View allAll Photos Tagged FORMAL

Taken @ Naturally Naughty

 

* :{Sofia}:. Luna Gown Dress - Pink, exclusive @ the Glamazon Event

* Pose: Seetra. Charm Collection, exclusive @ the Glamazon Event

 

♥Credits♥

I had thought to do some shots for a website, in Formal, Casual and Lingerie. However between me asking the parameters and submitting, the rules changed so it was a waste of my time. So lets post them here!

 

This is the Formal clothing one.

 

So called because of the formal layout of the garden at Loseley Hall and the modern sculptures in the background which seem to be figures meeting.

Black Phoebe. A cute little flycatcher that always looks so formal to me in their black jacket and crisp white shirt

I'm fortunate (for a change!) that this Green Heron has been hanging around a small creek about 3kms from my home. So i have had some opportunities to get some shots, and even to get him to pose for this more formal portrait!

 

Click to enlarge for even more details!

 

Thanks for looking, etc.:)

Royal Hospital Kilmainham

Pretty flowers and shrubs add a lot to already lovely buildings! This structure houses the office of the campus head, the chancellor.

Yellow roses are a guaranteed cheerer-upper, in MY book!!

The recently restored formal gardens at Dyrham Park,a 17th - century house and gardens.

A National Trust Property

Two starlings interacting in flight. Taken from a hide.

in Explore 9/5/2021 #28

This window shot from window to window across the shop.

At a stylish city building.

Do you know that feeling of confidence when you walk into a room and you know you're going to grab attention? Confidence is sexy. It reminds me of a proud peacock strutting and flashing his colors and that's exactly how I feel in this outfit.

 

That is what inspired my outfit for Sci Fi Formal, a theme of the Pride Event in SL.

I've always thought these black phoebes look rather formal in their black dinner wear with crisp white shirt. Turns out, they catch flies for a living.

Royal Hospital Kilmainham

After all the excitement at the villa, the Adorable Girl is sent to serve a man from Paris who is looking for arm candy for a big formal event. Aquila puts on a star performance in her daring (and expensive!) gown.

A Formal Farewell to Summer... The weekend of the Balloon Festival was pretty much the only weekend this summer when I got to do things that felt like life was "normal" again... so now, I am unofficially declaring summer OVER... at least for me! And that's just fine... I like Fall better anyway! (And yes... this is my take on "poetic license"... I added the sunset colors) Happy Fall y'all!!

Black-throated Sparrow on a yucca dagger along the river path in the Nature Conservancy's Dolan Falls Preserve, Val Verde County, Texas.

To view more of my images, of Belton House, please click "here" ! Click any image to view large!

 

