bmike-vt Offline Upload & Sell: Off
|
My dad was a machinist - working with his hands on giant machines that made parts for US automobiles. I can still smell the grease on his blue shirts. He had tools at work and tools at home - a garage full of woodworking and metalworking tools that we would use to fix cars, the travel trailer, renovate the house - you name it, we likely had it. As a kid I learned to work with wood, how to frame walls and hang doors, how to weld, solder copper pipe for plumbing, wire a fuse box - pretty much anything that needed to be done my father would take on in his spare time, and I was often an unwilling (but now thankful) assistant.
My dad passed in 2013. A few years after I visited my mom and brought home a few keepsakes. I have his old watch that doesn't run anymore (no matter how many times I change the battery) and I have some of his tools.
These micrometers made the move to Switzerland with me. I took one of these apart when I was 8, maybe 10 years old. I wanted to know how it worked. Sadly I couldn't get it back together and working before dad got home from work and I got a good lesson in respecting other people's things...
I've been playing in BW and with macro. These images are focus stacks taken on a wood table top with a simple LED light. I need more practice, but these work for me simply because of who they remind me of...
Dad's Starrett Micrometer by Mike, on Flickr
Dad's Starrett Micrometer - Patent Nos. by Mike, on Flickr
Dad's Starrett Micrometer by Mike, on Flickr
C&C welcome on the BW processing and the stacking (there are some glitches that I've noticed). Taken with Sony a7IV and the 90mm 2.8 G Macro using a focusing rail (first time playing with one).
|