Aisle 

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  • well, we’d had enough rain to make everything fresh n lovely. Call me grandma sunset- I just love the light on the path at sunset. I thought I’d had enough of flowers-but I squeezed another shot into the portfolio with ease!

  • Any Silent Hill fans in here? / When I saw the finished version I felt soooo happy… one of those shots that you have always wanted to take, but didn’t think possible without manipulating and photoshopping the crap out of it. Now I realize that maybe I just haven’t been in the right place to take it before. Taken at a Hotel during a remodeling.. I sneaked in :P

  • Looking down the main central aisle of the lower tier of an abandoned theatre / cinema

  • Church wedding black & white

  • A beech-tree lane on an early hazy morning, the high trees indeed forming a kind of aisle. Taken near Hilversum/The Netherlands. Near Hilversum, 4th June 2008, 7.36 am / Nikon D80, Nikkor 18-200 mm at 112 mm / F 7, 1/15, ISO 800

  • views: 290 / favs: 9 A columned space at the Museo della Civilta Romana (Museum of Roman Civilisation)- EUR in Rome “Projected by Mussolini as part of his grand exhibition, now the suburb of EUR, this museum uses replicas and models to create a history of Rome.” source: Italy Heaven Taken with an Olympus FE-220 on Sep 11, 2008. / / / / This work has been featured in: / Italy and all things Italian / Just Lines / Black and White Photographers Showcase / / / / Also available at Zazzle / / / / / Works by Category / / Origami / Drawings,Paintings and Graphics / Abstract Photography / Guessing Games Flowers, Trees and Plants / Water and Waterscapes / Scenery/Skyscapes / Light, Shadow, and Reflections / Still Life Living Creatures / Human Portrait Japanfluence / Canada / Europe / / /

  • The simple yet beautiful view up the aisle to the alter. The Collegiate Church of St Nicholas Buccleuch, formerly known as Dalkeith Parish Church, stands on the High Street. Dedicated to St Nicholas, this medieval church became a collegiate establishment in 1406, founded by Sir James Douglas. The nave and transepts date from 1854, when the inside of the church was greatly altered. The chancel was abandoned in 1590, walled off from the rest of the church, and is now ruinous. Sir James Douglas, 1st Earl of Morton, and his wife Joanna, daughter of James I, are buried in the choir and have stone effigies. Dalkeith (Scottish Gaelic: Dail Cheith) is a town in Midlothian, Scotland, lying on the River North Esk. It was granted a burgh of barony in 1401 and a burgh of regality in 1540. The settlement of Dalkeith grew southwestwards from its 12th-century castle (now Dalkeith Palace). Dalkeith has a population of 11,566 people according to the 2001 census.

  • This will be my last upload of St Thomas church in Blackpool Lancashire and my last upload of the day. / I wanted to get at least 12 images up of this church so I could make a calendar as it is something my father in law wants. / These St Thomas pictures are amongst the batch of pictures that I lost on my hard drive and have had to do them all again… /

  • beautiful brides’ shoes sitting on top of a tv cabinet

  • I loved the symmetry shown looking down the aisle here in the stock room of this mill.

  • A look along the length of St Mary’s Church, Harrow on the Hill, Middlesex, England, from between the pews. As I took the shot a little church mouse popped out to see what I was up to, then scurried away just as quickly as he appeared. Lanfranc, Archbishop of Canterbury, began the construction of a church on this site in 1087. The new church building was consecrated by the new Archbishop, St Anselm, on 4th.January 1094. More info on St Mary’s here.

  • I had been on a family-get-together holiday in Mallorca. I had dropped my mother, sister and three nieces off at the airport and had a few hours to kill before my flight was due out, so Milan and I took a wander around the tiny back streets of Palma. At the end of one such street was a high walled arched gateway with an iconic painting of a saint (Santa Clara I later discovered) in an arched recess high on the wall. Two huge solid wooden gates were closed, but a small door within one of the gates was open, so I wandered in. Inside was a courtyard with a fabulous old church building within. I went quietly inside and was greeted with this wonderful image. This shot is a panoramic made up of three landscape shots cropped and resized.

