Random Photos

  • Thread starter Thread starter morrobay
  • Start date Start date
  • Tags Tags
    Photos Random
Click For Summary
The discussion revolves around a variety of photography topics, showcasing personal photos and experiences from different locations, including Ko-Larn Island, Central Park, and various natural landscapes. Participants share insights about the techniques used in their photography, such as drone shots and long exposure panoramas, and discuss the beauty of nature, including autumn scenes and night skies. There are mentions of personal stories, including a trip to Sweden and memories of family history, particularly relating to military service during WWII. The conversation also touches on the impact of the pandemic on tourism and local businesses, as well as the enjoyment of photography as a creative outlet. Additionally, there are discussions about photography gear, including vintage lenses and new cameras, and the excitement of capturing unique moments like rainbows and wildlife. Overall, the thread highlights the joy of photography and the shared experiences of capturing the world around them.
  • #2,131
WWGD said:
Bhat is the price of clams? ;).
Including VAT?
 
  • Like
Likes alexzi and WWGD
Physics news on Phys.org
  • #2,132
WWGD said:
Bhat is the price of clams? ;).
Check next time. Shrimp is $8/kilo. Clams would be less
IMG_20240804_213513.jpg
IMG_20240804_213437.jpg
 
  • Like
Likes pinball1970 and WWGD
  • #2,133
 
  • Like
Likes pinball1970, Borg and phinds
  • #2,134
BillTre said:

Yeah, in the same vein:

 
  • Like
Likes pinball1970, BillTre and phinds
  • #2,135
Bit of an odd duck I found at a small air museum well off the beaten path yesterday… a 50 year old homebuilt flying wing. FAA records say it’s a White Flying Plank II.
IMG_3395.jpeg
 
  • Like
Likes BillTre, jack action, collinsmark and 1 other person
  • #2,136
Yikes! I wonder what they dropped it from...
 
  • #2,137
Fashion
IMG_20240807_193635.jpg
IMG_20240807_192003.jpg
 
  • Like
Likes pinball1970 and DennisN
  • #2,138
WWGD said:
Bhat is the price of clams? ;).
USD/35 Baht. Baht/kilo
IMG_20240808_161229_1.jpg
IMG_20240808_161253.jpg
IMG_20240808_161554.jpg
IMG_20240808_161601.jpg
IMG_20240808_163559.jpg
IMG_20240808_191241.jpg
IMG_20240808_163038_1.jpg
IMG_20240808_183717.jpg
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Likes DennisN, jtbell, pinball1970 and 3 others
  • #2,139
The recent wildfires that destroyed much of Jasper, Alberta reminded me of my very brief visit in May 2004, a rest stop (a half hour, maybe?) at the train station en route from Edmonton to Vancouver on VIA Rail's Canadian.

PICT2775.jpg

PICT2776.jpg

PICT2764.jpg

PICT2777.jpg
 
  • Like
Likes Spinnor, DennisN, Rive and 3 others
  • #2,140
(This begins a series of posts with pictures from my road trip from South Carolina to Connecticut and back, during August 2024. I posted them during the trip, then intermittently afterward. When the next post does not immediately follow the current one, there is a link at the end of the post.)

----

Now I no longer say "I never saw a purple cow..."

IMG_0541.jpeg


Location: along highway US-340, about 5 miles north of Waynesboro, Virginia. Until a few years ago, it was an ice cream parlor named the Purple Cow.
 
Last edited:
  • Haha
  • Like
  • Wow
Likes DennisN, collinsmark, Rive and 3 others
  • #2,141
Last edited:
  • Like
Likes DennisN, pinball1970 and morrobay
  • #2,142
My first thought was how often it gets hit by cars.
Because of its precarious, unprotected placement at the intersection of two roads, the White Post has been an unwitting victim of numerous vehicular accidents resulting in damage or near-destruction over the last 270+ years. Its status as a landmark on the National Register of Historic Places requires that the post be reconstructed each time precisely as it was.
 
  • #2,143
This new seafood restaurant is next to a boat yard way way off main areas . I only visited because I have seen them building it .Ie no one is just going to walk by in this area. So they must have good connections.
IMG_20240814_183617.jpg
IMG_20240814_160320.jpg
IMG_20240814_183812.jpg
 
  • Like
Likes pinball1970, DennisN and collinsmark
  • #2,144
From the Lehigh Gorge Scenic Railway in Jim Thorpe PA yesterday.

