PHOTOS - Post or link to pictures!
Went on a drive today to get out of the house. Pretty warm out there today.
Helped two of these guys across the road. One was relaxed, the other became aggressive when I tried to pick him up by the tail (supporting him with a wrench)
Cleanup on aisle six.
I typically pick up a bunch of trash where GMR and GRR meet. Sick of people just throwing shit down like it's their house or something.
Helped two of these guys across the road. One was relaxed, the other became aggressive when I tried to pick him up by the tail (supporting him with a wrench)
Cleanup on aisle six.
I typically pick up a bunch of trash where GMR and GRR meet. Sick of people just throwing shit down like it's their house or something.
The ultimate Ontario Peak ridge panorama:
Click on photo for more sizes, including 6842 x 1819 pixel original size.
Click on photo for more sizes, including 6842 x 1819 pixel original size.
Nunc est bibendum
I usually carry a Canon PowerShot A590, it fits in my pants pocket.Elwood wrote:That's a great shot of Ontario! I like the other pictures too. What did you use to photograph this?
Panoramas are stitched together in Photoshop CS2.
Nunc est bibendum
- Cy Kaicener
- Posts: 163
- Joined: Fri Sep 28, 2007 5:19 am
Here are some cool pictures of climbing in the Swiss and Italian Alps
http://teotaglia.com 8)
The Pickett Range in the North Cascades - Twin Needles first ascent
http://www.summitpost.org/trip-report/5 ... scent.html
http://teotaglia.com 8)
The Pickett Range in the North Cascades - Twin Needles first ascent
http://www.summitpost.org/trip-report/5 ... scent.html
- glamisking
- Posts: 89
- Joined: Sat Sep 29, 2007 4:04 pm
Good choice Taco and excellent shot Elwood.
Elwood,
Try duplicating the image twice (original, and two duplicates), change the blend mode of the top layer to "Multiply," and the second layer to "Screen." The results might seem a bit dark, so you can reduce the opacity of the "Multiply" layer. The result is known as a "digital sandwich."
Try duplicating the image twice (original, and two duplicates), change the blend mode of the top layer to "Multiply," and the second layer to "Screen." The results might seem a bit dark, so you can reduce the opacity of the "Multiply" layer. The result is known as a "digital sandwich."
- PackerGreg
- Posts: 623
- Joined: Sat Sep 12, 2009 9:31 pm
Me and my sister (who now calls herself 'River') at Echo Mountain circa... well, it's obvious (1975?). We didn't take the Sam Merrill Trail. Our father and uncle made us climb up the old Rubio Canyon incline railway bed!
- michaelmagno
- Posts: 45
- Joined: Thu Nov 26, 2009 6:11 pm
Great post, thanks. Interesting to see the faces of so many placenames: Charlton, Heaton, Lukens, Newcomb...
Roped up on Strawberry Peak--I love it! 8)
What a rich history we have in the San Gabriels. When I see these old photos and consider all who have gone before us, I sometimes wonder if there is a single square foot on the Angeles which has not yet felt a hiker's bootprint? If only tree and rock could speak--there would be epic tales to be told, I've no doubt.
What a rich history we have in the San Gabriels. When I see these old photos and consider all who have gone before us, I sometimes wonder if there is a single square foot on the Angeles which has not yet felt a hiker's bootprint? If only tree and rock could speak--there would be epic tales to be told, I've no doubt.
okay first 4 chapters of the book
This is the book that covers from Soledad canyon to Lytle Creek...
This is the book that covers from Soledad canyon to Lytle Creek...
- PackerGreg
- Posts: 623
- Joined: Sat Sep 12, 2009 9:31 pm
Frank "The Hermit" Volvin in Big Santa Anita Canyon. You can see the cotton he wore in his left eye socket...
The Place family of Sierra Madre visiting The Hermit...
The cabins of Max Arnold & Frank Volvin in BigSAC - now buried by Santa Anita Debris Dam...
Photo from LA County Flood Control District of The Hermit's cabin in 1935 - after it was abandoned and before it was buried by debris from the 1938 flood...
The Place family of Sierra Madre visiting The Hermit...
The cabins of Max Arnold & Frank Volvin in BigSAC - now buried by Santa Anita Debris Dam...
Photo from LA County Flood Control District of The Hermit's cabin in 1935 - after it was abandoned and before it was buried by debris from the 1938 flood...