  • View down the aisle in Inverness Cathedral. Inverness Cathedral, also known as the Cathedral Church of Saint Andrew (1866-69) is a cathedral of the Scottish Episcopal Church situated in the city of Inverness in Scotland. It is the seat of the Bishop of Moray, Ross and Caithness, ordinary of the Diocese of Moray, Ross and Caithness. The architect was Alexander Ross, who was based in the city. Construction began in 1866 and was complete by 1869, although a lack of funds precluded the building of the two giant spires of the original design. (taken from wikipedia).

  • Taken inside Milton Abbey in Dorset, England. / This is the left aisle. Milton Abbey is near the village of Milton Abbas, which is between Dorchester and Blandford Forum. Thank you for looking. / Hope you like it. Best Viewed Large.

  • so… something different :) / —-—-—-—-—-—- / somewhere different… / where nature is spilled from the bottle… / where man-made things are unable to contain it… / where my mind likes to roam :) / -—-—-——- / created in ps

  • Ministry of Heritage and Cultural Activities, Superintendence for the Architectural, the Landscape, the Historical Heritage. Artistic and Ethno-Anthropological of Italy / —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-——- Featured in Unique Buildings Of The World Group October – 21 – 2009 —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-——- / Featured in Christian Churches, Statues and Crosses Group October – 18 – 2009 —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—— / Featured in Amazing Graves Group Agoust – 24 – 2009 —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-——- / Featured in ImageWriting Group Agoust – 21 – 2009 —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—- / Featured in History Group June – 22 – 2009 / —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—- Placed 2nd in Heritage in Stone Group – Ruinous Stone Buildings Challenge June – 19 – 2009 / —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-——- Featured in Historic Churches Group May – 27 – 2009 / —-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—-—— Abbey of Saint Galgano The big St. Galgano’s Abbey was built between 1220 and 1268, when in Italy the Romanesque style was merging with the newborn French Gothic styleThe Abbey’s shape is the classic Latin crossWe find it impossible to describe the beauty of this abbey, so we’ll let the pictures to speak in our place. The building made up of the Hermitage (also called Montesiepi’s Round) and of the ruins of the big St. Galgano’s Cistercian Abbey, is one of the most enchanting views in Tuscany.Only in 1218/1220 began the construction of the big Abbey downhill.The building went on until 1268, when the Abbey was officially consecrated by Volterra’s Bishop Alberto SolariThe Abbey knew 100 years of great prosperity until 1364, then followed a slow decline due to the unfortunate Commenda’s practice.Despite some attempts to bring back the monastery into use at the end of 1789, after that Montesiepi’s Round had been put up in Pieve, the big abbey was deconsecrated and left for good to lie in ruin.While Montesiepi’s Round, thanks to his Sword in the stone, bring us back to the Arthurian Saga, the big Abbey offers us others “musical” and “Egyptian” surprises, through his Sacred Geometry. Nikon D100 Sigma 28/70

  • This is a view of the side aisle of the basilica of st Servais/Servaas in the Dutch city of Maastricht. It is one of the oldest existing churches in the Netherlands. Construction of this large Romanesque building started at the beginning of the 11th century. It was build on the site of a Roman burial ground where in 384 Servaas (the bishop of Tongeren, Belgium) was buried. The present building dates from the beginning of the 11th century and the church gradually grew into its present shape throughout that century. The last important medieval alterations were the construction of the current vaulting (replacing a flat wooden ceiling) and the construction of a series of Gothic chapels on each side of the church (some of which are visible here).

  • Inside St.Mary The Virgin Church at Minster,Kent,UK. Canon EOS 20D Sigma 17-70mm

  • This is St David’s cathedral in Pembrokeshire again, but looking down the isle. Tone compression in Photomatix. So not quite as taken… SONY A 200 ISO 100 / f/3.5 / 18mm / 1/4 sec

  • Oil on canvas, 2009

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