House scotland 

322 creative works found

  • The village street on the island of St Kilda, Scotland. http://www.orcadiaimages.co.uk

  • Princes Street Gardens, Edinburgh, UK

  • Replica of an iron age round house in glentress forest , by Peebles which looks out over the tweed valley in the lovely scottish borders … ...to this timeless view

  • A little slice of the history of Edinburgh, the Governor’s House on Calton Hill in Edinburgh. / Looking quite medieval, this is actually an early 19th century structure, the remains of the old Calton Gaol, a prison that was once on the historic hill. / Atmospheric evening fog and illumination came together to make this something special. Available as cards and a variety of prints – if interested in cards, on the preview page, please try with “black backing” as the artist intends.

  • Kincraig House Hotel.

  • Early morning Autumn sun hits Blackrock Cottage, Glencoe, Highlands of Scotland .

  • Small holding under the mighty Gribun Rocks, Isle of Mull, Western Scotland

  • A lone house sitting in the middle of nowhere with a magnificent view of The Cuillin Mountains on the Isle of Skye.

  • The exterior of this old stately home is really quite grand, and i think made by the same architect as the Way to school building due to the presence of many similar features such as the plaque space above the door etc.

  • This beautiful cottage can be found in Princes Street Gardens in Edinburgh.

  • Painting inspired by a visit to my brother’s house in Scotland. I liked the pattern the pine branches made.

  • I forget the exact location but I spotted this dwelling on my travels in Scotland. It seemed as though it was only in need of a bit of TLC so I asked a couple of locals if it used to be an Inn or parish building. The reply was, “no, just a house”, and then they locals turned and left without another word…..............Almost as if there was some mystery surrounding it that they didn’t want to talk about…...........hence the title Unloved Canon 350D 18-55 IS Tonemapped

  • Commission. / Oil on canvas, 60×60cm / Imaginary suburban houses. / Limited edition giclee prints available from: www.minigallery.co.uk

  • A collaboration with the lovely, talented, Julie Langford. Julie created with: One Daz studio 3D render of the mystical female A vector to create lightning her pic and my: loch broome and: Ardvreck castle

  • Small cottage under the mighty Buachaille Etive Mòr in the Glencoe region of Scotland. November 2008

  • We were travelling through one of my favorite places in Scotland Glencoe… and I had to pull over to take this scene, this little house must be one of the most snapped houses in Scotland! Everywhere you turned though was just another amazing picture…..

  • Looking out from a replica iron age round house* in glentress forest outside peebles in the lovely scottish borders on the site of a settlement dating back 1900 years…. ... The bench is well sited to take in this captivating view across the tweed valley. Taken Jan 09 with an Olympus SP560UZ f/8 1/250 sec ISO-200

  • Infra-red, HDR, panoramic view in one of the annexes of the Kibble Palace, Glasgow Botanic Gardens. 9 images from a modified Canon G6 and processed with Photomatix and Photoshop. /

