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Situated at the far end of Lanark before heading the old road to Edinburgh

Lanark County, Ontario

Situated at the far end of Lanark before heading the old road to Edinburgh

The Beck barn was completed in 1944 and was the last arched-roof barn built in the Bear Lake Valley, Idaho. Worthy Beck and others built it and used it as a dairy barn until 1968. Linda and I have often photographed it in Lanark, Idaho and I like the different look it had in the winter fog. The barn is featured in "Historic Barns of Southeastern Idaho" published by the Bear River Heritage Area.

old buildings of new lanark

A pair of 385s head for Lanark, passing Cartland, 14th December 2022.

The Clyde River going through the village of Lanark. Taken on my way to the start of a ride.

This is a photoshop double exposure using the barn as one shot and the straw/grass around it as a second. While I did a double in camera, I once again preferred the layering of the two singles that I got in post.

 

I thought that this photo would work for Sliders Sunday.

 

HSS

 

©AnvilcloudPhotography

With the monthly PLPR visit.

The town of Lanark, Idaho is little more than scattered ranches strung along this road for about five miles. There are still a few interesting buildings like the Beck barn in this photo. Years ago, Lanark had a rural school but it is long gone.

The Weir from the picnic benches near the cafe in New Lanark Village World Heritage Site

 

This is an in-camera double exposure. The first photo was of the main barn composition; the second was pointing the camera away from the barn to a bright spot in the sky. I did some post processing such as darkening the sky and brightening the barn. I wonder if this would be a good b&w conversion.

 

©AnvilcloudPhotography

I took this photo from the same spot and settings as yesterday's photo, which I shall put in comments. However, I used a different part of the sky for a double exposure overlay. In this case I did not prefer, how the camera blended the barn photo with the sky photo. Fortunately, I have the camera set to save the individual images as well as the combined image, so I used the two images to do a blend in Photoshop. Then, I converted to mono. It is now a manual double exposure that looks like a regular photo. It rendered a better sky than the one that was directly overhead the barn at the time.

 

©AnvilcloudPhotography

Went down to New Lanark and the Falls Of Clyde today, after the weather forecast promised sunshine. As you can see I was quite disappointed!

I know this is getting a bit repetitive because it is the same barn from the same position. It is a slightly wider angle, and it does have a different sky as a result of double-exposure blending in Photoshop. There is something about this one that I prefer more than the previous photo (Comments).

 

©AnvilcloudPhotography

An early morning shot from Blackhill looking over the Clyde Valley towards Lanark with some early autumn mist and fog rolling over the hills.

Lower waterfall on the Clyde at New Lanark

Back to the barn, this photo being in colour for a change.

 

©AnvilcloudPhotography

©AnvilcloudPhotography

Scottish landscape in september

Old Lanark racecourse abandoned tote building. Racecourse likely to have been founded din the 12th century.

I only had my phone with me but this came out very much the way I saw it.

New Lanark scene - 18th century cotton mill town

Colas Rail Freight’s 37219 ‘Jonty Jarvis’ and 37099 ‘Merl Evans’ are seen after arriving into Lanark with 1Q75 from Mossend Yard to Mossend Yard via Lanark, Ayr, North Berwick, Tweedbank and Milngavie. (25/11/21)

New Lanark mills on a sunny day with the River Clyde flowing slowly past. The river levels are very low due to a long period of dry weather!

Flyaway hair.

 

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New Lanark cotton mills - a UNESCO World Heritage Site - on the River Clyde.

 

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falls of clyde, new lanark

This is the third photo from yesterday's rural ramble, and I have probably shown the three best. This might be my fave of the day. I think this was taken on or near Don Fosters Road (although this name doesn't appear on the Flickr map) as we approached the village of Lanark as we began to wend our way home.,

©AnvilcloudPhotography

New Lanark is a village on the River Clyde, approximately 1.4 miles (2.2 kilometres) from Lanark, in Lanarkshire, and some 25 miles (40 km) southeast of Glasgow, Scotland. It was founded in 1786 by David Dale, who built cotton mills and housing for the mill workers. Dale built the mills there in a brief partnership with the English inventor and entrepreneur Richard Arkwright to take advantage of the water power provided by the only waterfalls on the River Clyde. Under the ownership of a partnership that included Dale's son-in-law, Robert Owen, a Welsh philanthropist and social reformer, New Lanark became a successful business and an early example of a planned settlement and so an important milestone in the historical development of urban planning.[1]. This information courtesy of Wikipedia where there is much more info and history on New Lanark.

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