View allAll Photos Tagged stackers
Rose, stack of 8 images. Now that we are confined to our home it is time to do some long due experimenting.
with Micro Nikkor 60mm/2.8
No.1 Croydon office block (formerly called NLA Tower, but also nicknamed the 50p building because of its multi-sided shape).
Designed in a brutalist style by architect Richard Seifert & Partners and completed in 1970.
The "stacked" bubbles of Abraham Lake are indeed interesting, especially when they form stacks with interesting shapes like you see here. We had a fun time finding cool bubbles like these to photograph!
Picked some shells from a nearby beach sometime ago.
The smallest shell on top is about half an inch.
For Macro Mondays, Stack.
A sea stack is a large stack of rock in the sea that looks like a tall stone tower, separated from the main shoreline. They can occur wherever there is a water body and a cliff. Sea stacks can be found on all seven continents, and each highlights a subtle difference in how they are formed. Famous examples exist everywhere from Australia to Ireland, Iceland, and Russia. Some of them are long and flat, while others are tall, thin, and pointed.
Coastal erosion or the slow wearing of rock by water and wind over very long periods of time causes a stack to form. All sea stacks start out as part of nearby rock formations. Over millennia, wind and waves break the rock down. The force of the two creates cracks in the stone, and, little by little, cracks become chips, which fall off the main rock.
When enough chips fall off, holes are created that extend from one rock outcrop side to the other. Eventually, the wind and water break through to the other side, creating a cave or arch. Over many more generations, this arch also falls away, separating one part of the rock from the original cliff, resulting in the sea stack.
Taken from the service rd. running parallel with I-25 in Walsenburg. from Left to Right is Mt Mestas, Rough Mountain. Silver Mountain, Sangre de Cristo Mountains range, Greenhorn Mountain. With a couple of Buttes in the FG. Spanish Peaks are just out of view to the left
Pano is 90 images. 6 segments of 15 images, each segment is focus stacked then merged into a Pano with Lightroom.
Southbound stacks roll into the north end of Duplainville siding while SD75I 5711 (and a matching unit second out) wait to proceed north with junk freight for Fond du Lac, Neenah and Stevens Point.
Canon EOS 6D
Mitutoyo M Plan APO 5x 0.14 + Raynox 150
MJKZZ Xtreme Pro rail + IR Remote Motion Controller
Tiempo exposición: 0,8" - ISO100
Canon Auto Bellows
Stacking
Nº de fotos: 150
Pasos: 37,5 µm
Magnificación aproximada: 4,93x
South Stack has been a warning beacon for passing ships since it's construction over 200 years ago, cautioning them of the deadly rocks below. The lighthouse helps guide shipping in the busy channel into the Mersey and is a waymark for local seafarers, as well as for coastal traffic crossing the Irish Sea to and from the ports of Holyhead, Dublin and Dun Laoghaire.
This is a composite. But the Milky Way in the picture is approximately in the position that the actual MW was at that time of night.
I took a shot of the scene during blue hour for the landscape,
then took about ten shots for the stars and processed them in Starry Landscape Stacker, then another 9 shots for the lightpainting of the caboose. All with the camera staying put on the tripod.
Unfortunately the MW did not show up properly in the shot due to the moon being quite bright already and the sun still contributing light to the sky during nautical twilight. So I took an image of the MW that I took about 4 years ago in early June and used it as a stand in.
I'm hoping to take the same shot again during the next new moon phase and just a little later in the evening.
I'll accept if you call this picture a "fake".
Canon EOS 6D
Minolta Dimage Scan Elite 5400 lens
Tiempo exposición: 1/4" - ISO100
Canon Auto Bellows
MJKZZ IR Remote Motion Controller
Newport M436 linear stage
Stacking
Nº de fotos: 143
Pasos: 100 µm
Magnificación aproximada: 2x
The fantastic view from the top of the University Library in Helsinki. I had to resist the strong urge to drop something on the guy below :)
For an account of my travels to Helsinki and Tallinn:
Lingonberries and Space-transcending Crows: Helsinki and Tallinn
I seem to remember seeing this S-train off in the distance from my 18th floor apartment on the UMN campus and thought with their 44th Avenue crew change I could beat them out somewhere west. I also seem to recall their getting delayed going through University / Northtown, and so I got them in the curve at Big Lake.
After Oliver Wright's great presentation last week at our camera club I thought I would try a bit of stacking. (Seeing as the rain has stopped gardening today) hope you like, but comments welcome....
8 images used..
Canon EOS 6D
Mitutoyo M Plan APO 5x 0.14 + Raynox 250
Tiempo exposición: 1,6" - ISO100
Canon Auto Bellows
Stacking
Nº de fotos: 200
Pasos: 59,76 µm
Magnificación aproximada: 3,17x
I know the stacking is way off point here and its a bit hit and miss, but with it being my first attempt I am quite happy with it.
GX8 mit Olympus 60 mm Makro + Raynox 250
Post Focus Funktion, Focus Stack mit Helicon Focus.
Freihand aufgelegt, Naturlicht
Fundort: Deutschland - Bielefeld - 19.05.2016
Canon EOS 6D
Minolta Dimage Scan Elite 5400 lens
Tiempo exposición: 1/30" -
ISO100
Newport M436 linear stage + MJKZZ 2-Axes Motion Controller Extension For Raspberry Pi
Stacking
Nº de fotos: 70
Pasos: 160 µm
Magnificación aproximada: 1,1x
Canon EOS 6D
Mitutoyo M Plan APO 10x 0.28 + Raynox 150
MJKZZ Xtreme Pro rail + IR Remote Motion Controller
Tiempo exposición: 1" - ISO100
Canon Auto Bellows
Stacking
Nº de fotos: 229
Pasos: 10 µm
Magnificación aproximada: 8,44x
Lightened in Photoshop" 100x2s from this time lapse: www.flickr.com/photos/79387036@N07/49260776216/in/datepos... at peak colors.
This image is equivalent to 3.33 minutes of lapsed time.
Picture of the Day
Canon EOS 6D
Minolta Dimage Scan Elite 5400 lens
Tiempo exposición: 2" - ISO100
Canon Auto Bellows
MJKZZ IR Remote Motion Controller
Newport M436 linear stage
Stacking
Nº de fotos: 120
Pasos: 93,34 µm
Magnificación aproximada: 2,12x
Mitutoyo lens and micro positioning system, for micro stacking application.
The lense measures 6.5 cm (and this foto meets the MM macro-size requirement), the resulting pictures made with this lense are much smaller: 4.8 x 3.2 mm². For stacking, the lens is driven by a piezo motor in closed loop with a positioning-sensor (upper right) having a resolution of 0.05 microns. Due to a special control mechanism, resonance-free bracketing with up to 30 fps is possible.
Since Mitutoyo lenses are infinitely corrected, it is possible to move the lens only for focus bracketing. Camera, tube lens and the object specimen are fixed and do not move at all.
A trio of eastbound trains were chilling at Fort Madison waiting on a signal while the Mississippi River bridge was open to allow a tow barge through.
As soon as the bridge closed, Santa Fe would give clear signals to their trains and eventually give one to the Southern Pacific trackage rights train.