View allAll Photos Tagged Nether
Pix: Shaun Flannery/sf-pictures.com.
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COPYRIGHT PICTURE>>SHAUN FLANNERY>01302-570814>>07778315553>>
2th November 2007.........New Deal for Communities (NDC), The Voice.
Health Trainers Sarah Bone and Marlyn Stothard.
The Clock Tower in St Mary Street was built in 1897. During 2011, the Clock Tower underwent a major refurbishment job which saw the replacement of several components of the bell chiming system. The tower also received a fresh coat of paint.
St Nicholas
Church of England
Early 13th century church, located in the centre of the village, and listed as one of Simon Jenkin's 'England's Thousand Best Churches'.
Chancel
North West Window
17th century Flemish glass.
(Detail)
The church of Saint Mary is the parish church of the village of Nether Stowey near Bridgwater in Somerset. The church can be found next to Stowey Court a little outside the village. Since the end of the 1960s the church has been 'cut off' from the village by the A39 bypass.
The church has a number of Victorian stained glass windows, two of which are in areas not open to the general public. This picture shows a detail from the window in the North Aisle of the church which depicts elements of the story of the Good Samaritan, see Luke x : 30 to 37. In this picture can be seen the panel where the Samaritan leaves money with the innkeeper to provide for the care of the injured traveller.
Edited with Photomatix and Photoshop. (from a single .jpeg)
Best viewed large.
On some screens, the sky may look a little streaky = botched photoshop job. It looked smooth on my screen, til I tilted it back! I need to work some more on that - had to take out some ugly power lines that ran right across.
This is a picture I took of an opening, and made it look like a Nether Portal (minecraft). I used Adobe Photoshop and Adobe Lightroom to eddit this picture.
A lovely working water mill in Cheshire. Just across from where Neil and Christine Hamilton used to live. Remember them? No? Ah, good, that's gratifying.
Aka the Douce Mausoleum, built in 1760 on the demise of Dr Francis Douce having been conceived by the deceased together with his architect John Blake. The inscription to the western side is not legible today, apparently it started 'Here lye the remains of Francis Douce' and described his ancestors and deeds. Many men sought to aggrandise themselves in death by the building of mausolea, this one had the good sense at least to site it on consecrated land otherwise it just doesn't work. We must not let that lessen its credentials as a folly however - a 15 ft pyramid sitting proud on a mound in a church yard, capped off with an imitation flaming torch. Superb!
britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/101156788-monument-to-franci...
Pix: Shaun Flannery/sf-pictures.com.
.
COPYRIGHT PICTURE>>SHAUN FLANNERY>01302-570814>>07778315553>>
2th November 2007.........New Deal for Communities (NDC), The Voice.
Health Trainers Sarah Bone and Marlyn Stothard.
Just over the border into Leicestershire on the A606 Nottingham to Melton Mowbray road, St. Mary the Virgin is a typical yellow-hued ironstone church of this delightful region (which is the true home of Stilton cheese). Nice mixture of Early English and Decorated, but alas overlooked by Betjeman in his Collin's English Parish Churches guide.
Abstract by camera toss.
I irradiate ultraviolet rays to acrylic fluorescent disc, and get a source...
Old street name, York.
Probably refers to horn carvers who worked there.
Narrow lanes in this area are known as 'snickelways'.
Sedos presents Jennifer Haley’s award-winning thriller The Nether
Bridewell Theatre
26-30 September 2017
www.sedos.co.uk/2017/nether.htm
Photo by Stephen Russell
Took this shot as a comparison to the old black and white photo from 100 years ago. There are only a few subtle changes.
Here lyeth the
Body of Mr Thomas Pitman
who died July 21st 1717 Aged
63 with His Wife Rebekah and
five young children & their
Son Edward who died Nov
7th 1717 in ye 21st Year
of his Age.