View allAll Photos Tagged TRUSTED

As the taverna is not open yet, the bread from the local baker is left hanging on the door.

WWII. Croome (National Trust), Worcestershire, UK.

A couple at the High Line had an exercise in trust; sure enough, she was caught safely enough, although there was a brief moment where it looked like things were going south.

I deliberated a fair amount on flip-flopping patron-patron and library-library, but ultimately, I have more faith in our patrons to trust one-another than I do our staff. Oh well.

Herbrand Street, London WC1.

 

Sony A7 + Canon FD 35mm f/2.0 SSC

Feb. 21, 2022: During arm negotiations with the former Soviet Union, Pres. Ronald Reagan was quoted, "Trust but Verify." On Presidents Day, I found the quote being used for Covid-19 restrictions at the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library cafeteria in Simi Valley. 56/365

At Cragside in Northumberland

Does life ever give us the chance to trust someone with our whole heart and never ask them to promise they wont tell anyone?

 

Fix Photo challenge 12: Trust

 

Photos taken during the 2017 GVVT open weekend.

oil paint pens on 5 inch X 5 inch canvas

TRUST : Soulagez-vous dans les urnes !

GALAXIE D' AMNEVILLE le 08.12.2006

oooold one :).... the other horses in that field were only interested in me giving them grass ... but not this one ... he just stood perfectly still - watching me ... wanting to be seen ...

The Pantheon at Stourhead, a National Trust property in Wiltshire.

 

© Mike Broome 2022

I know what I'm doing

 

-- Sledge Hammer

All mod cons. Well one or two more than normal for a 1971 Atlantean - the driving cab of Fylde rebodied Atlantean 7. 13/06/2021

A country house in Llandegai, Bangor, Gwynedd. in the form of a Norman castle. It was originally a medieval fortified manor house, founded by Ednyfed Fychan. In 1438, Ioan ap Gruffudd was granted a licence to crenellate and he founded the stone castle and added a tower house. Samuel Wyatt reconstructed the property in the 1780s.

The present building was created between about 1822 and 1837 to designs by Thomas Hopper, who expanded and transformed the building beyond recognition. However a spiral staircase from the original property can still be seen, and a vaulted basement and other masonry were incorporated into the new structure. Hopper's client was George Hay Dawkins-Pennant, who had inherited the Penrhyn estate on the death of his second cousin, Richard Pennant, who had made his fortune from Jamaican sugar and local slate quarries. The eldest of George's two daughters, Juliana, married Grenadier Guard, Edward Gordon Douglas, who, on inheriting the estate on George's death in 1845, adopted the hyphenated surname of Douglas-Pennant.

 

t is built in a sombre style which allows it to possess something of the medieval fortress air despite the ground-level drawing room windows. Hopper designed all the principal interiors in a rich but restrained Norman style, with much fine plasterwork and wood and stone carving. The castle also has some specially designed Norman style furniture, including a one ton slate bed made for Queen Victoria when she visited in 1859.

 

Hugh Napier Douglas-Pennant, 4th Lord Penrhyn, died in 1949, and the castle and estate passed to his niece, Lady Janet Pelham, who, on inheritance, adopted the surname of Douglas-Pennant. In 1951 the castle and 40,000 acres (160 km²) of land were accepted by the Treasury in lieu of death duties from Lady Janet. It now belongs to the National Trust.

National Trust property

i'm going to write something here later.

 

put in simple words for now, this is how i feel about trust. That it's a long road and I can't see what's ahead and that scares me.

 

I do a lot of photos about trust. I know. for me photography is something I express my feelings through. Trust is something that happens to be on my mind a lot and something that I'm building on, making that part of me better.

 

I has been tagged!

 

1.I was driving when I took this.

2.I don't understand why I have so many bugbites this summer :/

3.I have playlists that go from Godsmack to Nick Jonas. normal? probably not

4.I hate sites like Facebook/Myspace/Tumblr/Formspring. Yes. I have or have had all of them but I don't use any of them now. All it equals is drama and trouble that I have no need for.

