View allAll Photos Tagged Clinton
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Check out my blog! & Tumblr: millieclinton.tumblr.com - Twitter: @clinton_millie Instagram: @millieclinton
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Tools: Olympus OM10, Zuiko 50mm f1.8, expired Fuji superia 100. I have a decade worth of photos, check out my albums! Find me on Instagram & please like Millie Clinton Photography on Facebook! You can ask me anything anonymously here. These images are protected by copyright, please do not use them for any commercial or non-commercial purposes without permission. To preserve my passion for my hobby, I stopped taking on clients in 2021 and now only occasionally make money from photography through licensing agreements. For enquiries, contact me on social media. If you want to support me in another way, check out my Amazon wish list or check out my eBay store!
Model: www.instagram.com/mollywaringmoore/ Tools: Contax 167MT, Zeiss 50mm f1.4, Kodak Portra 160. Process and scan by Exposure Film Lab. I use Flickr as my cloud storage, so I upload everything here: I have a decade worth of photos, check out my albums! I made a Ko-Fi page because I saw other people doing it. I don't expect anything to actually come of it, but on the off chance that you would be so kind as to treat me to a coffee to help me put more of my money towards film and bribing my models with snacks, it'd be hugely appreciated. Find me on Instagram & please like Millie Clinton Photography on Facebook! These images are protected by copyright, please do not use them for any commercial or non-commercial purposes without permission. For enquiries, contact me on social media.
Tools: Yashica TL Electro, Yashinon 50mm. Find me elsewhere! Website Blog Twitter Instagram & please like Millie Clinton Photography on Facebook! These images are protected by copyright, please do not use them for any commercial or non-commercial purposes without permission.
The Clinton Park Bridge, which was built in 1899 as a railroad bridge and is now used as a pedestrian bridge.
Find me elsewhere! Website Blog Twitter Instagram & please like Millie Clinton Photography on Facebook! These images are protected by copyright, please do not use them for any commercial or non-commercial purposes without permission. For licensing queries (or any other questions!) please email: enquiries@millieclinton.com
Baddesley Clinton is a moated manor house with a long history, best known for being a sanctuary for Catholic priests during the Reformation. The estate has been home to the same family, the Ferrers, for over 500 years, and much of the current house was built by Henry Ferrers in the late 1500s.
The site was originally a clearing in the Forest of Arden known as "Badde's Ley" after an Anglo-Saxon settler named Baeddi. After the Norman Conquest, it was granted to Norman noblemen, eventually passing to the de Clinton family in the late 13th century, at which point the name became Baddesley Clinton.
The estate changed hands several times until it was acquired by John Brome in 1438. His son, Nicholas Brome killed the local priest he found flirting with his wife, legend has it that the murder took place in the Library, and the blood spains are still visible on the fireplace hearth. As penance, Nicholas built the towers of the local St. Michael's church and the nearby Packwood Church, known as the "Towers of Atonement".
In 1517, the house passed to the Ferrers family, who owned it for 12 generations and nearly 500 years. n the 1590s, the famous Jesuit carpenter Nicholas Owen build several secret "priest holes" around the property to hide persecuted priests.
The last private owners were Thomas Ferrers-Walker and his wife Undine, who restored the house in the mid-20th century. Their son eventually transferred the property to the National Trust in 1980, ensuring its preservation for the public. Today, the moated manor house is a Grade I listed building and a Scheduled Ancient Monument.
Clinton Valley Center.Pontiac, Michigan.
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Steve.D.Hammond.
A pair of EMD GP50's on the "BN Clinton" hang out while the crew reviews paperwork and grabs lunch inside the BNSF depot in Clinton, IA.
October 16, 2020
A quick stop at Clinton, Iowa on this whirlwind day of railfanning, in northern Illinois before heading back to Dixon. We stumbled on CNW RS1 215 (former M&StL 215). My memory is really fuzzy on this location, but I believe this was fairly close to the car shops there at Clinton, but those in the know are welcome to correct me, please.
Ex NYC SW8, now Clinton Terminal 209 zips along on the interchange track to couple onto several loads.
