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This week I decided to try to create a cupcake all on my own. Yikes...pretty much up to now I have followed someone else's recipe to the letter. I put some more thought into how I could create a Banana Pudding Cupcake and here's what I came up with. Check out my blog, 52 Cupcakes, for the recipe. This is my dog Layla...she was ever present during the baking.
Canon 5D3 with EF 100mm/f2.8 Macro. ISO 200, f8 as 1/15th second. Natural lighting. Speedlite 580 EX II was positioned at 1:00 overhead and a bit forward.
No focus stack though I should have shot this at f11 or so (back right lobe of main subject is out of focus). Love the lighting and detail. I work hard to get no areas of saturation but still have strong lighting effects. Personal fav.
Thanks to Marlon Wafer for the models.
Thanks to Sven Chua for organizing the talent.
Thanks to all make up artists and all designers involved.
Also, thanks to Brian for the opportunity.
The rotating wafer support maintains flatness and position of 4", 6", 8", 10", 12", and 13.625" diameter wafers in order to achieve contamination-free contact angle readings while preserving flatness. Each wafer support is hand lapped to a high-tolerance. The support incorporates a rotating stage plate which is graduated in 1° increments with displacement holes for creating the appropriate suction. The wafer support mounts directly to the leveling stage of the Contact Angle Goniometer. Model 400 supports and includes an 8" wafer support (and other sizes can be added). Models 190, 200, 250, and 290 support the 4" wafer support only. Larger supports may require an upgrade kit which will extend the focal length of the camera and extend the microsyringe fixture. We offer kits which include all of the necessary parts.
wafer confiscated amberlee's best friend. glenn doesn't entirely mind, though...he's an equal-opportunity bear-hugger.
Unloading the ingot after cutting into individual wafers. SolarWorld manufacturing facility Hillsboro, Oregon.
Of course, at Ellis Square, we had to follow our noses to the "oh so, sweet" smells of Savannah's Candy Kitchen. We relish the candies of our childhood and took lots of pictures!
Best viewed large.
Any idea what this thing is? Seen while camping in the Black Hlils near Custer, SD. It was on a stump and was about the size of a Nilla Wafer™. My best guess is either a deposit of eggs or perhaps a fungus. I went back the next day and it was dark brown and drying out fast. Amphibian eggs? Alien eggs? Nilla eggs?
Printed on the SEMATECH Berkeley MET, EUV photolithography research tool at the Advanced Light Source, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Another view of the pen knives with homemade wafers and a wafer seal.
Also shown are some 18th century reproduction letters, a small candlestick- for melting wax for seals and a inkwell.