5.Since 10th grade of high school I've felt the need to stay above drama. I do not put myself into positions that I know will in the end cause drama. I live a pretty peaceful life.

6.I really like this picture. I don't care if it isn't wonderful, I love it.

7.I can't wait to be a Mom. (but I will wait. until I'm at least 25)

8.I love my cocoa butter lotion. yum.

9.I am a grammar natzi. I'm warning you, so if you ever have a conversation with me PLEASE do not make me go on attack.

10.Silly bandz are the most ridiculous trend. Sad to say I officially own one now, but only because a little girl gave it to me. It was purple(my favorite color) and in shape of a Clarinet(the instrument I played for 7 years) so she thought of me. :)

TRUST : Soulagez-vous dans les urnes !

GALAXIE D' AMNEVILLE le 08.12.2006

The yard full of useful things thrown away!

Digital collage using ephemera from numerous sources.

The neighbour's dog took some persuading that we were there to feed her!

Petworth, West Sussex.

Petworth House (owned and managed by the National Trust) is a late 17th century Grade I listed country house, having been rebuilt in 1688 by Charles Seymour, 6th Duke of Somerset, and altered in the 1870s to the design of the architect Anthony Salvin. It is famous for the extensive art collection of George Wyndham, 3rd Earl of Egremont (1751-1837), and contains many works by his friend, J.M.W Turner.

Grade I listed on the Register of Historic Parks and Gardens, Petworth Park is owned and managed by the National Trust, and the wall around the 700 acre deer park is 14 miles long. The grounds are managed sustainably for wildlife and are protected under a Higher Level Stewardship agreement with Natural England. Petworth Park and Pleasure Grounds were transformed by Lancelot ‘Capability’ Brown throughout the 1750s, the formal gardens being replaced with the graceful curves and wide sweeping vistas of a perfect ‘natural’ looking landscape. The Park and Pleasure Grounds were one of Capability Brown’s earliest large-scale commissions and considered by many to be his masterpiece, taking 12 years and no less than five contracts to complete.

Molly and Johnathan go into the surf.....

Reuters Thompson Foundation - Trust Conference 26-27th October 2022, QEII Conference Centre, London. Images Copyright www.tellingphotography.com

Hasselblad X Pan II + 45mm / F4

Epson Perfection V750 Pro

 

Thank you for viewing and favouring my photographs.

Your viewing is much appreciated.

Sherwood Studio The Faith Project - Trust In Thee

Sherwood Studio The Faith Project - Trust In Thee Edges

Sherwood Studio The Faith Project - Trust In Thee Paint/Overlays

Sunrise Studio No photo Necessary 9 Templates

part of the fPOE mask around the world project!

www.flickr.com/groups/1549889@N22/

i had so much fun with this even though i am afraid of masks! lol ;)

 

Alfred Messel (22 July 1853, Darmstadt – 24 March 1909, Berlin) was one of the most well-known German architects at the turning point to the 20th century, creating a new style for buildings which bridged the transition from historicism to modernism. Messel was able to combine the structure, decoration, and function of his buildings, which ranged from department stores, museums, office buildings, mansions, and social housing to soup kitchens, into a coherent, harmonious whole. As an urban architect striving for excellence he was in many respects ahead of his time. His most well known works, the Wertheim department stores and the Pergamon Museum in Berlin, reflect a new concept of self-confident metropolitan architecture.[1] His architectural drawings and construction plans are preserved at the Architecture Museum of the Technical University of Berlin. wikipedia

 

Nymans is an English garden in Haywards Heath, Sussex. It was developed, starting in the late 19th century, by three generations of the Messel family, and was brought to renown by Leonard Messel.

