I use a PC. I have a Folder on my desktop for UHH. I hit the little squares in the upper right corner of the screen and make the page smaller. Then grab the Page Information thingee to the left of the www in the url. Drag and drop directly into the Folder, which I keep at the extreme right of the desktop.
Good. I really like the first one. And the last.
It was a new 1946 model Ford truck that the bundle wagon ran over. The thresher pictured may be older than the one used on our place. There were a lot of different configurations for the grainery. We took the truck load and shoveled the grain through a window in the grainery. If we took it to the feed mill, typically they tilted the whole truck and let the grain fall out the back.
The first one looks like a bundle wagon. It was used for carrying bundles from the shock, where they dried, to the thresher which is the second picture. The thresher separated the grain from the straw. I think that the tube on top carried the grain to what I think is a hopper to retain until the truck or wagon could get it. If I remember correctly, the tube moved to the side so the grain could go directly into the truck or wagon. The thresher was stationary. Sorry to be so fuzzy on this, but the last time I was close to an operating thresher, I and my tricycle caused the bundle wagon mules to run away. They crashed the wagon into a neighbor's brand new Ford truck. Wasn't allowed near afterwards.
The grader was possibly team pulled but converted to tractor pull. The last, I'm probably clueless. It looks like a rotary tiller. The remaining paint looks like Deere or Oliver. If I am wrong, blame old memory.
How about "The Stone Dog". Pooch Rock sounds like a 70s song.
That was very nice, Pat. My son went down there years ago. I was chicken. Always wondered what it was like, but not enough to go down in it. Thanks.
I think that I would just buy a couple rolls of film and try the cameras. If they don't do the job, then worry about the alternatives.
I like the first one. The first and the upside down second, are a good example of a lesson in art painting. When stuck getting started sketching or outlining, from a photograph, turn it upside down. Gives a whole new perspective.
We're not doing THAT again.
That is beautiful. Looks like the car paint and the sky came from the same bucket.
Glad you were "open" to Linda's suggestion. The whole thing, is neat. I
agree that is not your, or anyone else's normal genre. I like it.
Great picture. Is that a really ugly worm on the limb to the right of the bird's foot?
Take the barn from the first one and put it in the second.
That's great. It looks the way I imagine that 3D looks.
Thanks for posting that. The guy on the bicycle needs to be taken back to the funny farm. What was he thinking?