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Just got this Praktica Mtl3. I'm giving it a test run.

Stage 1 of construction of my sound activated flash trigger.

Strobist info:

Canon 580EX II with Stoffen Diffuser camera right @ 1/128

 

Triggered via CTR-301P RF Flash Trigger

This beautiful horse belongs to my eldest Grandaughter.

Product shot of some steaming bread, just out of the oven. I made this for a local bakery, it was very fun and i also learned two very important things:

1. Never shoot food on an empty stomach (it's safe to say the loaf in the back has not been torn apart for the "artistic value" :D )

2. Trying to arrange flour by blowing at it might seem like a good idea at first, to my surprise, turned out it wasn't.

  

Strobist info:

 

Cactus KF36 camera left, fired into shoot through umbrella @ 1/16th power, triggered by cactus V4

Like Me on Facebook: www.facebook.com/melatphoto

 

Check Out My New Website!

*Under Construction

 

Did some promo shots for my highschool's talent show, Mr. Fairfax.

 

Camera info:

Canon T1i, Canon EF 135mm f/2L, f/4.0, 1/200s, ISO 100

 

Strobist Info:

-AlienBee B800 shot through a stripbox slightly camera right in front of subject. 5 feet high and 2 feet away from subject. 1/16 Power

-AlienBee B800 shot through a stripbox slightly camera left in front of subject. 5 feet high and 2 feet away from subject. 1/16 Power

-Flash trigged with Cactus V5 triggers

 

Comments? Crit?

The Mark X hub was in production 1910-14.

New flash trigger system in the house replacing my old PT-04 triggers.

 

I waited quite a while for these ... looking forward to lots of flash-fun.

A part of my mini concentration; the theme is depression.

Dear UserThanks for choosing our Network DVR.This email is recorded and sent automatically by DVR.Reason as follows:Motion detection.Triggered channel:1,Time:2015-10-08 22:42:21You are suggested to check the recorded files, thanks for cooperation.

STROBIST: Canon 600EX-RT through softbox at 1/2 power, triggered by Pixel King trigger - camera right.

Testing of my new remote triggered flash system.

Sound triggered flash wotzit (for photographing bursting balloons, smashing glass etc.)

 

Based on the circuit at lullaby.homepage.dk/diy-camera/usoft.html

 

Laid out the pcb in eagle, which turned into an exercise in miniaturisation! :O)

 

Printing PCBs is remarkably similar to alt. process printing. Find me a way to expose copper clad with continuous tone and I'll be happy for months!

 

It nearly fits into the smallest potting box that maplin sells (can't be bad), thats a 10mm grid in the background, its about the size of a two pence piece!

Montenegrin Army soldiers find cover as they engage the opposing force in a field training exercise during the Immediate Response 2012 (IR12) training event held in Slunj, Croatia on Tuesday, June 5, 2012. IR12 is a multinational tactical field training exercise that will involve more than 700 personnel primarily from the U.S. Army Europe’s 2nd Cavalry Regiment and Croatian armed forces, with contingents from Albania, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Montenegro and Slovenia. Macedonia and Serbia will send observers to the exercise. The exercise is a part of USEUCOM's joint training and exercise program designed to enhance joint and combined interoperability between the U.S. Army, U.S. Air Force, Croatian Armed Forces and partner nations, and will help prepare participants to operate successfully in a joint, multinational, interagency, integrated environment. (U.S. Army photo by SPC Lorenzo Ware/Released)

 

DMZ tours offer insights into tensions then, now

 

By Sgt. 1st Class Jeff Troth

jefferey.l.troth.mil@mail.mil

 

CAMP BONIFAS, SOUTH KOREA – It’s been six decades since the Korean War of 1950 – 53 left the peninsula charred and devastated. But the Demilitarized Zone that has ever since divided the two Koreas, and the troops – North Korean on one side, South Korean and U.S. on the other – that stand guard there, remain an abiding and visible reminder of the hair-trigger tensions that persist.

The Army’s Family and Morale, Welfare and Recreation in Korea offers regularly scheduled trips to the DMZ, and a group of 41 Soldiers, civilians and family members from Warrior Country boarded a bus Aug. 4 and went to see the famous place for themselves.

The Joint Security Area at the DMZ draws more than 100,000 tourists from around the world each year, according to U.S. military officials there.

“Why would you come to South Korea and not go to visit the line between North Korea and South Korea?” said Rachel Barlow, wife of 1st Sgt. Frank Barlow, first sergeant for the 2nd Infantry Division Band. “I was curious as to what was there.”

One of the tour’s stops was the Joint Security Area, or JSA, where American and South Korean Soldiers work across a courtyard from those of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea. In this courtyard, straddling the Military Demarcation Line, are buildings that are used for direct talks between the two Koreas.

Tourists are taken into one of the buildings, and can step beyond the point that takes them across the dividing line and thus into North Korea. But they have to leave the same way they came in – on the South Korean side.

One of the stops within the JSA was Checkpoint 3, a building on a hill that is faced on three sides by North Korea.

It was an “interesting” feature of the tour for Sgt. Mario Smith, of Headquarters and Headquarters Company, U.S. Army Garrison Red Cloud. “You look to your left, you see North Korea. You look to your right, you see North Korea. You look in front of you and you see North Korea. And if you look down you can see the concertina wire and the fence going around you.”

