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I had more than i thought I had - ready for next year then!

Baltimore wandering

Focus-stacking pics 7, focus at back part

This image was taken from about 2 dozen stacked images of a fire sky sunrise: www.flickr.com/photos/79387036@N07/38659797831/in/photost... and darkened in Photoshop.

 

I like producing these quasi-abstracts because it requires a balance between the right number of stacked images and the speed of the clouds between each frame. I never know what the end product will look like and am always surprised.

 

Lightening stacked clouds often result in a more look of a star field when warp drive is engaged: www.flickr.com/photos/79387036@N07/37893063574/in/datepos...

 

Darkenng stacked clouds show more variability and can be more interesting as colors explode across the spectrum.

 

In any event, fire sky clouds are the best for using this technique.

 

Try it out. It's a fun way to create with the colors nature provides us.

My first attempt at stacking multiple images of the orion nebula.

Using my Nikon D500 and the Nikon 500mm f/5.6 PF lens manual focus on a static tripob, 125 images @ 1 sec and ISO 5000.

I had to realign the comp every few shots to keep the target in the center of frame so that the stacking software didn't have to work too hard, software used was the free Sequator program.

4 images, stacked for focus

Multiple image captures, combined into one focus stack of this Dahlia flower.

 

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MRS_20170416_194_LM_clean_stack_web_v1_700h_iwm - ©Matthew Schwartz, All Rights Reserved.

This image is protected by Copyright, and is not available for ANY use without the explicit written permission of the photographer. Thank you for being respectful of the time, money, and hard work I put into creating my fine art images.

I liked the striking diagonals formed from this collection of stacked chairs in Manchester Cathedral.

40 images shot with a D600/105mm f/2.8 tethered to a laptop with Control My Nikon and stacked with Zerene Stacker.

f/8 1/40s ISO250

Stacks and layers of Mushrooms

Fifty minutes of the Earth's rotation captured on a moonlit night at the spectacular Stacks of Duncansby

Cherished Laleidoscope of love!

Stacks roll west through downtown San Antonio. September 2017.

The Studio - Stacked

edit based on Kim's preset 'air'

 

Stacked saucers ...

A new test of my own build focus stack system.

Flat bed trailers stacked and waiting for use.

Had a trip to South Stack on Anglesey 10/6/2019.

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British postcard in the Picturegoer Series, London, no. W 771. Photo: Paramount.

 

American actor Robert Stack (1919-2003) became a star as Deanne Durbin's young lover in Henry Koster's First Love (1939). After the war, he had massive success with Douglas Sirk's drama Written on the Wind (1956) for which he was nominated for the Oscar. Internationally, he became famous as Elliot Ness in the TV series The Untouchables (1959-1963).

 

Robert Stack was born Charles Langford Modini Stack in Los Angeles, in 1919. His first name, selected by his mother, was changed to Robert by his father, a professional soldier Robert was the grandson of Marina Perrini, an opera singer at the Scala theatre in Milan. When little Robert was five, his father was transferred to the US embassy in France. Robert went to school in Paris and learnt French rather than his mother tongue. At 11, he returned to America, and at 13, he became a top athlete. His brother and he won the International Outboard Motor Championships, in Venice, Italy, and at age 16, he became a member of the All-American Skeet Team. He played polo, saxophone and clarinet at Southern California University. A broken wrist ended his career as a sports athlete. He took drama classes and made his stage debut at 20. He joined Universal Studios in 1939. In his first film, he starred as Deanne Durbin's young lover in First love (Henry Koster, 1939). He gave the teenage film star her first on-screen kiss. Around this "event," Universal producer Joe Pasternak provided a lot of publicity. Stack established himself as an actor and the following year he appeared as a young Nazi in The Mortal Storm (Frank Borzage, 1940) alongside Margaret Sullavan and James Stewart. Stack was reunited with Durbin in Pasternak's musical Nice Girl? (William A. Seiter, 1941). In 1942 he appeared as a Polish Air Force pilot in Ernst Lubitsch's comedy To Be or Not to Be (1942) starring Carole Lombard and Jack Benny. The plot concerns a troupe of actors in Nazi-occupied Warsaw who use their acting abilities to fool the occupying troops. The film has become recognised as a comedy classic. Stack played another pilot in Eagle Squadron (Arthur Lubin, 1942), a huge hit. Then Stack's career was interrupted by military service. He did duty as a gunnery instructor in the United States Navy during World War II.

