View allAll Photos Tagged stackers
South Stack Coastline Anglesey a wonderful bird watching place with stunning cliffs, out of season climbers practice on here, it's amazing to see them dangling from their colourful ropes
Stacked rocks in Iceland. Not sure exactly where this tourist "fad" started, but we saw them several places in Iceland. On the good side, at least in this case, the Icelandic environment can be "harsh", and the lifespan of a stack itself could probably be measured in days. Maybe hours.
Either way, I thought it made for a good picture.
Black Peppercorn
Nikon Z 5 Laowa 25mm macro lens.
f2.8, 2 secs, ISO 100
First attempt at focus stacking (62 shots)
Any tips on how to avoid or remove the 'halo' effect round the edge of the end result, gratefully accepted.
Handheld focus stack of 4 images. Shot with XT3 and Venus Laowa 60mm f2.8. Didn't have a flash with me so its a bit more grainy than I would have preferred.
Please view large because this image doesn't respond well to sharpening, which flickr does on smaller sizes.
Taken from iPhone 7+ video time lapse. Exposure; 17x15s, lightened in Photoshop. Of note, the greenish colors at left might be from combining thin yellow clouds against a dark blue sky. Also, in the right upper corner, you can see how the colors of sunrise transition from dark red to light yellow as the clouds move eastward. Gaps in the cloud structure are due to the 15 second interval between captured frames.
An eastbound stack train on the Union Pacific races away from the sunset at Creston, IL, 60 miles from its Chicago destination.
An eastbound Norfolk Southern stack train crosses the Fort Wayne Line in Bucyrus, Ohio. The train is on the NS Sandusky District and the junction is known on the railroad as Colsan, which stood for Columbus and Sandusky.
There has been a time / that a haystack was used / - dear children - / to stack hay / to feed the cows / in winter.
Thanks for viewing my image, if you’re interested in more images from Earl Adams Photography check out my website at www.earladamsphotography.com, and “Like” my photography page on Facebook at www.facebook.com/EarlAdams.Photography
These stacking up rocks serves as a breakwater at Blue Rocks, NS, Canada makes separated the inner side ocean warter so clam and made the shaoes of each beautiful rock reflected on it like a mirror.
Pembrokeshire Coast The Stack
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The first snow of the season has fallen at the highest elevations of the San Francisco peaks above Flagstaff in early October as Q LPCLAC6 passes through Maine on the western slope of the Arizona divide.
What's better than waking up to a stack of pancakes ? ...a stack of pandas of course !
Happy Mothers Day !
Camera: Nikon F5
Lens: AF Nikkor 50mm 1:1.8
Ilford FP4+ Black&White negative film
Developed and scanned by www.meinfilmlab.de
This is my first go at stacking multiple images in Photoshop, using the 'mean' method, (7 images).
Given the conditions on the day, I'm really happy with the result I've achieved and I'm fairly close to the image I had pre-visualised.
There is plenty of room for improvement, but as a first step, I'm very happy with it.
Your comment and critique is most welcome!
Evening Sea Stacks. © Copyright 2021 G Dan Mitchell – all rights reserved.
Sea stacks and surf on an overcast evening, Crescent City, California.
The circumstances of this photograph were just a bit unusual, and it is not quite the photograph that I thought I’d be making when I recently visited the coastline at Crescent City. Because the days are so long right now, we decided to go out for an early dinner, planning to head back out into the field to photograph an hour or so before sunset. The plans was not totally solid, but I had this spot in mind as one of the possibilities, as it more or less in Crescent City. We finished dinner and it was still too early for the photography I had in mind, so we did a bit of exploring before we ended up back at this post.
I had photographed these very rocks a couple of years ago, and this time I was imagining something with sunset light, the colorful ocean and sky, and perhaps some dramatic shadows. The conditions had something else in mind. To the north a line of clouds was arriving, likely the result of a weak incoming cold front. When it became apparent that the brilliantly colorful sunset I imagined was not to be (though something else interest did eventually happen) I rethought the mood I wanted to suggest and began to see the appeal in this framing of the scene, focusing on the foreground island with the more distant sea stacks closer to the top of the frame.
G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, “California’s Fall Color: A Photographer’s Guide to Autumn in the Sierra” is available from Heyday Books, Amazon, and directly from G Dan Mitchell.