Belton House is a Grade I listed country house in Belton near Grantham, Lincolnshire, England. The mansion is surrounded by formal gardens and a series of avenues leading to follies within a larger wooded park. Belton has been described as a compilation of all that is finest of Carolean architecture, the only truly vernacular style of architecture that England had produced since the Tudor period. The house has also been described as the most complete example of a typical English country house; the claim has even been made that Belton's principal facade was the inspiration for the modern British motorway signs which give directions to stately homes. Only Brympton d'Evercy has been similarly lauded as the perfect English country house. For three hundred years, Belton House was the seat of the Brownlow and Cust family, who had first acquired land in the area in the late 16th century. Between 1685 and 1688 Sir John Brownlow and his wife had the present mansion built. Despite great wealth they chose to build a modest country house rather than a grand contemporary Baroque palace. The contemporary, if provincial, Carolean style was the selected choice of design. However, the new house was fitted with the latest innovations such as sash windows for the principal rooms, and more importantly completely separate areas for the staff. As the Brownlows rose from baronets to barons upward to earls and then once again became barons, successive generations made changes to the interior of the house which reflected their changing social position and tastes, yet the fabric and design of the house changed little. Following World War I (a period when the Machine Gun Corps was based in the park), the Brownlows, like many of their peers, were faced with mounting financial problems. In 1984 they gave the house away—complete with most of its contents. The recipients of their gift, the National Trust, today fully open Belton to the public. It is in a good state of repair and visited by many thousands of tourists each year The Brownlow family, a dynasty of lawyers, began accumulating land in the Belton area from approximately 1598. In 1609 they acquired the reversion of the manor of Belton itself from the Pakenham family, who finally sold the manor house to Sir John Brownlow I in 1619. The old house was situated near the church in the garden of the present house and remained largely unoccupied, since the family preferred their other houses elsewhere. John Brownlow had married an heiress but was childless. He became attached to two of his more distant blood relations: a great-nephew, also called John Brownlow, and a great-niece, Alice Sherard. The two cousins married each other in 1676 when both were aged 16; three years later, the couple inherited the Brownlow estates from their great-uncle together with an income of £9,000 per annum (about £ 1.17 million in present day terms) and £20,000 in cash (equivalent to about £ 2.59 million now). They immediately bought a town house in the newly fashionable Southampton Square in Bloomsbury, and decided to build a new country house at Belton. Work on the new house began in 1685. The architect thought to have been responsible for the initial design is William Winde, although the house has also been attributed to Sir Christopher Wren, while others believe the design to be so similar to Roger Pratt's Clarendon House, London, that it could have been the work of any talented draughtsman. The assumption popular today, that Winde was the architect, is based on the stylistic similarity between Belton and Coombe Abbey, which was remodelled by Winde between 1682 and 1685. Further evidence is a letter dated 1690, in which Winde recommends a plasterer who worked at Belton to another of his patrons. Whoever the architect, Belton follows closely the design of Clarendon House, completed in 1667. This great London town house (demolished circa 1683) has been one of the most admired buildings of its era due to "its elegant symmetry and confident and common-sensical design". Sir John Summerson described Clarendon House as "the most influential house of its time among those who aimed at the grand manner" and Belton as "much the finest surviving example of its class". John and Alice Brownlow assembled one of the finest teams of craftsmen available at the time to work on the project. This dream team was headed by the master mason William Stanton who oversaw the project. His second in command, John Thompson, had worked with Sir Christopher Wren on several of the latter's London churches, while the chief joiner John Sturges had worked at Chatsworth under William Talman. The wrought-ironworker John Warren worked under Stanton at Denham Place, Buckinghamshire, and the fine wrought iron gates and overthrow at Belton may be his. Thus so competent were the builders of Belton that Winde may have done little more than provide the original plans and drawings, leaving the interpretation to the on-site craftsmen. This theory is further demonstrated by the external appearance of the adjoining stable block. More provincial, and less masterful in proportion, it is known to have been entirely the work of Stanton.

 

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Tres Chic Event

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Nika/156/143/21

Zafair - Flamingo Safari Jewell (Men) Black

 

Gabriel

maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/GABRIEL/128/127/23

::GB::body belt suit / Black M

Formal Dress

 

Wood Duck drake at the Wissahickon Creek, PA in Spring last year

 

2019_03_19_EOS 7D Mark II_4712-Edit_V1

I got this sweater just for it, is it my color?

°=° Cologne, District Southtown, Riverside.

Customs Port [ Zollhafen ] with Cranehouses.

May 2018

Up in Kristen's room before Winter Formals. All three couples are still together over 20 years later.

 

(Cropped from this photo.)

Japanese, c.early 1960s. Given to Winifred Sulley as payment for taxi fares to a conference she adressed.

The leaves are falling in Grenoble, France. This garden used to be the formal garden of a Duke. Now it is a public park for all to enjoy.

 

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Clumber Park, Nottinghamshire.

Formal Gown Time for our Special Group event

new series on vegetable formal structures

Texture by les brumes: www.flickr.com/photos/lesbrumes/

Oranienbaum Park is a most valuable example of garden and park art from the second half of the 18th to the mid-19th century. It covers an area of 162 hectares. Until the 1770s, the main artistic technique in the park's design was the formal layout, which was later replaced by the landscape style. The park consists of several historically developed sections, each formed during specific periods of the palace and park complex creation.

 

Upper Park: 18th - 20th centuries - formation of the general landscape, 1710 - 1720s - development of the water system, garden masters: L. Lamberti, D. Bush, L. Meinecke.

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