Pews 

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  • A serendipitous moment of light, captured as I visited Coventry Presbyterian Church, in San Antonio, Texas. (Castle Hills)

  • ...one of the first photos I took with my D200. I have a D50 as well that i originally started shooting with.

  • This is the pipe organ in the Anglican church here in St. John’s. I had the opportunity to go on a tour of this church and while on tour the organist began to play and the sounds were just incredible. It sounded so reverent and demanded you to stop and listen… to imagine. If you look closely in the background you can see the organist playing. / / Visit my website On The Rock Photography / /

  • The Anglican churuch here in historic St. John’s, Newfoundland. / / Visit my website On The Rock Photography / /

  • A view from the pulpit in a church

  • A leather chair underneath the organ pipes at a church

  • The view of the painting at the side of the pews in a cathederal

  • Looking down into the lady chapel at a cathederal

  • Taken inside St Mary Redcliffe in Bristol

  • The light was only that which shined through the stained glass window near the pew in which he sat…

  • John P. Cable Mill – Great Smoky Mountain National Park, USA In Cades Cove there were few sources of power which the frontiersman knew how to harness. One of those power sources was the water wheel such as drove the early grist mills. Cable Mill is one of those. The Smoky Mountains Natural History Association keeps Cable Mill running in Cades Cove to teach the Smoky Mountain visitor a little about life in the 1800’s. The mill is operated April-October. A handful of enterprising residents in Cades Cove built water driven mills to grind grain. Their hope was that other Cades Cove families would prefer paying them to grind the grain rather than to struggle with the small inefficient tub mills at home. The tub mills were only capable of processing a bushel of corn each day. The entrepreneurs were correct and ran fine business in Cades Cove as a result. Cornmeal was the only grain that could be ground in the tub mills and so the waterwheel driven mills that could grind wheat into flour was a welcome addition to the cove. Now biscuits could be eaten some of the time instead of cornbread. Payment for grinding grain did not always mean money exchanged hands in Cades Cove. Sometimes money was paid but other times the miller was paid a portion of the resulting flour or meal. Besides John Cable, his son and also Frederick Shields operated mills. Cable and Shields took double advantage of their waterwheel by using it to power saw mills as well. Cable was the only person in Cades Cove to use the overshot water wheel. Like most business men in the Cove, Cable was also a farmer. He could be summoned from the fields by a large bell he had on the property for that purpose.

  • Jesus is the Light of the World. Then Jesus again spoke to them, saying, “I am the Light of the world; he who follows Me will not walk in the darkness, but will have the Light of life.” John 8:12. The Cades Cove Methodist Church was constructed in 1902. Methodists were active in the cove as early as the 1820s, and built their first meeting house in 1840. The church was rebuilt in 1920, this is the one that remains in the cove today. The light pouring into the window provides a view of the cemetery from a church pew. There are not many records of the early Methodist Church. The Cades Cove Methodist Church is included among those of the Holston Conference’s Little River Circuit in 1830. The present church building was built by Rev. John E. McCampbell in 115 days for $115. It had two doors and a physical divider to separate males and females. The cemetery contains at least 100 graves and is the second oldest church cemetery in the Cove. Methodists were not as dominant as Baptists in the Cove, but they served the community well. The Civil War and Reconstruction divided the members and dissidents formed the Hopewell Methodist Church on the opposite side of the Cove, which no longer stands. Other works in the Cade’s Cove Collection: > Companion Piece http://images-1.redbubble.com/img/art/border:blackwithdetail/product:laminated-print/size:small/view:preview/1223691-1-the-tipton-place.jpg!:http://www.redbubble.com/products/configure/4160293

  • Missionary Baptist Church, / Cades Cove, Great Smoky Mountain National Park, USA – / interior shot with lovely bay window opening up to a view of the forest. This church was formed in 1839 by ex-members of the Primitive Baptist Church. The church split and 40 of its members left because they favored Missionary work, an issue that divided Baptists everywhere. At one time 114 members were enrolled here. This church, built in 1894 on Hyatt Hill, was moved to its present location in 1916. Other works in the *Cade’s Cove Collection: > Companion Piece http://images-1.redbubble.com/img/art/border:blackwithdetail/product:laminated-print/size:small/view:preview/1223691-1-the-tipton-place.jpg!:http://www.redbubble.com/products/configure/4160293

  • In times of unsureness don’t leave him behind. Take Him with you wherever you may roam. Let Him carry you when it gets too tough. But never leave Him behind. Featured work in the “For the Love of Jesus” group

  • 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.

  • Well, it goes like this. After driving around for an hour looking for nice animals, I spotted this newly awakened Skunk crawling on the snowbank. It has just awoken from hibernation, maybe a bit early because since it was a warm melting snow day, I think his bed got wet! Call it a practice shot with my new Canon 50D (hey I’m getting ready for Alaska) Photographed at Ste. Rita, Manitoba. I have 886 views as of November 4, 2009 /

  • Found this at a church in Key West, FL. The sun was coming in which allowed more light for a great shoot. Over 50 individual glass pieces. Taken with a Canon XTI. / f/5.6 / ISO- 1600 / exposure- 1/400 sec / focal length- 100mm

  • The interior of the Old Church at Eidfjord, Norway. This stone church from the Middle Ages was built in 1309. According to legend, the authoritarian and powerful Rich Ragna built the church in order to gain redemption for her sins. There are still traces of a mural on the back wall

  • Lincoln Cathedral (in full The Cathedral Church of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Lincoln, or sometimes St. Mary’s Cathedral) is a historic Anglican cathedral in Lincoln in England and seat of the Diocese of Lincoln in the Church of England. It was reputedly the tallest building in the world for nearly a quarter of a millennium (1300–1549), though this height has been questioned.[1] The central spire collapsed in 1549 and was not rebuilt. It is highly regarded by architectural scholars; the eminent Victorian writer John Ruskin declared, “I have always held… that the cathedral of Lincoln is out and out the most precious piece of architecture in the British Isles and roughly speaking worth any two other cathedrals we have.” Canon 5DMK2 / F16 / ISO 100 / 24mm / HDR / Handheld / 1 Raw File Split Into 3 / Tonemapped in Photomatix

  • Detail of old church pews, weathering away in the scrap yard of an old Monastery dating from the Middle Ages, Many hands must have rested on these armrests through the ages, only to now come to an end in our modern throw-away age. / FEATURED in Moody, Dark, Evocative Group 14/09/2009 / FEATURED in This is Relevant Group 16/09/2009 / FEATURED in POSTED: No Trespassing Group 30/09/2009

  • These are some of the pews once found in a European monastery that William Randolph Hearst brought over to be used as seating in one of the room of his main house/castle. I believe it was the Music Room, but I’m not certain.

  • Taken with a Canon 50D, Sigma 10-20 lens at 10mm, F11, shutter speed 1/15 second, ISO100, processed in Photoshop On Monday I went for a walk with the dynamic duo of Jason Connolly and Jamie Green near High Dam in the Lake District. The weather was overcast for the first hour but then we were greeted with wonderful autumnal sunshine. This is a view from Stott park overlooking the middle of Windermere. The title refers to Mr Cs annoyance that I got a shot of the bench in sunlight, when he arrived at this spot the sun would not come out….I did not hear the end of it for the rest of the walk…lol!! Please view large

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