Cobbles 

421 creative works found

  • Wroclaw / http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wroclaw

  • All The Materials Contained May Not Be Reproduced, Copied, Edited, Published, Transmitted Or Uploaded In Any Way Without My Permission. My Images Do Not Belong To The Public Domain. / © 2008 Forest Friends Photography: using this image for any purpose and in any way, without prior permission, may lead to legal action.! This place is simply amazing with so much to photograph…...... A beautiful ruin, a beautiful church, and even little quaint bridges & a watermill, and also a park. / I didnt even know of this existed & I only live 10 mins away. / Its a photographic paradise.

  • A beautiful little cobbled street in Ripon which leads around to the Cathedral

  • This is the Organ in Ripon Cathedral, this also shows how un symetrical this place is, the east and west wings that come off here are both different and the cross hanging above is way out of line.

  • Looking down the Altar in the Cathedral, stunning stained glass window i am sure you will agree

  • Gold Hill, Shaftesbury Possibly the most famous thoroughfare in the County of Dorset, the ancient, cobbled street of Gold Hill leads steeply down from the centre of the town of Shaftesbury, Dorset. Featured on many calendars, postcards, chocolate box lids and TV adverts. Date: 31st March 2008 This shot was featured by the Cottage Style group, 18th April 2009. Click here for more views of Gold Hill Greeting Card: / Framed Print: /

  • Little old cobbled street in Whitby, shoppers wandering to the sound of the guy playing his guitar

  • The Jews of Cracow (Krakow) enjoyed protected status in 14th century Poland, but by the end of the 15th century were forced to move to this district, south of the city. They suffered terribly during the second world war, though much of the action of the film “Schindler’s List”, though shot here, took place in another district on the other side of the Vistula river. Kazimierz is full of picturesque old streets like this. Taken with the synagogue behind me. Pentax K10D.

  • Part of the Ttv St Emilion Series

  • looking down on a photographer taking some wedding photos

  • Falkland is a village in Fife where Falkland Palace is. The houses, buildings, streets date from the 12 th Century. Falkland has been a royal place since the days of the Stewarts. King James II adopted it as a royal home (it had earlier been a castle of the MacDuff family) and it was used as a hunting lodge in the 12th century. In those days the Forest of Falkland had stags and wild boar and falconry was a popular sport. / All the villages in Scotland display flowers in baskets, barrows etc to earn the Best award for floral displays throughout the summer months. This shows a small passage with original cobbles ( for horses) from the olden days.

  • The city of Norwich in the U.K. has been a city since around the year 1194, and already existed as a town before then. Even though Norwich is now a modern city, it still contains the evidence of its long history in its architecture and other features, such as these cobblestones, which have been preserved in an area of the city known as Pottergate. Canon EOS 450D. Featured in European Everyday Life, January 2009.

  • These plane tree leaves are still falling and lying on the ground around Norwich. In the middle of Winter, with Spring seeming so distant.

  • Whitby North Yorkshire

  • I photographed these cobbles at Brentford Lock in London one freezing morning in January 2009. My parents were staying at a nearby hotel and I decided to take them on a walk… Canon 10D / 1/640/sec @f8.0 / Canon 35-135mm lens @35mm / ISO 200

  • Gold Hill, is a hill and cobbled street in the small Market Town of Saftesbury, Dorset, England. Gold Hill was made famous by the 1973 television advertisement for Hovis bread featuring a boy and a bicycle, once voted Britain’s favourite advertisement of all time: Link: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Mq59ykPnAE / Canon EOS 400D 18-55mm lens.

  • For affordable canvas prints please                     click here / Gold Hill is a famous street in Shaftesbury in Dorset, England. It is a steep cobbled street featured on the cover of countless books about Dorset, chocolate boxes, postcards, calendars and in television commercials. Gold Hill featured in the 1973 “Boy on Bike” tv ads for Hovis bread. The advert was voted Britain’s favourite advertisement of all time. It was directed by Ridley Scott, and includes the distinctive music of Antonín Dvořák’s Symphony No. 9. As it is such a well known and much photographed street, I tried to capture something a little different.

  • Half Moon Bay near Stanley, Tasmania in the morning light. Nikon D40 / Sigma 10-20mm @ 11.5mm / ISO200 / F/22 / 3 seconds

  • Part of the quay at Mullion Harbour on the Lizard Peninsula, Cornwall, UK. I used my Sigma 70-300 at 150mm to take this. Hope you like it. / Thank you for looking. Best Viewed Large.

  • A 360 degree planet of Lincoln Cathederal and surrounding buildings Please visit my website / PaulThompsonPhotography Canon 5DMk2 / F11 / ISO 100 / 16mm full frame / 8 shots / HDR / 1 Raw File splt into 3 exposures -2/0/+2 / Photomatix

  • Believed to be the oldest man-made navigation in the country that is still navigable, the Fossdyke stretches 11 miles from the River Trent at Torksey Lock and arrives at Brayford Pool. More information on the Fossdyke Canal can be found on the Waterscape website. / Following the Fossdyke and the Witham through the ages Early history / Some historians and archaeologists believe that the Fossdyke Canal was built by the Romans around 120AD to link the River Trent with their city at Lincoln. The earliest definite documentary reference to the Fossdyke Canal is from 1121. 13th century – 16th century / Waterways were responsibility of various landowners and the Church; maintenance inefficient and by 17th century almost impassable (though Lincoln still England’s 4th largest port in 13th century) 18th – 19th century / Fossdyke is leased to various parties – on understanding that trading profits would be used to maintain the waterway 1753 / Act of Parliament leads to straightening and dredging of Witham and Fossdyke 1766 / Grand Sluice and lock built at Boston to protect Witham from tide and flood damage Early 1800s / Major schemes to alleviate problems caused by mud in the tidal section of the Witham between the coast and Boston. Witham was also straightened and deepened between Lincoln and Boston. 1846 / Witham and Fossdyke leased to Great Northern Railway Company End 19th century / Both navigations running at a loss Early 1950s / Regular barge traffic along Witham ceased 1964 / Brayford Pool cleared, 25 wrecked boats removed 1969 / Brayford Trust established 1972 / Commercial carrying along Fossdyke Canal ceased / Please visit me at my website / PaulThompsonPhotography / Canon 30D / ISO 200 / F11

  • Taken in a Roman underground duct near Herculaneum, Naples, Italy. Can you see the ghostly figure of Violet….. Many thanks to the Paralell Dimensions group for the feature (November 2009).

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