View allAll Photos Tagged surgical
Seen at a U.S. Civil War reenactment last autumn
According to "The Journal of Antiques and Collectibles," Union surgeons during the war "were issued all-purpose surgical sets outfitted for an array of battlefield injuries. Along with amputation instruments, these typically included trephines, retractors, bullet extractors, razors, forceps, along with lancets, tourniquets, tweezers, bone gougers, hooks, probes, scalpels, surgical razors, suturing needles, and wedge-shaped Hey's Saws, useful in skull surgery."
THE TEMPLE OF KOM OMBO is an unusual double temple constructed during the Ptolemaic period, which lasted from 108 to 47 BC. The ancient Egyptian place of worship features a unique engraving that is thought to be among the first representations of medical and surgical instruments.
The relief showing the medical tools is among the most intriguing features of the temple. It can be found in the building’s rear, in the passageway that surrounds the main area. The depicted surgical instruments include scalpels, curettes, forceps, specula, scissors, medicine bottles, and prescriptions. The image is completed with two goddesses sitting on birthing chairs. At the time the relief was carved, Egyptian medical science was almost certainly the most advanced in the world.
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Candid street photography from Glasgow, Scotland. It's always good to see someone getting it right with the wearing of a facemask. Stay safe everyone!
surgical masks which have wire over the nose piece for a snugger fit.
Directions I followed..... youtu.be/irXTpoak8RA
Lincs and Notts Air Ambulance Leonardo AW.169 G-LNCC descends on to their HQ's heli-pad adjacent to RAF Waddington
276A0982
My daugher in law is a nurse educator in a large LI Hospital.... so today I made 15 fabric surgical masks for her to share with the women that work in her office.... this pattern was pretty easy and it has a slit in the back to insert a filter if they choose.... or they will wear them over the good masks, so they can be washed...
....and since I was an avid quilter before photography took over my life, I have tons of fabric to make them with!!
This is the video I followed to make these...
One of several surgery rooms at a large abandoned psychiatric hospital. The hospital was famous in the 1930's for being one of the pioneering sites for the research and early practice of frontal lobe lobotomy. I have no idea if the chairs in these rooms date back to that time but I suspect they may have. Quite a sobering thought when looking around the place.
Shot with the amazing Pentax 645Z and Brian 3 Legged Thing tripod.
This photo is one of the last 10 shots from 2020 that I have been re-uploading at the frantic pace of ten per day in an attempt to catch up.
Tomorrow, I will start uploading another selection of oldies (I will explain which ones and why), which will take an additional 10 days or so, before we can at last move on to photos of 2021 and (hopefully!) slow down the pace a bit...
Many thanks for your patience!
The inner workings of my Leatherman Surge multi-tool. 5:1 (roughly) macro shot taken with the bellows.
Composite shot made up of 12 focus-stacked exposures, set manually using a Novoflex Castel XQ II focusing rail. Stack processed with Helicon Focus. Laowa 100mm ƒ/2.8 2× macro lens on a Novoflex BALPRO T/S bellows.
A Six mile hike into the Tremont Area of the Great Smoky Mountains National Park with 28 pounds of camera equipment one day short of three months from my fusion surgery. My back held up like it was made of surgical grade steel.....oh wait it does have six screws and two rods.
...like the subway trains in Singapore! Even cleaner when viewed LARGE On Black!
So clean it could be easily converted to a mobile surgical unit...
For those who remember, I did a similar shot before, but this one has a different format and colors, and looks even cleaner!
I took this shot after the train has arrived at the terminal station, and was the last one to leave the train.
Technical note: almost no post-processing on this shot, except for the white balance and I gave some punch to the colors. This is not as sharp as I would like, but it was taken handheld at 1/4 second shutter speed.
Please check the whole Subway Set.