IMG_0550.jpeg

IMG_0552.jpeg

IMG_0548.jpeg

IMG_0549.jpeg
 
  • Like
  • Love
Likes Spinnor, pinball1970, DennisN and 5 others
  • #2,145
From the Connecticut Trolley Museum in East Windsor, today:

IMG_0554.jpeg




A city bus c. 1970 modified by adding railroad wheels and other equipment so that it could run on both roads and railroad tracks. The plan was to run it on suburban streets to pick up passengers, then use rails to get into the city quickly. This turned out not to be practical, partly because the added weight impaired performance in "street mode".

IMG_0557.jpeg


This museum also houses the Connecticut Fire Museum, with a collection of vintage fire trucks.

IMG_0558.jpeg


(skip to the next post in this series)
 
Last edited:
  • Like
  • Love
Likes DennisN, pinball1970, collinsmark and 3 others
  • #2,146
What a Beauty
IMG_20240816_082915.jpg
 
  • Like
  • Love
Likes DennisN, collinsmark and BillTre
  • #2,147
jtbell said:
A city bus c. 1970 modified by adding railroad wheels and other equipment so that it could run on both roads and railroad tracks. The plan was to run it on suburban streets to pick up passengers, then use rails to get into the city quickly. This turned out not to be practical, partly because the added weight impaired performance in "street mode".
Interesting concept - perhaps a forerunner to the guided bus concept?
 
  • #2,148
IMG_20240816_184439.jpg
Screenshot_2024-08-16-18-50-15-198_com.android.chrome.jpg
 
  • Like
  • Love
Likes DennisN, pinball1970, collinsmark and 4 others
  • #2,149
Today I took the train to New Haven from Windsor Locks CT. Surely this is one of Amtrak's smallest stations.

IMG_0562.jpeg


Yale is apparently in the middle of freshman orientation.

IMG_0563.jpeg


However, I wasn't there to visit Yale. I was just killing some time while waiting for a bus to East Haven, home of the Shore Line Trolley Museum. Yes, another one of those! :smile:

IMG_0564.jpeg


The scenery is definitely better than at the other trolley museum that I visited yesterday. Nice views of salt marshes and expensive waterfront homes.

(skip to the next post in this series)
 
Last edited:
  • Like
  • Love
Likes Rive, DennisN, pinball1970 and 3 others
  • #2,150
 
  • Wow
  • Like
Likes DennisN, collinsmark, docnet and 1 other person
  • #2,152
The Shore Line Trolley Museum has a special exhibit: one of two surviving cars from a Port Authority Trans-Hudson (PATH) train that arrived at New York's World Trade Center from Hoboken during the 9/11/2001 attack. It was immediately evacuated, and was standing empty in the station when the WTC collapsed on top of it. The first two cars escaped the falling debris. This was the leading car. The second one is at the Trolley Museum of New York in Kingston.

IMG_0570.jpeg

IMG_0571.jpeg

IMG_0569.jpeg


This article is from 2016, when the museums received these cars from the Port Authority.

https://untappedcities.com/2016/09/...-from-911-will-open-to-public-for-first-time/

I remember these trains well from my day-trips to NYC when I lived in upstate NY for a couple of years in the 1980s. I sometimes parked in Jersey City or Hoboken and rode the PATH into the city.

(skip to the next post in this series)
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Likes DennisN, collinsmark, morrobay and 3 others
  • #2,153
From a random photos topic on: forum.surfer.com Too funny
IMG_20240819_080208.jpg
 
Last edited:
  • Like
  • Wow
  • Haha
Likes pinball1970, Rive, collinsmark and 1 other person
  • #2,154
Atwood machine lights in a cafe
InShot_20240819_174910339.jpg
 
  • Like
  • Informative
Likes Spinnor, pinball1970, jtbell and 3 others
  • #2,155
I took my camera to downtown San Diego yesterday morning. There was one architecture shot I had planned, and I figured as long as I was down there, I'd try to practice my street photography.

BankOfAmericaBuilding701B.jpg

Figure 1. Planned, architecture shot. The image is composed of 5 individual, partially overlapping photos stitched together in post and cropped.

Fig.1 shows the planned shot: the main reason I went to that particular location. I was hoping my 21 mm lens would be wide enough to get everything in the frame. It was not.

So I did the next best thing and sat on the curb, put all the camera settings in manual, and took several overlapping shots, each covering a section of the intended view.

Photoshop's stitching algorithm wasn't perfect, but you'd need to pixel peep to see the flaws, so I'm OK with it, I guess.

Now onto the street photography.

L1000080.jpg

Figure 2. Pigeons in puddle.

L1000084.jpg

Figure 3. Pigeons in puddle, different angle.

