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The steps outside All Saints in Stamford in the sunshine.
Olympus Pen EE2 half-frame camera
Kentmere 400 film (quite grainy as half-frame)
Lab develop & scan
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Another scene from Newcastle Quayside, the amazing architecture.
Zeiss Super Ikonta 531 camera
Zeiss Tessar 75 mm f/3.5 kens
Fomapan 100 film
Lab develop & scan
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Love my AllSaints Damisi Boots in Asphalt. It's a versatile boot to go with skinny jeans or skirts. The double buckles are usually undone but they give the boots a bit of casual tough style.
One caveat: all those hardwares make lots of jangling noises when I walk. There's no sneaking around!
All Saints dominates Maldon's picturesque High Street; built of stone and flint, with a very peculiar triangular west tower. The tower sides are of equal length, making a perfect equilateral triangle plan, and the tower base is topped with a hexagonal spire with pinnacles at the corners, making a very striking sight
#85 All Saints
-Outfit-
HALO : + Celestial Halo + {aii}
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Aii%20and%20Ego/92/121/1527
HAIR : KUNI - Olivia
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/KUNI/140/173/26
OUTFIT : ERSCH - Lovesick
maps.secondlife.com/secondlife/Lyrics/29/72/33
WINGS : [M.O.R] AVIA : WINGS DARK v1.17
marketplace.secondlife.com/p/MOR-AVIA-BENTO-WINGS-DARK/15...
-Body parts-
MOD : {GHOSTED} BLACK CAT BOM MOD KIT (Group Gift you can find this mod in the notice of the group)
secondlife:///app/group/6565fee3-842a-238f-ab0e-e6d7c9e67ed0/about
HEAD : Happy Paw - Foxcat head bento V.3
marketplace.secondlife.com/p/Happy-Paw-Foxcat-head-bento/...
Life
Too much of it, and not enough.
The fear that it will end some day, and the fear that tomorrow will be the same as yesterday.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=cIk-Kxw_7Kc
John Updike
American novelist, poet, short story writer, art critic, and literary critic
© All rights reserved Anna Kwa. Please do not use this image on websites, blogs or any other media without my explicit written permission
Lots of sewing machines on display.
Excerpt from www.seetorontonow.com:
Allsaints was originally founded in 1994 as a menswear brand, quickly gaining a reputation as the destination for vintage inspired design. In 1998, the brand introduced womenswear with a focus on fresh and innovative design, detail, technique and fabrication.
Former Lothian Bus SN04 AAX, making it`s way out of Braunston with a Rugby Free School bus. This service is operated by Hunters of Daventry
I had just lost the sun so tried to do something different.
15th September 2021
Annesley All Saints Church, Nottinghamshire dates to 1874. Viewed from Newstead and Annesley Country Park.
...in Norfolk. The ruined tower of All Saints' Church, Gillingham. Taken on a dark and gloomy afternoon.
Threxton All Saints is a round-tower church at Threxton Hill, situated east of the village of Little Cressingham and west of the town of Watton in the English county of Norfolk.
There is isolated, there is very isolated and then there is Waterden Church. Officially known as All Saints, Waterden, it is the last survivor of the village of that name, one of Norfolk’s many deserted medieval villages (DMV).
Subject to an extensive renovation which was only completed in 2019, Waterden can be found down a narrow lane which runs between South Creake and North Barsham. While regarded as Norman there are a couple of features high on the walls which suggest this is an Anglo-Saxon church to which the Normans made a few tweaks and then lost interest in due to the small community.
The building as it stands today appears to date from about 1300 with some 16th century changes to windows which suggest that the village survived the Black Death but may have fallen victim to enclosure and the introduction of more profitable sheep. Sheep pay better than tenants and cause less trouble.
The church was once wider - with a south aisle - with traces of the aisle arches remaining both inside and outside. The font is simple but very old while the box pews are smart and suggest money has been spent on it during the 19th century. There is a fragment of medieval paint on the wall near the door. One door still uses a medieval drawbar instead of a modern lock.
Norfolk Heritage Explorer talks about a collapsed west tower (see above) which, at first glance, seems logical. A more recent assessment is that the ruins at the west end are probably a lost nave end rather than a tower. Substantial buttresses around the chancel end suggest that subsidence has been a problem with the chancel’s north wall being some five degrees or more out of plumb. See:
www.heritage.norfolk.gov.uk/record-details?MNF1976-All-Sa...
Still active All Saints is part of South Creake parish and still used for services.
There is isolated, there is very isolated and then there is Waterden Church. Officially known as All Saints, Waterden, it is the last survivor of the village of that name, one of Norfolk’s many deserted medieval villages (DMV).
Subject to an extensive renovation which was only completed in 2019, Waterden can be found down a narrow lane which runs between South Creake and North Barsham. While regarded as Norman there are a couple of features high on the walls which suggest this is an Anglo-Saxon church to which the Normans made a few tweaks and then lost interest in due to the small community.
The building as it stands today appears to date from about 1300 with some 16th century changes to windows which suggest that the village survived the Black Death but may have fallen victim to enclosure and the introduction of more profitable sheep. Sheep pay better than tenants and cause less trouble.
The church was once wider - with a south aisle - with traces of the aisle arches remaining both inside and outside. The font is simple but very old while the box pews are smart and suggest money has been spent on it during the 19th century. There is a fragment of medieval paint on the wall near the door. One door still uses a medieval drawbar instead of a modern lock.
Norfolk Heritage Explorer talks about a collapsed west tower which, at first glance, seems logical. A more recent assessment is that the ruins at the west end are probably a lost nave end rather than a tower. Substantial buttresses around the chancel end suggest that subsidence has been a problem with the chancel’s north wall being some five degrees or more out of plumb. See:
www.heritage.norfolk.gov.uk/record-details?MNF1976-All-Sa...
Still active All Saints is part of South Creake parish and still used for services.