View allAll Photos Tagged Kipling

Última comprada... Mas vão ter outras, provavelmente, hehe. ^^

Kiplings Gardens, The Green, Rottingdean (Brighton), East-Sussex, Great-Britain.

 

Kiplings Gardens were once part of The Elms, where Rudyard Kipling lived from 1897 to 1902. Kipling rented the house for 3 guineas a week and it was here that he wrote Stalky & Co, Kim and some of his famous Just So Stories.

 

The gardens later became derelict for many years under private ownership and eventually permission to build on them was sought. Fortunately, this was refused on appeal and the land was bought by The Preservation Society, who then restored the gardens creating the present Kipling Gardens. The gardens are considered a fine example of 'horticultural excellence' and have been frequent holders of the prestigious Green Flag, which is awarded to the best parks and green spaces in England and Wales.

 

The gardens were opened in 1986, when they were formally handed over to Brighton & Hove Council for the long term benefit of residents and visitors, who can relax in quietness and seclusion within the beautiful surroundings. Highlights in the garden include the walled Rose Garden, a Herb Garden and a Wild Garden. The Wild Garden can be used for picnics and the playing of croquet can be seen during the summer.

 

Source: Visit Brighton.

This coyote wandered through the yard in broad daylight.

Venue: Broken City, Calgary AB

ink, watercolor on paper

Cartable Wolly S bleu

Dimensions : 38x28x11

Prix boutique 79,90

Prix vente fixé à 35 euros

 

Petit Cartable Ergonomique

Bretelles ajustables et renforcées

Une poignée principale renforcée

Rabat avec 2 clips

Un large compartiment principal avec une division zippée

Une poche plaquée avant fermeture Velcro

Porte-clefs singe Kipling

Rudyard Kipling: The Day's Work.

MacMillan & Co. 1964.

The feedlot only looks abandoned.

Halton County Radial Railway

END of the line in a few min this train will turn around and head back east, an 1 hour trip form end to end.

Le singe Kipling avait faim !

CP freight train trundling west at Kipling Station,Toronto, in a heavy snow storm.

Kipling Gardens, The Green, Rottingdean (Brighton), East-Sussex, Great-Britain.

 

Kiplings Gardens were once part of The Elms, where Rudyard Kipling lived from 1897 to 1902. Kipling rented the house for 3 guineas a week and it was here that he wrote Stalky & Co, Kim and some of his famous Just So Stories.

 

The gardens later became derelict for many years under private ownership and eventually permission to build on them was sought. Fortunately, this was refused on appeal and the land was bought by The Preservation Society, who then restored the gardens creating the present Kipling Gardens. The gardens are considered a fine example of 'horticultural excellence' and have been frequent holders of the prestigious Green Flag, which is awarded to the best parks and green spaces in England and Wales.

 

The gardens were opened in 1986, when they were formally handed over to Brighton & Hove Council for the long term benefit of residents and visitors, who can relax in quietness and seclusion within the beautiful surroundings. Highlights in the garden include the walled Rose Garden, a Herb Garden and a Wild Garden. The Wild Garden can be used for picnics and the playing of croquet can be seen during the summer.

 

Source: Visit Brighton.

Those loops were meant to be a little smaller, but Kipling's very proud of her chain for the tree anyway!

 

(Also, she is done now and it should go on the tree as is.)

From Wikipedia:

 

"The Collegiate Church of St Peter at Westminster, which is almost always referred to popularly and informally as Westminster Abbey, is a large, mainly Gothic church, in Westminster, London, England (UK), located just to the west of the Palace of Westminster. It is the traditional place of coronation and burial site for English, later British and later still (and currently) monarchs of the Commonwealth Realms. The abbey is a Royal Peculiar and briefly held the status of a cathedral from 1546 to 1556.

 

Westminster Abbey is governed by the Dean and Chapter of Westminster, as established by Royal Charter of Queen Elizabeth I in 1560, which created it as the Collegiate Church of St Peter Westminster and a Royal Peculiar under the personal jurisdiction of the Sovereign.

 

According to a tradition first reported by Sulcard in about 1080, the Abbey was first founded in the time of Mellitus (d. 624), Bishop of London, on the present site, then known as Thorn Ey (Thorn Island); based on a late tradition that a fisherman called Aldrich on the River Thames saw a vision of Saint Peter near the site. This seems to be quoted to justify the gifts of salmon from Thames fishermen that the Abbey received in later years. In the present era, the Fishmongers' Guild still gives a salmon every year. The proven origins are that in the 960s or early 970s, Saint Dunstan, assisted by King Edgar, installed a community of Benedictine monks here. A stone abbey was built around 1045–1050 by King Edward the Confessor as part of his palace there and was consecrated on 28 December 1065, only a week before the Confessor's death and subsequent funeral and burial. It was the site of the last coronation prior to the Norman conquest of England, that of his successor Harold II. From 1245 it was rebuilt by Henry III who had selected the site for his burial.

