View allAll Photos Tagged stackers
Taken from a GoPro 10 @ 240 fps video by screen saving each of 52 frames, stacking and lightening it in Photoshop.
This is a single event.
Best lightning display during this year's Southwest Monsoon (9/23/22) during blue hour.
For slow motion clip: www.youtube.com/watch?v=GhPOcNax2zw.
With just a huff and a puff you can blow it all down. A wooden match house is not so easy to build. MacroMonday
60'000 tiles of gneiss stone stacked on top of each other form the Thermal-Spa in Vals.
Designed by the architect Peter Zumthor, built in 1996.
This is an exterior view.
Stacked two images here where I focused on the lights for one of the captures, and then focused on the post for the other ... then combined them in Photoshop.
This is an 8x8s stacked image lightened in Photoshop. This thunderstorm was about 40 miles away.
Picture of the Day x2
Last of the series, I wanted to portray in these photos the scale of the Steel Stacks in Bethlehem, PA. This is a very small part of the structure, but you may be able to tell from the walkway, how small a person would be, moving around in the system of mysterious pipes.
Yesterafternoon, while playing with E, I got the inclination to stack her farm animals. I could only get up to four before she'd come knock them over, so after she went to bed, I set about stacking the animals. I spent a ridiculous amount of time getting this done. It was the stupid chicken that made it so hard, but I finally got all five stacked, secure enough for us to walk around them without them falling over. No glue, just gravity.
While doing this silly task I was reminded of a children's story about some animals going on a journey, and they were riding one atop the other, but I can't remember the name of the story. I was also reminded of a boy at LSMSA who, out of the blue, told me I had a "perpetually stoned attitude." He may have been correct.
A row of stacked beer glasses at Betty's in the Short North...
Canon 20D, w/ Canon 24-70mmL (@25mm) f/2.8 @ 1/10th with ISO 800.
NOTE: This photo made it into Flickr's 'Explore" as one of the top five hundred most interesting photos on a particular day. You can see all of my photo's that have made it into the Flickr Explore pages here.
Cloud to ground and anvil crawlers dominated in this 15x8s stacked image. 35mm lens was used (not 85mm as noted at right).
That feeling when you come back from your holiday at your work and the stack has grown huge.
Oh no .......
Ostoma ferruginea, Trogossitidae
Size 9 mm
A different take on the species from the last post. This dead/prepared specimen was borrowed from a friend's collection.
This is was shot in the studio with darkfield style lighting (light coming from behind). See the comment section below for more info!
Stacked from 160 exposures in Zerene Stacker.
Canon 5DmkII, Nikon PB-6 bellows, Mitutoyo M Plan Apo 5X 0,14, morfanon tube lens.
Canon EOS 6D
Mitutoyo M Plan APO 5x 0.14 + Raynox 150
Tiempo exposición: 1/20" - ISO100
Newport 436 linear stage + MJKZZ 2-Axes Motion Controller Extension For Raspberry Pi
Stacking
Nº de fotos: 83
Pasos: 39,45 µm
Magnificación aproximada: 4,37x
Some of the most dramatic coastlines in Wales that you would ever come across is near the southern Pembrokeshire National Park from Castlemartin Range East to all the way to Govan's Head. Castlemartin Range East is the only one that is open to public subject to some Ordnance tests that happen from time to time. It is also the only route to get to the Green Bridge of Wales - A natural sea arch that is simply spectacular.
As you walk east from the Green Bridge, you would come across these two sea stacks. You can also see the Devil's Cauldron in the distance. There are a lot of other less prominent stacks till you reach Govan's head which is spectacular on its own. This has a 6 stop ND filter and a graduated ND filter. I also had used the UV filter to limit some of the haze but as the sun was setting in the other side, I could not get rid of em all...
Thanks for viewing and have a nice day!
This 96x5s interval stacked image was lightened in Photoshop. Intense fire sky displays can yield the most interesting stacked images. In this equivalent 8 minutes elapsed time, the start through the end of the fire sky is depicted.
Picture of the Day
The fourth picture within a 30 minute span is this BNSF stack train climbing the Grade at Sullivan's Curve. In the siding at Canyon on the ex-SP Palmdale cutoff is 8401 and UP 5432 is on the main. Plenty of action this morning even with the 3751 special in the mix.
The great windstorm of last fall left plenty of fallen wood for stockpiling in advance of the winter. Unlike last year, March has come in like the proverbial lamb with temps in the 30s, 40s, and now even 50s with bright sun causing a dramatic melt of the snow. Some of you have inquired as to the lake and it will be some time before the thick ice releases its grip. While there remains plenty of potential winter in the month ahead, this has been a most pleasant change from last year. Perhaps this pile will endure until next fall...
from Loch Glascarnoch looking to Beinn Dearg mountain, winter cold pushing the ice onto the banks made for interesting photographyphotography
South Stack Lighthouse, I am starting the Anglesey photos with this wonderful place, exceptional for birds, flowers and scenery.
Massive stash of chopped and stacked "fire wood" in downtown Madison, Wisconsin (yes, downtown)
Toggle "L" key to get less distracting view
I took this as an oblique view across the geyser field near Grand Prismatic Spring in Yellowstone National Park. I liked the abstract way the various concentric rings appear here in earth tones. All is a result of the interaction of mineral-laden water, scalding hot, and the extremophile microorganisms that live in this environment.