Architecture england 

789 creative works found

  • London 2006 ! / . Click to view

  • Millennium Bridge and St. Paul Cathedral, London, Uk ! / / - Click to view .

  • Learn from yesterday, live for today, hope for tomorrow…..... Natural History Museum, London, England. / One of my most favourite places…....... / . . /

  • Coal drops at Benwell, Newcastle upon Tyne, early Victorian era. / In the Thomas Hair style, 1830’s. HB pencil and watercolour. 140lb paper.

  • London, UK I usually walk along the south bank riverside in London.. and l passed by this place maybe a thousand times ! This time for some reason l was walking very slowly.. once I got here l just thought this could be the moment to take a nice picture.. I am happy with the result ! / / - / Click to view

  • If history repeats itself, and the unexpected always happens, how incapable must Man be of learning from experience…..... Natural History Museum, London, England.

  • This is an HDR image of the wonderfully ornate stone ceiling at the back of Peterborough cathedral, I had great fun trying to take the various exposures necessary to make this image, as the place was full of tourists. Still I think you will agree it was worth the patience. The other HDR shot I took in here is this one:

  • Gunwharf Quays / / / / / Click to view by category / / Fractal Images Images from Nature HDR Images Flower Portraits Night/Low Light Images Architectural Images Landscape Images Infrared Images / / / Random Images / /

  • When I think of Cornwall, my mind is never far from the many old unspoilt fishing villages dotted round it’s rugged coastline. As with Polperro on the South coast, it’s narrow streets are of cobbled construction and too narrow for cars, so it’s sleepy atmosphere is the perfect way to get away from the stress of modern city life. Late afternoon light.

  • I went over to my former home town of Totnes in South Devon UK.,this morning having checked that high tide was at 09,56 and all was still with the River Dart like a mirror and beautiful lateral warm light. A similar scene to my earlier Reflections of the Past image that was taken with my trusty old Nikon D100. Still getting accustomed to all the features on my recently purchased Nikon D300 but was more than pleased with the results of the images I took this morning, this one having little editing, just a slight perspective crop and a little sharpening. Nikon D300 / 18 – 70 @ 29mm / AP F16 for 1/13sec / CP Filter

  • Exeter’s beautiful 1000 year old cathedral has the longest continually vaulted ceilng in the World. I carefully composed this image of a short section of the vaulted ceiling to be as symmetrical as possible and give a pleasing patternation created by the lines of the gilt decorated structural beams. As a footnote to anyone else trying this kind of composition, you get quite a bit of attention from others when you spend over an hour laying on your back in such a sacred building trying to get that special image. PLEASE VIEW LARGER

  • The current abbey was built by an order of Benedictine monks and was completed less than a hundred years ago though an abbey has stood on this site for over 1000 years. / Situated in the small village of Buckfast below the foothills of the Dartmoor National Park, over recent years a strong commercial side has evolved in the abbey with regular visitors, gift shops and a restaurant. / World famous for the production and sale of their fortified wine and honey from a unique strain of honey bees which goes towards the upkeep and education of children in the local school amongst many other things. / Many of the locals now nickname the abbey Fast Buck Abbey but the money is well spent within the local community and a visit is more than worthwhile. Taken in warm evening light.

  • Location: London UK

  • Carnaby Street, London, UK. / / / / Image Collections: Featured work Layered with Texture Monochrome Camera Paintings Floral Triptychs This & That / /

  • Time to try something different and I’d appreciate your honest feedback on this one please. Two highly reflective images taken in the portrait format, slightly cropped and reduced in size to fit on a black mask, total image size is 4500×3000. I took both of these images within minutes of one another from each side of the old bridge over the River Dart in my former home town Totnes, Devon. The PAST image is of the former warehouses and church converted to luxury riverside apartments, the PRESENT being a new block of colourful riverside houses recently built on the site of a former garage business. Nikon D300 / PAST – / F16 for 1/13sec / 25mm / PRESENT- / F16 for 1/20sec / 18mm / CP Filter

