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This is another view from the communion altar in the next room to the main altar. The hanging lamp is shown in more detail in the next pic in my stream.
View On Black (large)
available at my etsy shop ➡️ etsy.me/3BCEmLK
available at my etsy shop ➡️ etsy.me/3BCEmLK
available at my etsy shop ➡️ etsy.me/3BCEmLK
available at my etsy shop ➡️ etsy.me/3BCEmLK
available at my etsy shop ➡️ etsy.me/3BCEmLK
This Green BoardShade Hanging Lamp is handcrafted using a pair of green board shorts that feature a beautiful flower pattern. Every BoardShade is a unique, one-of-a-kind, handmade creation made from board shorts that were handpicked for their historic pattern so once it's GONE it's GONE for GOOD!
BoardShade Hanging Lamps are perfect for hanging practically anywhere! From the living room or bedroom to the deck or patio, the possibilities are endless! BoardShades are both fire resistant and waterproof.
www.etsy.com/listing/75123940/11-inch-green-boardshade-ha...
"The Church of St Catherine (1840s, 1878-79, 1885, John Pollard Seddon) Hoarwithy, Herefordshire, Photograph by James Russiello, August 27, 2017
"The Church of St Catherine is a Church of England parish church at Hoarwithy in the English county of Herefordshire. Brooks and Pevsner describe it as "the most impressive Victorian church in the county. Designed in an Italian Romanesque style by the architect John Pollard Seddon for the Revd William Poole, vicar of Hentland with Hoarwithy, it is a Grade I listed building."
"The original chapel on the site was a "brick building" of the 1840s which Poole considered; "An ugly brick building with no pretensions to any style of architecture." Coming into his inheritance in 1870, Poole commissioned Seddon to undertake a total rebuilding. The building history is "unclear"; designs were exhibited at the Royal Academy in 1874, and the main building period appears to have been 1878-79, although English Heritage records much work as post-dating 1885. Brooks and Pevsner consider that this may relate "largely to the internal decoration." Work has continued into the 21st century with the addition of the "Dubricius" polyptych[5] by the artist Edward Kelly, and the restoration of the organ."