View allAll Photos Tagged WindowWednesday
I took this ages ago and it's been sitting in my archives ever since.
Thank you for the favourites. :O)
playing with post-processing-- this is HDR but it looked a bit more 'dynamic' on my laptop. if i can grab the original, i'll post it in the first comment box... hmm, maybe i should have saved this for slider sunday??
Tudor. Leaded windows - oak frames. Looking out onto the gardens and moat of Little Morton Hall, Cheshire, England.
Little Morton Hall in Cheshire was constructed during the Tudor period, with the earliest part of the house begun in around 1504-1508 and the latest addition being completed in 1610. The Moreton family were wealthy landowners in the area and built the house as a symbol of their prosperity.
The house remained in the possession of the Moreton family for almost 450 years, until ownership was transferred to the National Trust in 1938.
Number 67. Glass - theme for 115 pictures for 2015
Hospital of St Cross and Almshouse of Noble Poverty
This part of the almshouses is preserved in a historical setting. The 25 Brothers who live here each have their own flat with central heating.
*ღღ* Entre Amigos *ღღ* Proyecto 365 DÃas
Window Wednesdays
For Window Wednesday, from inside the Museum of Brisbane in City Hall. Thanks to sccart (Stephen Crawford) for putting me right on the location.....I had forgotten and was totally lost.
There seems to be a trend of putting stuffed animals (of a type somehow related to the location) on hotel beds recently. The first time I saw one was years ago in Helsinski. But on our most recent trip we had several choices - orca, bear, salmon. The cutest was this little sasquatch (also know as bigfoot) at Skamania Lodge. I moved him/her to the window to take in the great view of the Columbia River.
Monte Generoso – "Fiore di Pietra" by Mario Botta.
"Fiore di Pietra" is the mountain station of the cog railway to the Mount Generoso (1'704m | 5'590ft) and also includes a restaurant, a projection room and a meeting room.
It has been planned by Mario Botta and was finished in 2017.
âž½ Monte Generoso
➽ Mario Botta – homepage
➽ Baudokumentation – 16/59
(45.92802, 09.01858); [30°]
Window Wednesday
I took this from the Staten Island Ferry. This was taken right after Hurricane Sandy hit the east coast and you can see the Freedom Tower still under construction!
West Block
Parliament’s West Block reflected in the windows of the Bank of Canada and the CD Howe buildings. The patterned glass on the lower portion of frame is part of the Currency Museum of the Bank of Canada. Money and Power.... 😊
Happy Window Wednesday!
Window Wednesday
Took this out of the Jeep window.
The folks who own this old house have done some work on it and the property. It is starting to look pretty good.
am Marktplatz in Mosbach im
Neckar - Odenwald - Kreis im nördlichen
Baden-Württemberg ist das größte und
prachtvollste Fachwerkhaus der Stadt.
Es ist ein dreigeschossiges Fachwerk Haus auf
massivem steinernen Sockelgeschoss,wobei
die einzelnen #Fachwerkgeschosse# jeweils
leicht vorkragen.Die Ecke zum Marktplatz hin
ist als auf einer steinernen Konsole ruhender
Erker ausgebildet,der sich über alle drei
Fachwerkgeschosse erstreckt und sich nach
einhelliger Meinung einst auch als Türmchen
nach oben fortsetzte.Das Dach ist ein
schmuckloses Walmdach.
Clear packing tape is keeping this window from cracking - for the most part. Seen at Healing Waters Fishing Lodge, Twin Bridges, Montana. Always hard for me to get back into things after a trip, but I really like windows - and pareidolia is hard to resist. 😊
Will get to your streams soon.
Window Wednesday
This is a huge project that has been in progress for a long time It will provide 500 new apartments when complete. It will include market-rate apartments and affordable rate apartments.
www.ithaca.com/news/ithaca/waters-edge-housing-project-to...
Another beauty in my hood facing Lake Adair. Happy Window Wednesday, Peeps. May God bless you for your kindness in visiting.
Detail of a colourful office building, with adjustable glass shutters, opposite the Old Bailey in the city of London. Architects: Sauerbruch Hutton, 2015.
And high windows at the Fountain Cafe. This tiny restaurant (8 or so tables) was down the street from the B&B where we were stayed in Port Townsend. Fantastic food there - gorgonzola, spinach, and walnut penne for me. Lucky we came across it!
I always take showers, but this tub - which was almost seven feet long and painted (?) a beautiful turquoise-y color on the outside - almost enticed me in. But there was a really nice shower stall, too, so I just took a photo of the tub.
The Organ Grinder pub in Portland Street, Newark was previously The Horse & Gears, but was taken over by Blue Monkey Brewery, reopening during Easter week 2014. It remains a beer drinkers' pub with few pretensions.
As far as I know, it is only one of two pubs in England with the same name, the other being in Loughborough.
There might have been a bar in Ottawa with the same name? Any Canadian Flickr members have knowledge of it?