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This was the Friday night before Eurovision and Liverpool was very busy....and noisy with bands blasting out on the Pierhead.
My back up plan of St.George's Halls magnificent columns was cut short when someone told me it was covered in Eurovision flags and all the acts were doing a practice run there.
The Albert Dock was paddle board central and never quite became still enough for a full reflection of Luke Jerram's Floating Earth. The police had three patrol dinghies out moving between both Canning and Albert Docks and drones hovering over both.
Anyway, Canning Dock settled enough to get a blue hour shot in with the museum lit up in the Eurovision colours.
The more than life-sized Beatles statue (2015) facing Liverpool's Pier Head is dwarfed by the "Three Graces" in the background, (the somewhat baroque-ish Royal Liver Building of 1911, the Cunard Building of 1917 in its Italian renaissance style, both outside this image) and the Port of Liverpool Building of 1907, (Edwardian Baroque). Together with a couple of museums and the Tate Gallery on the Pier Head, this assemblage tells the story of Liverpool's considerable maritime and mercantile prowess and its international cultural importance. Interestingly, I found the "spirit" in this attractive city to be decidedly unpretentious and egalitarian through and through. Fuji X100F.
Photo Date: 15 Dec 2021 (Wed)
Located: Liverpool, England
It’s one of my favourite city and football club in England.
Filmed and edited by Kelvin Ho
This image is free to use and share as long as you copy and paste this license wherever you post it!:
Photography by Josh N. (joshuaobaranorwood.com)
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. (creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
The more than life-sized Beatles statue (2015) facing Liverpool's Pier Head is dwarfed by the "Three Graces" in the background, the somewhat baroque-ish Royal Liver Building of 1911, the Cunard Building of 1917 in its Italian renaissance style and, outside this image, the Port of Liverpool Building of 1907 (Edwardian Baroque). Together with a couple of museums and the Tate Gallery on the Pier Head, this assemblage tells the story of Liverpool's considerable maritime and mercantile prowess and its international cultural importance. Interestingly, I found the "spirit" in this attractive city to be decidedly unpretentious and egalitarian through and through. Fuji X100F.
This image is free to use and share as long as you copy and paste this license wherever you post it!:
Photography by Josh N. (joshuaobaranorwood.com)
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License. (creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
HDR photography by Timothy Selvage inside Our Lady's Chapel, Liverpool Anglican Cathedral Church. This was a great place for photographic opportunities. This perspective shows how I was able to take this picture www.flickr.com/photos/timothyselvage/10883187334/ for those who were curious.
Liverpool Cathedral Church is the longest cathedral in the world, the 5th largest in the world that the largest in the UK. It is relatively young, being completed in 1978. It was designed by Sir George Gilbert Scott. The Lady Chapel (pictured here) was the first part of the cathedral to be pictured and is actually larger than many parish churches.
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For more information on this cathedral: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liverpool_cathedral