I haven't done any street photography since I was in my late teens. And I wasn't all that good at it anyway. So to get the re-education going, I started with some birds (Figs 2,3). I hesitated at first, confident that I would frighten them off. My fears were unfounded, however. The pigeons immediately welcomed me into their flock. They considered me one of their own.

In retrospect, I should have taken a few shots way down low, only a couple of centimeters from the ground, but I didn't think of it at the time. Well, live and learn. There'll be a next time.

L1000089.jpg

Figure 4. I don't know what that contraption is or why it belongs here. But, there it is.

L1000093.jpg

Figure 5. The interior lighting and the outdoor reflection worked really well together here.

L1000097.jpg

Figure 6. Omg.

This guy was hauling a bunch of stuff stacked up on a hand cart. Just as I approached the corner (the same corner where I took the photo), something happened to his cart, and everything toppled over. Thinking about it now, I feel bad not asking if he needed help. He looks like he's having a bad day.

L1000102.jpg

Figure 7. No actual humans in this image. I thought the buildings looked interesting and quaint.

I really wanted to stop in at the coffee shop, but I didn't have a lot of time. I couldn't find a good parking spot when I arrived downtown, so I parked in a pay lot for $10. And it was only good for two hours.

Next time I think I'll travel light, drive to the nearest trolley station and take the trolley the rest of the way. That should give me more time.

L1000108.jpg

Figure 8. Some mornings can be a struggle.

L1000114.jpg

Figure 9. Some fountain outside of the Wells Fargo building. I needed the practice with slow-ish shutter speeds.

To be continued ...
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Likes pinball1970, Rive, jtbell and 5 others
  • #2,156
... Continuing on,

L1000121.jpg

Figure 10. The juxtaposition of this guy and the "walk" sign in the background caught my eye.

L1000122.jpg

Figure 11. San Diego is a very dog/pet friendly town. While not all stores/shops/bars/restaurants allow dogs, many do. As long as you know where to go, you can take your dog anywhere.

L1000126.jpg

Figure 12. Temporary walkway next to a construction site.

SouthernHotel.jpg

Figure 13. These doors remind me of a classic riddle.
 
  • Like
Likes pinball1970, Rive, morrobay and 3 others
  • #2,157
Nice shots.
I like your commentary.
 
  • Like
Likes collinsmark
  • #2,159
Last weekend I was at the American Philatelic Society's big annual national stamp show, this time in Hartford, Connecticut. A couple of items from the exhibits:

First, a piece of mail salvaged from the wreck of the airship Hindenburg in 1937.

IMG_0576.jpeg


Unfortunately, reflections from the plexiglas covering of the exhibit frames and the plastic sleeves enclosing the items make photography challenging.

Earlier this year I showed you some mail that was intended for the return flight to Germany but had to be sent by other means.

Those of you who hunt may know about the "duck stamps" that show payment of fees for waterfowl hunting licenses. The designs come from an annual competition among wildlife artists.

IMG_0577.jpeg


The artist here was one of my classmates in grad school, a year behind me IIRC. After finishing his PhD, he ended up doing wildlife art, not physics. His two brothers are also wildlife artists. Between them, they've won the duck stamp contest 15 times, of which 6 were by Joe.

http://www.hautman.com/
 
  • Like
Likes Rive, pinball1970, morrobay and 1 other person
  • #2,160
Yesterday I drove from Hartford to Scranton, Pennsylvania. After passing the fork in the fork in the road I stopped in Port Jervis, New York to take a look at the former Erie Railroad station, built in 1892.

IMG_0582.jpeg


It was used as a train station until the 1970s, then was redeveloped into offices and shops.

IMG_0583.jpeg


Next door is a hotel that was built about the same time as the station, and still operates as a hotel/bar/restaurant.

IMG_0584.jpeg


Further west down the tracks, just barely visible at the left in the first picture above, is the current Metro-North station for commuter trains to Hoboken, New Jersey (with connections to New York City).

IMG_0585.jpeg
 
  • Like
Likes pinball1970, collinsmark and phinds

Similar threads

  • · Replies 40 ·
2
Replies
40
Views
3K
  • · Replies 14 ·
Replies
14
Views
3K
  • · Replies 35 ·
2
Replies
35
Views
5K
  • · Replies 6 ·
Replies
6
Views
2K
  • · Replies 24 ·
Replies
24
Views
3K
  • · Replies 30 ·
2
Replies
30
Views
3K
  • · Replies 22 ·
Replies
22
Views
3K
  • · Replies 31 ·
2
Replies
31
Views
5K
  • · Replies 21 ·
Replies
21
Views
3K
  • · Replies 12 ·
Replies
12
Views
2K