 

In 1953 Nymans became a National Trust property.[1] Nymans is the origin of many sports, selections and hybrids, both planned and serendipitous, some of which can be identified by the term nymansensis, "of Nymans". Eucryphia × nymansensis (E. cordifolia × E. glutinosa) is also known as E. "Nymansay". Magnolia × loebneri 'Leonard Messel', Camellia 'Maud Messel' and Forsythia suspensa 'Nymans', with its bronze young stems, are all familiar shrub to gardeners.

 

History

In the late 19th century, Ludwig Messel, a member of a German Jewish family, settled in England and bought the Nymans estate, a house with 600 acres on a sloping site overlooking the picturesque High Weald of Sussex. There he set about turning the estate into a place for family life and entertainment, with an Arts and Crafts-inspired garden room where topiary features contrast with new plants from temperate zones around the world. Messel's head gardener from 1895 was James Comber, whose expertise helped form plant collections at Nymans of camellias, rhododendrons, which unusually at the time were combined with planting heather (Erica) eucryphias and magnolias. William Robinson advised in establishing the Wild Garden.[2]

 

His son Colonel Leonard Messel succeeded to the property in 1915 and replaced the nondescript Regency house with the picturesque stone manor, designed by Sir Walter Tapper and Norman Evill in a mellow late Gothic/Tudor style. He and his wife Maud (daughter of Edward Linley Sambourne) extended the garden to the north and subscribed to seed collecting expeditions in the Himalayas and South America.

 

The garden reached a peak in the 1930s and was regularly opened to the public. The severe reduction of staff in World War II was followed in 1947 by a disastrous fire in the house, which survives as a garden ruin. The house was partially rebuilt and became the home of Leonard Messel's daughter[3] Anne Messel and her second husband the 6th Earl of Rosse. At Leonard Messel's death in 1953 it was willed to the National Trust with 275 acres of woodland, one of the first gardens taken on by the Trust. Lady Rosse continued to serve as Garden Director.

wikipedia

Chase after money and security

and your heart will never unclench.

~ Tao Te Ching

 

www.nytimes.com/2010/03/30/opinion/30brooks.html?src=me&a...

The relationship between happiness and income is complicated, and after a point, tenuous. It is true that poor nations become happier as they become middle-class nations. But once the basic necessities have been achieved, future income is lightly connected to well-being. Growing countries are slightly less happy than countries with slower growth rates, according to Carol Graham of the Brookings Institution and Eduardo Lora. The United States is much richer than it was 50 years ago, but this has produced no measurable increase in overall happiness.

 

. . . People get slightly happier as they climb the income scale, but this depends on how they experience growth. Does wealth inflame unrealistic expectations? Does it destabilize settled relationships? Or does it flow from a virtuous cycle in which an interesting job produces hard work that in turn leads to more interesting opportunities?

 

If the relationship between money and well-being is complicated, the correspondence between personal relationships and happiness is not. The daily activities most associated with happiness are sex, socializing after work and having dinner with others. The daily activity most injurious to happiness is commuting.

 

. . . If you want to find a good place to live, just ask people if they trust their neighbors. Levels of social trust vary enormously, but countries with high social trust have happier people, better health, more efficient government, more economic growth, and less fear of crime (regardless of whether actual crime rates are increasing or decreasing).

 

The overall impression from this research is that economic and professional success exists on the surface of life, and that they emerge out of interpersonal relationships, which are much deeper and more important.

 

The second impression is that most of us pay attention to the wrong things. Most people vastly overestimate the extent to which more money would improve our lives. Most schools and colleges spend too much time preparing students for careers and not enough preparing them to make social decisions. Most governments release a ton of data on economic trends but not enough on trust and other social conditions. In short, modern societies have developed vast institutions oriented around the things that are easy to count, not around the things that matter most. They have an affinity for material concerns and a primordial fear of moral and social ones.

    

Port Metro Vancouver, March 2018

Photos taken during the 2023 West End Festival, Glasgow 25 June 2023

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