 

Since the coronations in 1066 of both King Harold and William the Conqueror, coronations of English and British monarchs were held in the Abbey. Henry III was unable to be crowned in London when he first came to the throne because the French prince Louis had taken control of the city, and so the king was crowned in Gloucester Cathedral. However, this coronation was deemed by the Pope to be improper, and a further coronation was held in the Abbey on 17 May 1220.

 

Many Kings and Queens of England are buried there. Poets and writers are also buried or memorialised in what became known as Poets' Corner. These include: Geoffrey Chaucer, William Blake, Robert Burns, Lord Byron, Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Charles Dickens, John Dryden, George Eliot, T. S. Eliot, Thomas Gray, Gerard Manley Hopkins, Samuel Johnson, John Keats, the Brontë sisters, Rudyard Kipling, John Masefield, John Milton, Laurence Olivier, Alexander Pope, Nicholas Rowe, Percy Bysshe Shelley, Jane Austen, Thomas Shadwell, Alfred Lord Tennyson, Dylan Thomas and William Wordsworth."

 

The current Duke and Duchess of Cambridge were married at the abbey in April 2011.

HDR with Artizen.

 

Bateman's, near the village of Burwash in Sussex, was built by a Wealden ironmaster in local sandstone, at a time when the Sussex Weald, with its forests for charcoal, was a flourishing centre of the ancient English iron industry. The date over the porch is 1634.

 

Rudyard Kipling settled in the house in 1902, and lived there for over thirty years, until his death, rejoicing in its seclusion under the Sussex downs, and in the evidence all around of thousands of years of English history.

 

Information from www.kipling.org.uk

 

www.nationaltrust.org.uk/main/w-vh/w-visits/w-findaplace/...

Venue: Broken City, Calgary AB

acrylic on paper

Palo Alto, February 1st, 2019

It was pouring at Kipling. I am really smart, and left my umbrella at home. I spent most of this trip hiding under the awning where buses pull up, though I ventured up a hill to take photos of the station from overhead - which ended up not being worth the effort.

August 09, 2016:.

16-501212.

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Venue: Broken City, Calgary AB

ink on paper, Photoshop

Venue: Broken City, Calgary AB

ink on paper, Photoshop

Kipling猩猩鑰匙圈系列

真品特價優惠中!

喜愛KIPLING的朋友有福囉~~

暢銷品牌Kipling猩猩鑰匙圈系列 

全新正品 

 

◎猩猩爸爸、猩猩媽媽系列(大隻的)

原價每隻580元,現在每隻特價380元(約7cm)

∼∼每隻都有正品標籤喔∼∼歡迎選購

 

猩爸爸&猩媽媽每一隻都可以變換不同照型喔! 可以手拉手,也可以吸大拇指照型!

 

產品顏色會因燈光相機有些微差距,賣家儘量以原色呈現 ,請買家多多體諒

欲購買的買家請多善用問與答,賣家會儘快答覆 , 量多另有折扣且可合併計算郵資喔!!

 

Mail: blue0523.tw@yahoo.com.tw

Taken February 22nd.

Again, a flash shot because lighting was spotty.

At least it was still light out...sort of.

And there's no glare.

Rudyard Kipling/ If/ STUDENT PROJECT

 

"If you can bear to hear the truth you’ve spoken

Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools,

Or watch the things you gave your life to broken,

And stoop and build ’em up with wornout tools"

 

For use on the blog. Original art by John Byrne, for Marvel Comics.

press - L - to see it large and on black.

press - F - if you like it :)

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Click here to see an overview of the whole set of beers

 

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Headstone of Lieutenant John Kipling, only son of Rudyard Kipling. St Mary's Advanced Dressing Station Cemetery, Loos. May 2008.

 

For more information on this location, visit www.warwalker.co.uk/artois/artnor06.shtml .

 

See where this picture was taken. [?]

Venue: Broken City, Calgary AB

ink on paper, Photoshop

Rudyard Kipling/ If/ STUDENT PROJECT

 

"If you can wait and not be tired by waiting,

Or, being lied about, don’t deal in lies,

Or, being hated, don’t give way to hating,

And yet don’t look too good, nor talk too wise"

 

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