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I have to verify that this was captured in the GREEK pavilion at the Venice Biennale 2007... The installation by Nilos Alexiou is called The End and is inspired by the floor mosaic in the Catholicon of the Iviron Monastery on Mount Athos (10-11th century A.D.)
Germania's Boeing 737-300, D-AGEK, waiting by the gate at Helsinki-Vantaa airport. I think it was operating for Air Berlin on that particular day.
Behind it can be seen the tails of KLM and Turkish Airlines' Boeing 737s.
Picture taken once again through a layer of glass (hence 'the grey effect'.)
Made with 5136 Zen Magnets.
This shape is a cube, inside an octahedron, inside another cube, inside another octahedron. Simple in theory, tough in practice!
Someone knocked over a poster column on St. George St. The bottom looked singed, for some reason. You can see the accumulated layers of paper.
From Robin Robertson's 1000 Vegan Recipes, page 226.
A Greek baked pasta, with layers of macaroni, red sauce w/ chopped chickpeas and spinach, and a creamy bechemel.
A short eastbound NS manifest climbs uphill between Portage and Lilly on the West Slope late on a somewhat cloudy afternoon. Still, the hill is steep enough to require helpers pushing on the rear.
St John the Baptist, Layer de la Haye, Essex
The largest of the Layers, and usually referred to as simply Layer. Open. A small, pretty little church beside Abberton reservoir. Inside is homely and warm, late Victorian. Very cosy. There is an Easter Sepulchre tomb from the 1540s, exceptionally late and the liturgy it would have served can only have had months to run when it was installed.
Very friendly churchwardens inside doing the books and playing the organ, although they assured me that the church is always open every day. Unfortunately, I was so busy talking that I left my Essex Pevsner beside the visitors book, and had to go back for it the following week.
Having fun with my MISTI and Hero Arts Layered Squirrel.
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Back to images from last BC trip. We know how altitude as well as latitude affects weather. Here is a prime example from sea level on up.
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Layer Marney Tower near Colchester in Essex is the tallest Tudor Gatehouse in the UK, a magnificent building standing 80 feet tall within stunning grounds.
The Tower stands on the shores of the river Blackwater, and construction was initiated by Lord Henry Marney in the 1520s, a close friend of Henry VIII. The King visited the Layer Marney Tower during its construction - at the same time Cardinal Wolsey was building his home which would eventually be confiscated by the King.
The Gatehouse building works were continued by his son after his death were supposed to be part of a grand palace, but construction ceased after his son's death. What stands today is a glimpse into the luxurious aspirations of a 16th century lord, now a family-run venue which opens its doors to the public at certain times of the year, and it still does not fail to impress.