‘Amazing gift:’ Melrose Heart delivers free obtain to recording studios, 3D printing labs and cameras

ORANGE COUNTY, Fla. – Steve Hill, 54, is back again in the recording studio, creating new music. He’s having palms-on working experience applying higher-tech audio products.

“I was listed here almost every working day up until finally the pandemic strike. Once almost everything shut down, we’d drive by and say, ‘Look, there is the library, we utilised to go there,’” Hill mentioned.

The recording studio is at the Orange County Library System’s downtown Orlando branch, portion of the Melrose Heart on the second flooring. Immediately after staying shut for almost a calendar year in the course of the pandemic, it is back open up at a restricted ability.

[TRENDING: Disturbing details in stabbing of Florida teen | Officer Raynor has ‘long road ahead’ | PICS: Lightning strikes near Florida beach]

Ad

There is video and photo studios. You can check out out a camera to acquire photos and

Boat photos: how to take an amazing shot of your yacht

Getting a decent boat photo or a shot of action on board can be tricky. Yachting Monthly photographer Richard Langdon shares his pro tips

Photography might not be a sailing skill per se, but the chances are you take boat photos or shots of the ocean almost every time you head out on the water.

Whether it’s capturing a picture to post on Facebook or Instagram, to create a photo album or yacht club presentation about your adventure, or even to immortalise your pride and joy for a framed picture at home, we’re all snapping away.

Getting a decent picture at sea is no mean feat, however.

To get a good shot of your boat under sail, you can’t be on it, which is a significant hurdle.

Shots of coastlines and headlands often end up as black lines sandwiched between a grey sea and a grey sky, and you’re invariably

Amazing astrophotography: How some of the most iconic space images were captured

Space photography produces stunning, otherworldly displays of intricate shapes and fiery colors, but it has also become essential in astronomers’ attempts to understand the universe. Since the first astronomical photo was taken of the moon in 1840, technology has advanced to allow scientists to snap the clearest and most accurate cosmic images.

Wide-field cameras enable orbiting cameras to shoot an extended area, while capturing objects in infrared, X-ray and other wavelengths reveals the fine details of explosions, collisions and other cosmic events. For example, by observing space using only visible light, astronomers would be unable to identify the high-energy features within the universe such as black holes. Using X-ray photography, scientists can watch as black holes steal energy from their surroundings and re-emit it in the form of high-energy jets. 

Visible light has short wavelengths, meaning that it is more likely to bounce off surrounding particles and scatter. When observing