From Checkpoint 3, visitors can see Gijong-dong Village, also known as Propaganda Village, in the North’s part of the DMZ. The village was built in the 1950s to encourage South Koreans to defect. Despite massive loud speakers that once broadcast the virtues of North Korea, the village consists of buildings that are mere concrete shells, no windows or doors.

Next stop on the tour was the Bridge of No Return, which was used for repatriation of refugees and prisoners of war. A U.S. Soldier who briefed the tour explained that prisoners of both sides were given the option of being returned to their side or remaining with their captors. But the prisoners were also told that once they crossed over they’d be forbidden to come back.

The Barlow’s favorite part of the trip was the vantage from Dora Observatory, which affords a view of Mount Songhaksan and other North Korean mountains. It reminded them of the mountains in their home state of West Virginia, they said.

At Dora visitors can, for a small price, use binoculars to get a closer look into North Korea and can see as far as the city of Kaesong.

The tour included a stop at one of the infiltration tunnels leading into South Korea that authorities have discovered over the years.

Smith went inside the tunnel for a look and found it “awesome.”

“I have heard people talk about it, but until you walk through it yourself you will never believe the work that they put into it to construct it,” he said.

The next tours to the DMZ are Sept. 8 and 22. For more information on the tour or to sign up, visit your Area I Community Activity Center.

Original equipment S/A trigger shifter. Despite badly faded graphics and rusty hardware It works after decates of neglect.

Strobist Info

1 Metz 58 AF-1 camera left 1/2 power (Softbox)

1 Yongnuo YN-460 II behind mommy and baby from right side (diffusor) 1/1 power

 

Canon Eos 50D

Canon EF-S 18-200mm IS (130mm)

1/250 f/8 ISO 100

Yongnuo CTR-301P Wireless Flash Trigger System

Testing the sound function of my new HiViz DIY multitrigger kit by popping balloons.

 

Strobist:

Sigma 500DG Super at subject left, 1/128th power (to keep flash duration as short as possible)

Triggered with HiViz multitrigger on sound mode, mic mounted next to flash

Canon 350d on tripod at ISO 400, aperture f/11, shutter 1 second using remote shutter cable

Fashion design student

 

Strobist;

Flash camera right set to full, softbox, key light

Flash camera left behind subject, softbox, rim light

Flash camera right behind subject,softbox, background light

 

Triggered Impact radio slave

I also got a Cactus radio trigger set for Christmas. :D I was playing around with it tonight, and liked this shot even though the light is a little too hot around the bridge.

 

Bare flash in the violin case camera left. I don't remember which flash or anything else because these were just test shots with my new cactus trigger. I got tired of shooting the wall. :)

 

I have an optical slave (Wein Peanut.) I thought I would use the radio triggers to trigger one flash and have the peanut on another flash. It doesn't work, :( so I will be buying another receiver soon.

 

Demonstrating Trigger Point Therapy

 

© Photography www.esccreative.com for www.escapefitness.com

Samstag

09. 01. 19:30 - 22:00

.:trigger :.

Nils Ostendorf - Trompete

Matthias Müller - Posaune

Chris Heenan - Kontrabassklarinette

Trigger Plant (Stylidium graminifolium) found on a fire trail in Springwood, Blue Mountains. This is the first year I have noticed these flowers and I just love them. In fact, I adore them so much I just purchased two from a native plant nursery and have put them in my garden. Here’s some information about them from the Australian Native Plant Society: “Stylidium is a genus of about 130 species, most of which occur in Australia with a few being found in Asia. They are known as "trigger plants" because of the unique, irritable flower column which is triggered by insect visitors. The trigger remains cocked until an insect probes the flower and then springs upwards and deposits pollen on the head or back of the insect which then transfers the pollen to another flower.” [Source: anpsa.org.au/s-gra.html ]

strobist info, un flash a unos 35 grados por la derecha con paraguas blanco translucido disparado con cactus V4

Remington Model 8 trigger group retainer pin being removed.

Water balloon bursts with trigger trap firing flash

 

Just playing along with my new (old) speedlite.

 

Strobist info:

One Nikon SB-24 triggered by Cactus Trigger in front of the camera.

Someone WHINED, and I mean whined big time that there wasn't enough goat photos this week, really? Cuz I was whining to myself that there wasn't enough cute dog and cat photos on my photo stream this week, but those can wait, until everybody gets their goat fix squared away first. So here you go, I found a cute baby photo of these little rascals.

Join ITS Tactical as we continue our series on How to Build an AR-15 with the fourth step in assembling your Lower Receiver, installing the Trigger Group.

 

Please check out our detailed step-by-step write up on ITS Tactical that complements this video with additional information and photos: itstac.tc/mJkKYz

The second Plec Pick 2017 shoot I did in January. Shot in Diffusion Lab studio.

 

www.goldenplec.com/featured/soule-plec-picks-2017/

 

Strobist info: Canon 430 EXII through a softbox, above camera. Triggered by Yonguo 622 triggers.

Shot with Canon 60D. Vivitar Strobe and Cactus V4 triggers. Strobe inside box.

2nd attempt at soldering the components to the stripboard resulted in success! First go I used an old traditional soldering iron that didn't seem to melt the solder fast enough. The resulting mess of a stripboard failed to trigger the flash. Luckily I didn't fry any of the components so for my second try I used a soldering "gun" that's got a trigger. This turned out to be fantastically easy to use and my soldering was done in no time.

 

I still need to attach a PC female port and find a project box (Altoids tin?)

 

Watch this space!

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