Beautiful farmhouse near downtown Clinton
The bundles of tall grass (left side of frame) seem to be more common of late, not sure why that is. Maybe I just am now noticing.
Find me elsewhere! Website Blog Twitter Instagram & please like Millie Clinton Photography on Facebook! These images are protected by copyright, please do not use them for any commercial or non-commercial purposes without permission. For licensing queries (or any other questions!) please email: enquiries@millieclinton.com
Model: Alix. Find me elsewhere! Website Blog Twitter Instagram & please like Millie Clinton Photography on Facebook! Email: enquiries@millieclinton.com These images are protected by copyright, please do not use them for any commercial or non-commercial purposes without permission. For licensing queries (or any other questions!) please email: enquiries@millieclinton.com
Baddesley Clinton is a moated manor house with a long history, best known for being a sanctuary for Catholic priests during the Reformation. The estate has been home to the same family, the Ferrers, for over 500 years, and much of the current house was built by Henry Ferrers in the late 1500s.
The site was originally a clearing in the Forest of Arden known as "Badde's Ley" after an Anglo-Saxon settler named Baeddi. After the Norman Conquest, it was granted to Norman noblemen, eventually passing to the de Clinton family in the late 13th century, at which point the name became Baddesley Clinton.
The estate changed hands several times until it was acquired by John Brome in 1438. His son, Nicholas Brome killed the local priest he found flirting with his wife, legend has it that the murder took place in the Library, and the blood spains are still visible on the fireplace hearth. As penance, Nicholas built the towers of the local St. Michael's church and the nearby Packwood Church, known as the "Towers of Atonement".
In 1517, the house passed to the Ferrers family, who owned it for 12 generations and nearly 500 years. n the 1590s, the famous Jesuit carpenter Nicholas Owen build several secret "priest holes" around the property to hide persecuted priests.
The last private owners were Thomas Ferrers-Walker and his wife Undine, who restored the house in the mid-20th century. Their son eventually transferred the property to the National Trust in 1980, ensuring its preservation for the public. Today, the moated manor house is a Grade I listed building and a Scheduled Ancient Monument.
Home of the Ferrers family for 500 years, in the village of Baddesley Clinton in the Forest of Arden. The house was a sanctuary not only for the Ferrers family, but also for persecuted Catholics who were hidden from priest hunters in its secret hiding places during the 1590s.
A westward UP stack train enters Iowa crossing the former Chicago & North Western through truss swing bridge over the west channel of the Mississippi River. As indicated on date plates above the main structure the bridge was completed by Pennsylvania Steel Company in 1909.
The southbound searchlight at Clinton, Wisconsin watches yet another spring day come to an end. Like most searchlights, these ones are finally meeting their end as UP is doing an all-electronics upgrade on the far end of the Harvard Subdivison, including signal upgrades for both trains and roadways.
Find me elsewhere! Website Blog Twitter Instagram & please like Millie Clinton Photography on Facebook! enquiries@millieclinton.com
Thick fog reflecting the lights on the Clinton Park Bridge, in downtown Little Rock, Arkansas. The bridge was built in 1899 and was converted into a pedestrian bridge.
HIllary Rodham Clinton gets more than a mouthful from Ruta Alualu at the Kuhio Park Terraces. photo CORY LUM. one of my favorite images while working as a photo intern at The Honolulu Star Bulletin. strobist info. canon speedlight w/paper card bounce flash. on facebook at on.fb.me/mEnLhL
SOCIAL MEDIA:
Check out my blog! & Tumblr: millieclinton.tumblr.com - Twitter: @clinton_millie Instagram: @millieclinton
CONTACT:
RE PHOTOGRAPHY: millieclintonphotographer@outlook.com
RE BLOG: modishrambling@outlook.com
Feel free to contact me via either e-mail or any social networks for general enquiries.
Bill Clinton came to UCF to rally for Obama and change. It was awesome getting to see and hear him speak, aside from sitting out in the hot sun for hours waiting for it to begin. I kept taking photos, and these are the ones that i liked most out of them, and the ones where he had not made a strange looking face. Enjoy. Thoughts and criticism always wanted.