre. Tamron 90 @ f8, 1/100s, 50mm extension tubes, sidelit flash 1/8 power. The Tammy is sharper than the old Canon FD 50 f1.8 on the bellows IMHO. Must get a Canon FD 100 Macro from somewhere. Modified by CombineZP
One of my all-time favorite stacking fabrics. I've made at least two previous stacked tops with this fabric.
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Natural stone wall cladding ideal for commercial and residential interior and exterior wall cladding. For more info, click on the link: Stone Wall Cladding
A UP stack train with a rare high-headlight ACe in the lead charges through Maricopa, AZ in spring of 2018
The stack blower is used to create a draft to pull the firebox smoke through the boiler tubes. When the engine is running, the steam exhaust and/or a steam blower are used to maintain the draft.
Experimenting with focus stacking, I shot 20 images with my 180 macro @ f3.5 and process stacked them using Helicon Focus. I used mirror lock up and my heavy tripod with a remote release. I put it on manual focus and then gently cranked the focus barrel just a weee-bit for each image. The software did a pretty good job, then I brought it into PS for my normal flower processing.
Thanks for looking
View "L" it's better
Sitting by the George's River today working so I set up the camera with an automatic timer remote. Unfortunately ran out of battery but managed to get 32 x 30 second exposures with a 10 stop and 3 stop screw in filter attached to the lens.
Stacked in Photoshop using Dr Brown's and processed in NIK. I have since tried manually processing this shot and realised that NIK was responsible for the texture in the water. The original file is super SMOOTH so maybe 16 minutes is worth it after all!
Effectively a 16 minute exposure. Not sure I see the benefit in going that long.
Stacked Glass Fountain
Danny Lane
1986
Glass, steel
H270 x W60 x D60cm
Vero Beach, Florida
Photo Michael Decoulos
Blocks won at VMQG's February Meeting. Happy this top is together but will be putting it aside to work on other, more pressing projects for a bit.
A few images from a recent visit to Stack Rock fort. It is testament to the skill of the engineers and builders of the day that the main structure is still in such good condition.
If you've seen many of the quilt tops, you know that I find the stacks endlessly fascinating. On this fabric, the repeat is five inches one way and three and three quarters the other way. That tiny piece of fabric in the lower middle of the picture is one repeat. There are ten more blocks to go and I'll bet all twenty will be different!