  • This well-known English village gets featured on everything from calendars to chocolate box lids! / This location also featured in the film Dr Doolittle which stared Rex Harrison. During this time a certain Ranulph Fiennes became offended by the construction of an ugly concrete dam built to create a harbour scene. Fiennes planned to demolish the dam. He used explosives which he later claimed to have obtained legitimately from the armoury. Using skills from a recently completed training course on evading search dogs by night, he escaped capture, but he and a guilty colleague were both subsequently traced. After a court case, Fiennes had to pay a hefty fine and he and his co-conspirator were discharged from the SAS. Fiennes was initially posted to another cavalry regiment but was then allowed to return to his regiment. I’m fortunate to live only a few miles away, so managed to capture this classic scene in the early morning before the tourist coaches arrived! Please view large Featured in ‘Cottage Style’ group Nikon D80. Nikkor 17-135mm

  • I shot this some while back now maybe a year or so ago in Blackpool tower ballroom in lancashire and forgot to upload with the others I shot.. / Shot at Blackpool Lancashire. / Shot with a Nikon D70s and 18-70mm lens Here are some historical details about the Tower ballroom from Wikipedia: The original ballroom, the Tower Pavilion opened in August 1894. It was smaller than the present ballroom and occupied the front of the tower complex.The Tower Ballroom was built between 1897 and 1898 to the designs of Frank Matcham who also designed Blackpool Grand Theatre and it opened in 1899. It was commissioned by the Tower company in response to the opening of the Empress Ballroom, in the Winter Gardens. The ballroom floor is 120ft x 120ft and is made up of 30,602 blocks of mahogany, oak and walnut. Above the stage is the inscription, “Bid me discourse, I will enchant thine ear” from the sonnet, Venus and Adonis by William Shakespeare. Each crystal chandelier in the ballroom can be lowered to the floor to be cleaned which takes over a week. From 1930 until his retirement in 1970 the resident organist was Reginald Dixon, known as Mr Blackpool. The first Wurlitzer organ was installed in 1929, but it was replaced in 1935 by one designed by Reginald Dixon. The resident organist is Phil Kelsall who has been playing the organ at the Tower since 1975 when he started in the circus. The ballroom was damaged by fire in December 1956, and the dance floor was destroyed along with the restaurant underneath the ballroom. Restoration took two years and cost £500,000 with the restaurant becoming the Tower Lounge. The BBC televised the Come Dancing series from the Tower Ballroom for many years and it has also hosted shows from Strictly Come Dancing including the grand final of the second series on 11 December 2004. / The Blackpool Junior Dance festival has been held each year in the ballroom since 1964. / Dancing was not originally allowed on Sundays, instead sacred music was played. The ballroom also originally had very strict rules including – “Gentlemen may not dance unless with a Lady” and “Disorderly conduct means immediate expulsion”. The Tower Ballroom has been voted the most magnificent ballroom in the world

  • The National Trust-owned Horsey Windpump overlooks Horsey Mere, an internationally renowned site of special scientific interest. The Mere (from the Dutch word meaning “lake”) is an important site not only for wintering wild fowl but also as the home to a colony of natterjack toads. Canon EOS 20D; EFS 17-85mm lens Exposure of 1/50 second at f/18.

  • Herringfleet Mill can be found where you might least expect to find it – about twenty yards on the Suffolk side of the Norfolk/Suffolk border. Given Norfolk’s monopoly on spectacular, well-preserved mills, it seems only fair that neighbouring Suffolk should have a few of its own…although it should be noted that even this mill is officially in the Norfolk Broads. This photograph was taken on an extremely February day. A 13 seconds’ exposure captured the movement of the clouds as they raced across the East Anglian sky. Canon EOS 5D and EF 16-35mm lens. Exposure of 13 seconds at f/22.

  • Ancient Bridge Cottage in the delightful old world village of Buckland-in-the-Moor in Devon’s Dartmoor National Park after a recent complete no expense spared refurbishment, including a new thatched roof sits in a beautiful natural woodland garden. I am sure many the romantics amongst us have dreams of living in a character filled chocolate box cottage like this, I know I certainly would. VIEWING LARGER IS BEST Nikon D100 / 18 – 70 zoom @25mm / F5 for 1/90 sec / CP Filter

  • Art Deco architecture on Worthing Pier, am doing a series of the pier for a local shop, will add some history re the architecture shortly..

  • A long exposure of The Great Court in the British Museum, London.

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