View allAll Photos Tagged CROSS
Churchyard cross with added sundial The upper part was cut back with date 1629, mediæval shaft and square sundialhead perhaps of 1718 and modern cross on top
This year's Kings Cross Christmas tree in our glorious concourse. .
To one who has used and worked at/through/from Kings Cross lifelong and who remembers this as the station parcels yard this amazing transformation will always be 'glorious'.
A beautiful, silver leafed Cross centered on a museum quality, textured, canvas frame that has been painted yellow and aged.
The Cross has been topped with my interpretation of Christ's Crown of Thorns, a vintage, ornate, drawer pull.
10x10x1.5
The cross again. I like the way the rays of the setting sun are centred on the cross :)
I had to run through prickly bushes to get this shot!
At the cross, at the cross where I first saw the light,
And the burden of my heart rolled away,
It was there by faith I received my sight,
And now I am happy all the day!
West Cross (early 10th Century) - is 6.5m high, making it the tallest high cross in Ireland.
Monasterboice was founded in the late 5th century by Saint Buite (or Buithe, who died around 521) a follower of Saint Patrick. It was an important religious centre until the establishment of nearby Mellifont Abbey by the Cistercians in 1142. The settlement was captured by invading Vikings in 968 AD, who were then comprehensively expelled by Donal, the Irish High King of Tara.
Discover Ireland
This is a shot of author Pat McManus I shot earlier this spring. I StumbledUpon an online Photoshop CS3 tutorial recreating the Cross-Processing effect. Back in the days of film, chemistry was a big deal. Each individual film stock had precise chemistry and processing recipes that had to be followed to generate the desired look. Occasionally, photographers would have happy mistakes where they followed the wrong recipe for particular emulsion. Colors would shift dramatically, grain would enlarge.
This is my attempt at recreating the effect. I had to tweak the tutorial a little bit . I think it looks like a lot like The Matrix. I recreated a film frame too.
Some late medieval carved bench ends and some poppy finials.
The Church of the Holy Cross in Middlezoy, Somerset, England dates from the 13th century and has been designated as a grade I listed building.
William of Bitton II was the rector by 20 April 1263. From the 13th to early 16th century, when it became a separate parish, Middlezoy was a chapelry of Sowy parish. The church was originally dedicated to St. Lawrence and later to St. Mary before adopting the current dedication in 1754.
The church has a chancel and a nave with a south aisle and south porch, and a north chapel or vestry. The 3-stage west tower was built around 1483, similar to that at Lyng. The tower contains six bells including one of 1608 probably by George Purdue of Closworth. The upper part of the tower was restored by Sall Strachey Historic Conservation. The work included replacing the pinnacles and sections of the pierced parapet.
The whole church has been renovated many times with a major restoration being undertaken in the 1860s to plans by Charles Knowles, with further repairs in 1908.
The parish is part of the benefice of Middlezoy and Othery and Moorlinch with Stawell and Sutton Mallet, within the Glastonbury deanery.