  • Another view from previous published. See extra large view here The castle is thought to have been constructed around 1590 by the Clan MacLeod family who owned Assynt and the surrounding area from the 13th century onwards. Indeed Sutherland, the area in which Ardvreck is situated, has long been a stronghold of the clan MacLeod. The most well known historical tale concerning the castle is that on April 30th 1650 James Graham, the Marquis of Montrose, was captured and held at the castle before being transported to Edinburgh for trial and execution. Montrose was a Royalist, fighting on the side of Charles I against the Covenanters. Defeated at the Battle of Carbisdale, he sought sanctuary at Ardvreck with Neil MacLeod of Assynt. At the time, Neil was absent and it is said that his wife, Christine, tricked Montrose into the castle dungeon and sent for troops of the Covenanter Government. Montrose was taken to Edinburgh, where he was executed on 21 May 1650, using the traditional method for traitors: hanging, drawing and quartering. Ardvreck Castle was attacked and captured by the Clan MacKenzie in 1672, who took control of the Assynt lands. In 1726 they constructed a more modern manor house nearby, Calda House, which takes its name from the Calda burn beside which it stands. The house burned down under mysterious circumstances one night in 1737. The castle is said to be haunted by two ghosts, one a tall man dressed in grey who is supposed to be related to the betrayal of Montrose and may even be Montrose himself. The second ghost is that of a young girl. The story tells that the MacLeods procured the help of the Devil to build the castle and in return the daughter of one of the MacLeod chieftains was betrothed to him as payment. In despair of her situation, the girl threw herself from one of the towers and was killed. The nearby ruins of Calda house are also supposed to be haunted. The legend says that the Mackenzie family organised a family gathering there one Saturday and that the celebrations continued past midnight into the Sabbath day. At some point a fire broke out, possibly caused by a lightning strike, and all the inhabitants perished as the house burned to the ground. The causes of the fire are uncertain, but inhabitants of the Assynt area state that it was a manifestation of divine wrath as the family had been merry-making on the Lord’s Sabbath day. Indeed, stories are told that there was a survivor of the fire, a piper who was spared the flames because he refused to play the pipes past the midnight hour. A number of ghost sightings have been recorded around the area of the Calda ruins, including that of a ghostly woman who haunts the site itself. Strange lights have also been seen there at night, and several people have claimed that they have seen car headlights approach them on the road there at night, but after waiting for the vehicle to pass, no car has appeared. Canon 40D 18-55 IS tonemapped

  • The famous bay at Tobermory on the Isle of Mull in Scotland. We had a trip up there recently to take our Daughter to see where they filmed the tv programme Balamory. 1 shot handheld, converted to 3 shots in CS2 then merged to HDR in photomatix. Levels, curves and saturation in CS2 Canon 400D / 18-55 lens / Hoya uv filter.

  • Dawn at Loch Ard, Trossachs. 3exp HDR; long-exposures (average 100 secs) using NDx1000 filter; texture overlay; Canon EOS 450D + Sigma 10-20 zoom; Featured in the following groups: / Your Magic Place / Dimensions

  • Just off the Lawnmarket (a stretch of the Royal Mile in Edinburgh, Scotland) is Makars’ Court. Within the Courtyard is The Writers’ Museum which is housed in Lady Stair’s House (built in 1622 for Sir William Grey of Pittendrum). In 1719, the building was bought by Lady Stair. The museum is dedicated to the lives and work of Scotland’s great literary figures, including Robert Burns, Sir Walter Scott and Robert Louis Stevenson. Makars’ Court, which takes its name from the Scots word for a poet, is an evolving national literary monument in which inscribed commemorative flagstones celebrate Scottish writers from the 14th century John Barbour to Ian Crichton-Smith who died in 1998. New flagstones are added on a regular basis. Camera: Canon EOS 450D (Digital Rebel XSi in the USA) / Canon 18-55mm IS lens / Exif data from the JPG / F-stop f/3.5 / ISO 200 / Focal length 18 mm BEST VIEWED LARGER Three bracketed JPGs converted to HDR in Photomatix. Related shots can be found at: Edinburgh or you can look at all my HDR shots. Featured in : HDR Photography : 1 Aug 09

  • This renovated stone house and byre must be the most photographed house on North Uist (Uist a Tuath). Situated overlooking Vallay Beach (Tràigh Bhalaigh) an amazing sandy bay. Many hundreds of these simple old stone houses stand abandoned throughout the Isles. Some are now being renovated – at considerable expense – often as holiday homes with all mod cons. This does not seem to be an original “blackhouses” which had no chimneys or large windows and were built without mortar but rather in a cottar’s whitehouse with thatched roof. Nikon D200, Sigma18-200mm F/3,5-6,3G; 22mm, F/9, 1/160s, ISO 100, June 2007. Location: Sollas/Macleite, Vallay bay, on the A865 from Clachan to Lochmaddy. 57° 38’ 19.75” N 7° 22’ 28.69” W Accompanying music by Four Stone Walls by Capercaillie Lovers of the Isles may like my calendar Outer Hebridean Coastlines A year later from a different angle: /

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