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Juliana Hatfield No Makeup
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The Great British Sculpture Show 2014. 'Peregrine Falcon' by Geoffrey Dashwood. Bronze. At a mere £250,000 this sculpture could be yours!
The East Garden, which is only open one day per week. The garden is bordered on each side by double-avenues of holm oaks - these were once clipped into separate lollipops but have now merged into a single pleached mass.
Part of the Historic Columbia River Highway has been restored between Mosier and Hood River and is now a bicycle and hiking path. The Mark O. Hatfield State Trail.
66707 leads the 1109 Selby to Felixstowe liner train passed Hatfield colliery on 4th August 2014. The train is diverted due to planned maintenance to the swing bridge at Selby which lasts for 6 weeks. 66705 is on the rear as the train has to run to Brough to reverse.
Went out for an early walk to Hatfield Forest this morning and shot a few pictures around the lake. These are four of them. Shot with a Canon 1Ds Mklll. Copyright DonColeonni. Not to be used without permission.
An Elizabethan park with a famous Jacobean house which had a great Jacobean garden, designed by Thomas Chaundler, Salomon de Caus and John Tradescant. The layout has changed many times since then but now has a 'seventeenth century character' with terraces and garden enclosures, including a knot garden, herb garden and privy garden. The East Garden adjoining the Jacobean house is more formally planted with its parterre, topiary, herbaceous borders and vegetable garden. The park is well-wooded has an ancient avenue of oak trees.
History
Dating from the 17th century, the gardens at Hatfield House have evolved into a gardeners’ paradise. Visitors can enjoy the peace of the West Garden with its scented garden and fountains, and view the famous knot garden adjoining the Tudor Old Palace where Elizabeth I spent much of her childhood. The East garden bordering the Jacobean house, home of the Cecil family for 400 years, is more formally planted with its parterre, topiary, herbaceous borders and vegetable garden.
This work by Rhonda Surman is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
© Rhonda Surman 2013
The entrance courtyard at the South Front of Hatfield dates from 1840 when Queen Victoria came to stay. Facing this was a large area of lawn and a few bay trees in lead planters. But around 2000, Lady Salisbury began one of her last major projects and planted the whole area with box which today has reached maturity. It is a most impressive sight and an exercise in pure classicism.
Hatfield House
The home of the 7th Marquess and Marchioness of Salisbury and their family.
The Estate has been in the Cecil family for 400 years.
In 1611, Robert Cecil, 1st Earl of Salisbury, and the son of Lord Burghley, the chief minister of Elizabeth I built this fine Jacobean House adjoining the site of the Old Palace of Hatfield.
The deer park surrounding the house, and the older building of the Old Palace, had been owned Henry VIII who had used it as a home for his children, Edward, Elizabeth and Mary. It was while she was living in the Old Palace, in 1558, that Elizabeth learned of her accession to the throne.
The House was splendidly decorated for entertaining the Royal Court, with State Rooms rich in paintings, fine furniture and tapestries.
Superb examples of Jacobean craftsmanship, such as the Grand Staircase with its fine carving, and the rare stained glass window in the private chapel can be seen throughout the house .
www.hatfield-house.co.uk/house-park-garden/history
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hatfield_House
The Long Gallery
A Long Gallery was an essential feature of every large Jacobean house.
This one now runs the entire length of the South Front, having been lengthened to 170 feet in 1781. The rooms at each end were opened up by the removal of party walls and the insertion of tall, wooden pillars.
The ceiling, originally white, was covered with gold leaf by the 2nd Marquess who had been impressed by a gold ceiling he had seen in Venice.
Garden of Eden
An impressive painting of Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden. (Detail)
www.hatfield-house.co.uk/house-park-garden/the-house/the-...
91119 heads the 10:30h East Coast service from London Kings Cross to Newcastle whilst the 09:58h Moorgate - Welwyn Garden City FCC service trundles along the slow line at Hatfield.
Locomotora eléctrica 91119 adelanta un automotor eléctrico de la serie 313 en Hatfield.
16.8.2008.
DRS liveried Class 37's Nos 37059 and 37423 pass the colliery at Hatfield with a 'Spitfire Railtours' special for Grimsby and the east coast.
The Old Palace was built in about 1485 by the Bishop of Ely, John Morton. It is one of the foremost examples of mediaeval brickwork in the country.
Henry VIII acquired the Palace from the Bishop of Ely in 1538, and it was here In 1558 Princess Elizabeth was sitting under an oak tree in the Park when she learnt of her succession to the throne of England.
04/05/15 Hatfield & Stainforth: Northern Class 144 144004 departs Platform 2 with 2R69 12:24 Sheffield - Scunthorpe.
The unit is to be preserved at the Aln Valley Railway once withdrawn from service in 2020.
Hatfield House is a sumptuous Jacobean house with gardens, where Queen Elizabeth I grew up.
It is located in a large estate, the Great Park, near the town of Hatfield in Hertfordshire, England.
Hatfield House est une somptueuse demeure jacobéenne agrémentée de jardins, où a grandi la reine Elizabeth I.
Elle est située dans un grand domaine, le Great Park, à proximité de la ville de Hatfield dans le Hertfordshire, en Angleterre.
FYI being bathed in pink light is pretty fabulous.
Press L, go on be naughty.
5x RAW HDR
Longest exposure 60seconds
10mm
f/22
ND 0.9 filter used.
0 bias, ev range -4,+4, 2ev step.
Taken while heading up to Tawharanui to chase bellbirds. It's nice when you're on top of things and just go all zen 'n stuff while shooting. I setup, took a bracketed set, decided on improvements to the composition. Adjusted, re-shot and scampered back to the car, wet socks and all. I was there just in time for the pink hues to reach their peak and was back on the road in no time. Why can't every shoot be that easy?
Read about demonic Bellbirds on my blog