Sunday, 30 December 2012

St Paul's cathedral, again...

We don't normally go to church but this morning we went to Choral Mattins in St Paul's Cathedral.  It was lovely - the bells were pealing outside, the organ welcomed us in, the sun was shining through the stained glass windows, and the choir sang like angels.
 
I took a couple of photos on the way back to the flat.  This is the only trace above ground of Old St Paul's cathedral that burnt down in the Fire of London in 1666.  Some of the foundations are picked out by a low wall and this plan is laid into the stone.  It shows the "footprint" of the new cathedral built by Sir Christopher Wren superimposed on the footprint of the old cathedral.  It was made by Richard Kindersley who carved the lettered standing stones in our garden at Newmead.

 

The sun was still shining as we crossed Paternoster Square at 11am.  The sundial on the Stock Exchange building cast a shadow above the shadow of the "pineapple" at the top of the monument.  It's an unusual sundial, called an analemma sundial, which marks noon on each day of the year.  An hour later and the shadow would have touched the left hand curve for 30th January.  It was also made by a Kindersely workshop, but not Richard himself.
 


Thursday, 27 December 2012

Stourhead on Christmas Day 2012

Now I have "officially" got my 5D for Christmas, John has started to use the 7D.  Here is MY edit of HIS Christmas Day photos in Stourhead Gardens.

Thursday, 29 November 2012

Night shots on the river

Grainy, hand-held shots, but it's amazing what the Panasonic Lumix will do at its maximum ISO (6,400).


Yes, it's THAT  VIEW  again!


Those silver balls are still there too, but a bit scratched and worn now.  I waited for a bus to trundle past...


The 45-175mm lens zooms close in


The view to St Paul's from the Wobbly Bridge...


...down river to the Shard...



...with Tower Bridge in the distance.


On my way home, the full moon peaked through the clouds over the rooves of Smithfield and the Barbican.

Next time I'll take a tripod.

Sunday, 28 October 2012

Foggy, drizzly day in Norwich


Norwich has a beautiful Norman cathedral with a medieval spire, here glimpsed from the river bank, and looking quite like Salisbury...



This lion stands proud in front of the 20th century City Hall, but here you can see the medieval Guildhall in the background.


Beautiful fountain figure in front of the 18th century Assembly House


A quaint area called Tombland - here suffering from a bit of sag...


And one for Josie!


It's not even much fun being a pigeon in the market place on a day like this :-)

Autumn colour at Stourhead


The colours are muted at Stourhead this autumn.  There was a frost on Friday night, but the strong wind on Saturday was blowing the leaves away before they could change colour.


The garden was packed with people, lots taking photos, but some just strolling...


The first glimpse of the Temple from above the lake is wonderful in any season.

Friday, 20 July 2012

Odd Corners of Old London - Part 3 Rotherhithe

Rotherhithe is another old docklands area on the south bank of the River Thames in the East End of London.  I can't pretend that it has a lot going for it - but if you take the train from Wapping (on the north bank) to Rotherhithe (a journey of all of 4 minutes), you pass through the Thames Tunnel.  This tunnel goes under the River Thames and was the first successful tunnel built underneath a navigable waterway, an amazing feat of engineering at the time, and still going strong.  It was built by Marc Isambard Brunel and his son Isambard Kingdom Brunel between 1828 and 1843.  The Brunel Museum is in the engine house of the tunnel, and it held the steam-powered pumps that extracted the water from the tunnel.  I'm going to visit it later in the year with a group from the V&A, so more then...  Meanwhile, here is a close-up of one of the benches in the garden, with a cute train chuffing along the back:



I was there at low tide and strolled on the "beach":




And of course there is a great view of the Shard up-river:




On the way back to Clerkenwell, I went past the Shard which looks very impressive from underneath:






Thursday, 19 July 2012

Odd Corners of Old London - Part 2 Wapping

No this isn't Amsterdam, it's Wapping in London's East End.


It's called Spirit Quay and it connects Shadwell Basin with the Thames near St Katharine's Dock.  And to prove it isn't Amsterdam, you can see the Shard.  Is there anywhere in London where you can't see the Shard?



Fronting onto it is Tobacco Dock, built in 1811 as a store for imported tobacco.  As at July 2012, it is being used as temporary accommodation for soldiers deployed to guard the Olympic Games.  Here is the figurehead of one of the ships in the dry dock.




Fronting onto the River Thames, Wapping is full of old warehouses with wonderful names - Gun Wharves, King Henry's Wharves, Phoenix Wharf...







And from the riverside, there is a view of Canary Wharf.



Wednesday, 18 July 2012

Odd Corners of Old London - Part 1 Three Mills

The Three Mills are former working tidal mills on the River Lea in the east end of London.  The Domesday Book recording all the assets in England in 1086 says that there were 8 or 9 mills on this site.  The area has been known as Three Mills since it was acquired by a monastery in the 12th or 13th century.  Over the years, the mills have been used for grinding wheat for bread, barley for beer, and gunpowder, and to distill gin.



This is the first glimpse of Clock Mill as you approach Three Mills from the direction of the nearest tube station, Bromley-by-Bow.  The original Clock Mill was built in the time of Henry VIII, but it was rebuilt between 1815 and 1817 incorporating an older clock and bell.




This is the other side of Clock Mill once you have crossed the River Lea and the Limehouse Cut canal.




The House Mill, on the right hand side of this photo, was built in 1776 and is Grade 1 listed.  The Miller's House in the centre was bombed in the second world war and rebuilt within its old facade on the front and this new facade on the back.  Today it has a cafe and occasional exhibitions.  The building on the left is the Clock Mill again.

Further to the left, beyond the photo, is Three Mills Studio, which occupies a 20 acre site and makes major TV programmes and films.

The mill pond in the right foreground used to be tidal, and the tides provided the power for the mills. As a result of the 2012 Olympics site construction (the Olympics site is only 10 minutes walk away), there is now a lock above the pond and it is no longer tidal.




Today there are canal boats parked along the river just above the lock.  Canary Wharf can be glimpsed in the background over the roof of House Mill.




Thursday, 21 June 2012

River Thames

Yesterday, my brother and I made our way along the River Thames from the Millenium Bridge to Greenwich, on foot, Docklands Light Railway and river boat, in warm sunshine.


St Paul's Cathedral with streaming vapour trails


Wonderful shiny metal balls in the lane leading down from St Paul's to the Millenium Bridge - reflecting two photographers


The oldest cathedral in London at Southwark, with its flag fluttering in the breeze


No traitors going into the Tower of London via the Traitors Gate at high tide


View of the Shard from near Tower Bridge


The shadows on the water are thrown by the Olympic Rings suspended from Tower Bridge



One of the more impressive private yachts in St Katharine's Dock


Distant view of Tower Bridge


One Canada Square at Canary Wharf


The workers at Canary Wharf enjoying the sunshine in their lunch hour


One wing of the old Royal Naval College at Greenwich, built by Sir Christopher Wren, now part of the University of Greenwich





Sunday, 17 June 2012

So many photos, so little time to blog...

The sun peaked out from behind the storm clouds briefly on Wednesday (13th June), and I joined the masses of tourists in Westminster:


It took me ages to get this shot, as there were so many people who wanted their own photos taken with Big Ben in the background - I should have charged!


Lovely reflections of the Palace of Westminster in the windows of a bus on Westminster Bridge.


Stunning view from the South Bank


There were still lots of puddles around, here underneath the London Eye



Great reflections of the Eye in the ticket office as well


Same photo subjected to the magic of Photoshop :-)