 

After World War II, Robert Stack continued his career. He returned to the screen with roles in films such as Fighter Squadron (Raoul Walsh, 1948) with Edmond O'Brien and A Date with Judy (Richard Thorpe, 1948) with Elizabeth Taylor. In 1952 Stack starred in Bwana Devil (Arch Oboler, 1952), the first major film production in 3D. He played the second leading role alongside John Wayne in William A. Wellman's aviation drama It's Always Day (1954). Sam Fuller cast him in the lead of House of Bamboo (1955), shot in Japan. Stack enjoyed one of his greatest successes with Douglas Sirk's drama Written in the Wind (1956). He received an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actor for his portrayal of the alcoholic playboy Kyle Hadley. From the late 1950s Stack turned increasingly to television. Internationally, Robert became famous with his role in the television series The Untouchables in which he starred as the clean-cut Chicago police officer Eliot Ness during the Prohibition era. Around 120 episodes were made between 1959 and 1963. Other leading roles followed for Stack in the television series The Name of the Game (1968-1971), Most Wanted (1976) and Strike Force (1981). The multilingual Stack also took the lead role in the German-language film Die Hölle von Macao/The Hell of Macau (James Hill, 1966) alongside Elke Sommer, and he also appeared in French- or Italian-language productions. With advancing age, Stack also frequently took on deadpan comedy roles that lampooned his dramatic on-screen persona in films such as 1941 (Steven Spielberg, 1979), Airplane! (Jim Abrahams, David Zucker, Jerry Zucker, 1980) or Caddyshack II (Allan Arkush, 1988). Between 1987 and 2002 he was the host of the television series Unsolved Mysteries, which was dedicated to mysterious murder cases. He worked as an actor until his death. In 1956 he married actress Rosemarie Bowe (1932-2019), to whom he was married until the end of his life. The couple had two children. Robert Stack died of pneumonia in 2003 in Beverly Hills at the age of 84 and was buried in Westwood Village Memorial Park Cemetery.

 

Sources: Wikipedia (Dutch, German and English) and IMDb.

 

And, please check out our blog European Film Star Postcards.

Re-shoot of the image titled stackable, this time with a tripod and with the color boosted a bit.

Is that a rock stack or is that a rabbit in a skirt?

Stacked images of crows heading west. Los Angeles,

Thirle Door and the Stacks of Duncansby, Duncansby Head at dawn.

 

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A westbound NS stack train makes it way over the Ohio Connecting Bridge on the Mon Line in Pittsburgh.

Sunset from a few nights ago at Plover Scrap lighthouse.

Another attempt at image stacking on this one (Same process as the last shot)

This one was 108 shots stacked in photoshop. Would have liked a few more but my batteries died so that was the end of that.

This is an absolute ball ache to stack all these when you've only got Elements, so I can't run any scripts to automate it. But it's fun all the same.......

 

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The larger of the two small stacks at Torquay

syrphe, focus stacking

Photo-a-Day: Year 9, Day 42 - Total Days: 2,964

Absetzer im Tagebau Inden / Stacker in opencast minining area Inden, Germany

A birthday quilt finished! Inspired by a pattern by Tula Pink.

These bubbles formed in ice in a bucket under a downspout. I can't account for the linear pattern since the bucket did not move; perhaps the floating cap of ice changed elevation or rotated slightly with each successive drop, though interestingly, the drops stack in opposite directions in the two "worms."

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