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One of several beautiful stained glass windows in the Bishop's Palace on Broadway in Galveston, Texas.
Built in 1886 by Col. Walter Gresham who fought in the U.S. Civil War. The house was then one of the most lavish and massive homes in the U.S. and is a Victorian adaptation of a Renaissance style.
The Catholic Diocese bought the home in 1923.
I know the stained glass window looks blurry, but that’s because it is. This church has a protective covering over the window...if I had to guess, I would say a plexiglass type of covering. It looks like it has yellowed over time when you view it during the day and you don’t really see the stained glass that well. Also, I never see the church lit up at night and actually get to see the beautiful colors of the glass. I had to stop and take a picture even though I knew it wouldn’t come out great.
The famous stained glass windows inside the Duomo Di Milano in Italy. This is a re-edit from a phototrip in 2012.
Late posting today, Bad Panda wouldn't let me on this morning.
Tried some stained glass window shots on Sunday at Trinity Memorial Church in Binghamton NY. This close-up was my favorite.
I hope everyone enjoys this image! :D
- at the Tuesday concert in Chichester Cathedral, we sat in the choir stalls instead of our usual place in the nave
- we found the listening experience much better but could not see the musicians
- we did see, however, part of the beautiful stained glass window in the south transept
posting for Window Wednesdays
gratitude for all visits to my photostream
In memory of Richard Pentreath 1814 - 1880.
At St Pol de Léon's church, Paul, Cornwall.
(St. Paul's church)
HWW!
One of the Shrewsbury Church's Stained Glass windows and rather a spectacular and beautiful one too.
''Treat This'' 218 ~ Kreative People group
Thanks to SolanoSnapper for the source image which you can see in the first comment box below or here: flic.kr/p/2eiLXRf
Former church setting with stained glass windows, columns and striking lampshades, now a bar on Union Street Aberdeen.
Stained feathers or aberrant plumage? That’s the question I was trying to answer when I sent this image to an ornithologist last April. The oddly colored male Hairy Woodpecker showed up at my feeder and remained in the area for about three weeks. I was told that the bird’s feathers were stained by tannins in trees. I thought nothing more about it until I saw a photo of a very similar looking bird spotted in New England. Bird specialists there said the odd coloration in that woodpecker came from pigments laid down in the feathers, and not from staining. (This color variation is apparently found in Hairy Woodpeckers in other parts of the U.S.) Whatever the case, the buffy colored male didn’t seem to bother the pair of Hairy Woodpeckers already visiting my yard and feeder.
These were the actual colors of the sunrise that morning. Just a bit oversaturated:)
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Stained glass window at Saint Patricks Church, Ballina. New Year, new photo. thanks for dropping by.
Flickr friend Victoria Carmichael suggested in my most recent shot of these Monarch butterflies at Wynnum Wetlands in Brisbane that they looked like stained glass windows and I thought that was very apt really. This is my last uploading from that day but despite the light not shining through the wings as in a stained glass window, this little one with its wings spread flat line an aircraft does show the equivalent to the lead framing in such a window to great effect. And I must admit in my rare shots of butterflies because they just don’t like me, their wings are either fairly well closed or I have taken a side view with only one showing.
Created for KP Stained Glass December
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