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Former Southern Railways Battle of Britain class locomotive no. 34067 'Tangmere' is captured from Wharton Fell, down at Birkett Common, with the Raialway Touring Company's 1Z87, the 14:18 Carlilsle to London Euston 'Winter Cumbrian Mountain Express'. Saturday, 1st February 2025.
The Ed Sullivan theater has been a beehive of activity all summer, with the new marquee almost finished last week. Hoping those sturdy beams will allow for lots of marquee-top concerts! Colbert's first show scheduled for September 8th!
5 exp HDR
The extremely handsome Saint Stephen's at the bottom of Edinburgh's New Town, designed by the famous William Henry Playfair in the late 1820s, now home to performing spaces and arts school.
This striking church is all the more photogenic because of its location - as you walk downhill along a broad street, it is beautifully lined up with the road, visible all the way down, especially that impressive tower (which apparently holds one of the longest clock pendulums in Europe).
Just to the left of this is Circus Lane, a cobbled road of old Mews buildings (where the Georgian townhouses would have their stables in the old days - now converted to very expensive flats), which is one of the most photogenic streets in the New Town, another street to the left leads you into the Stockbridge area, and the Water of Leith, so all in all a great area to walk around and take pics. Directly across from the church, if all that walking leaves you tired, is the excellent Saint Vincent pub, for a nice rest and refresh!
In the stairwell of Northampton's Freemason's Hall - and no secret handshakes to get in either! Was there for an exam (which I buggered up)
*Exam Update - they lost my script!! I have to re-sit in January*
*Exam Update2 - I passed the resit (it's the least they could have done)*
Stephen, one of the Effstopeyes v.i. photographers on our recent shoot in the Keep of Norwich Castle.
strobist:
1 strobe in large softbox behind model
1 strobe bare with reflector above slight camera left as main light with a bounce reflector below camera for fill.
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St. Stephen's Anglican Church (1886) in Greermount, in the Municipality of Thorne, Quebec, Canada.
Its construction began in 1883 and opened for worship on August 18, 1886.
For many decades now, it only hosts an annual summer service and has an active cemetery.
Greermount (aka Greer Mount) was named after the Rev. A.J. Greer who supervised the building of the church and after the mountain from which the stones were quarried.
Stephen's Falls
Governor Dodge State Park, Wisconsin
The most beautiful waterfall I know of in southern Wisconsin! It's changed a ton over the years due to erosion and that massive boulder the water is falling over. Apparently it didn't used to be there until fairly recently.
Tough to see in this photo, but it was making a cool mist around the waterfall that morning which made for a great place to sit and enjoy the serenity.
Palace of Westminster, London, United Kingdom
St. Stephen’s Hall, the highly decorated corridor that led to the heart of Palace of Westminster, recorded much of the nation’s royal history and parliamentary nobilities. It sits right on the site of the old St. Stephen’s Chapel where the House of Commons gathered until the chapel’s destruction in 1834. Its dimensions today seem almost too small for such portant meetings—i guess grandeur doesn’t always accompany politics in history.