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The Board of Trade Inspection of the Irwell Viaduct over the developing Manchester Ship Canal. There are 10 locomotives of the Midland Railway and Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway standing on the bridge, giving a total of 750 tons. The date is said to be 1893, but I wonder if it might be a bit earlier. The site of Irlam Locks is in the distance and the old railway bridge just after the viaduct that will replace it. The River Mersey is running in on the right side of the image. The viaduct is still in use today but has been completely rebuilt with new steelwork and extra support pillars for the outside spans.
I built this for the guys over at tested.com, as a thank you for having me as a guest on Octobercast 2013.
"Truckee" bomb test, conducted 10 mi. south of Christmas Island on June 9, 1962, as part of Operation Dominic. One of the most spectacular mushroom clouds ever photographed. "X-Files" type caption added later in dedication to Dr. Edward Teller.
A test shot done of Kina (renamed Gwendolyn Giang),that's why her hair is Blah. I wasn't planning on posting this; but the angles and little editing I did came out waayy too well not to.
GB Railfreight Class 92, 92 014 hauls a Caledonian Sleeper Mk5 test run south as 3Z11 Glasgow Central to London Euston through Acton Bridge.
Whilst there were some indications this would be a Load 15/16, there were only seven Mk5s in the consist behind 92014 - as was the case with the test runs the prior week. It was also the same short-formed "unit" of coaches, so at least some of them are getting some miles under their belts. The missing coach is believed to have wheelflats.
Rake was: 15006 / 15104 / 15203 / 15316 / 15324 / 15325 / 15329
(Missing coach: 15326)
More tests today. I'm learning how to control very light values. But first I did a little ink test in the upper left to see if you get green when you mix yellow and black ink. Yes, you do if you are very fast and mix them while they are still wet. I used a yellow Micron pen and a black Zig pen.
My main test was to slowly build up dilute colors. I had burnt sienna in one Kuretake Mini waterbrush and cobalt in another. I applied a wash, waited for it to dry completely, and added another. I did this four times to create four increasingly darker values. You have to be very patient, but it works. I learned this method from a book called "The Wash Method of Handling Water Colour" by Frank Forrest Frederick published in 1908. I found it for free on Archive.org
archive.org/details/washmethodofhand00freduoft
Where you can download it as a PDF, ePub, or Kindle file.
Finally I tried to get the lightest value possible with a number of colors. I used a wet round brush to pick up a little dried tube paint. I then quickly dipped the brush in water, tapped the brush against the inside of my water container (to dislodge a little water) and then made a brush mark down the dry page. This deposits very little pigment and is a good way to make beautiful, light colors. I also tried lifting some color out with a thirsty brush (in the cadmium red/lemon yellow mix), and I tried adding a little more color on top of the wet first stroke (ultramarine and cobalt - bottom left).
A modern day TV test pattern. Test patterns were first used to assist TV set owners with adjusting their sets, but today's are for studio use and are a rare sight over the air (a local station was airing this on an unused sub-channel until programming was added).
37608 and 37609 2q88 Powerhall - Derby RTC Test train 22/08/2012,photographed at Woodacre near Garstang
shot with my underwater photography rig....but above water. I'm trying to learn how to use the housing and strobe
this is all random stuff in the Nervous System office that looks coral-ish....since I'll mostly be shooting coral underwater.
Adding cocoa (dissolved in hot water) at the beginning of your marshmallow whipping step results in a denser mallow (seen at right).
I prefer the texture, appearance, and flavor of the middle chocolate marshmallow- whose dissolved cocoa was stirred into a basic vanilla batch after it was whipped to full volume.
You should do it too- make your own chocolate marshmallows!
Test Olympus E-M1 + 50-200mm FT lens + 1.4 FT converter + MFT Adapter - >239mm - f/7.1 - time 1/125sec - ISO 1600
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Foto gemaakt zonder gebruik te maken van een statief en door de ruit (dubbele beglazing) van de deur van mijn woning. Omgerekend naar FF formaat zou de brandpuntafstand plm. 478mm bedragen.
Found these mixed in with lots of unused / unassembled minifig torsos, unpainted signs, heads and animals, etc.
The green plate is like the purple one Fantastic Brick and Thomas found here. Like the red quadrate, the plastic is a different, softer plastic than ABS.
The blue beam I believe is what's shown in a small inset picture of a man holding a yellow collection of test pieces on a sprue on Fantastic Brick's Flickr.
A mobile fuel test unit, also called a 'prover' truck, used to test accuracy of gasoline pumps. A certain amount of gasoline is pumped into the small stainless steel tanks and measured on the devise above them.
This cab view of vintage metro train during some runs on test track after master overhaul. These old russian trains of Ečs type were withdrawn from service in 1997.
Real 14 mm lens are realy useful in small places like is this cab. It is fun. :-)
少し、私は鉄ちゃんですね。 :-)
Paper napkin test fit of MyOwnLittleWorld's "The Little Dress" pattern in the Lati Yellow SP size on Realfee. I'd say it's a bit short, but otherwise a good fit.
FYI: The bottom lined area is just my drawn example of how long it would be with the ruffle added.
This is what happens when you get out of work late and there is no daylight left for test shots. Bathroom mirror selfies for the win!
This is Fuji Pro 400H.
RAW conversion of this pic, brought the exposure up a tad to compensate for my over-zealous use of high F-stop.
Just some test shots with my new Canon 80D. Taken near my home in North Lincolnshire. Not much to take pictures of around here, as the ground is so flat! Light's terrible. But I tried to make do!
Lien vers le test :
www.nikonpassion.com/test-nikon-z6-deux-semaines-terrain-...
Les photos en pleine définition