View allAll Photos Tagged mcgregors
Bridal shoot at Ballast Point located in Birchgrove at the tip of the Balmain Peninsula, Sydney Australia. The backdrop forms part of a derelict fuel depot. The site has now become a public park and was designed by McGregor Coxal
A town on the great Mississippi River. I believe that the high point in the background is Pike's Peak, the one in Iowa not the one in Colorado of Hillclimb fame. Hopefully someone familiar with the area can confirm or correct me.
Happy Telegraph Tuesday!
Update: After studying a satellite view of the scene it appears that Pikes Peak in this area of Iowa would have to appear to the left of the house near the center, not to the right of it. The Post Office dock at the right margin of the photo and the utility pole with the three transformers helped to locate the vantage point for this photo.
Excerpt from heritageburlington.ca:
An oustanding example of a Flemish-bond brick structure in Regency Style. The lowpitched end-gabled roof has wide eaves, decorative wood brackets, and returns. The centre front gable has an arched window and the gable ends have a quarter-pie window on either side of the chimney. The first-level windows are large. The front windows may have opened as French windows on to a verandah. They have multi-paned glass and low wood panels. The centre door is single, with sidelights and transom and similar wood panels. The door frame may be a restoration, but is well designed and executed. The front gable has some decorative bargeboard trim, added later. There is a rear open porch with a shed roof.
Built in 1850 for Donald McGregor.
This lake is just simply incredible. Its rawness and beauty is something that can only be appreciated while witnessing on its shoreline. Take some time...get there!
Seen at Haunted Silent Peacock Hotel & The Town of Lost Shores
Great Haunted Sim with many surprises. ✈ Visit Peacock Hotel
Taken at Midwest Mayhem
Strobist Info:
AB800 into AB Large Octabox to camera left. Metz 48AF into medium shoot thru umbrella up against the wall at waist height from camera right. Triggered with cybersyncs.
All images are © Ross Holmes, All Rights Reserved. Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission
Early morning sun spills over the mountains and creates a bowl of light. Lake Mcgregor, South Island. NZ.
Typical Karoo architecture, from the Victorian period - shutters, ‘broekie lace,’ a modern curved wall…. I love the details of these places.
Established in 1861, the small Karoo village of McGregor was originally called Lady Grey. It was renamed in 1905 in honour of the Rev. Andrew McGregor, who for forty years had served as the Dutch Reformed Minister for the area.
The once-sleepy village has become something of a refuge in recent years for those seeking respite from the big city blues, in search of quieter, slower, more creative or adventurous lifestyles. For visitors and weekenders, too, McGregor offers the perfect Karoo getaway, within easy driving distance from Cape Town, yet a world away. Still, the old persists with the new, and the influx of new money can’t wholly hide the inequalities that lurk on the outskirts.
Taken over a ten-year period, between 2012 and 2022, this series of photographs is from a project on South African country villages and towns. Many of the images are of small Karoo towns, and many of these in turn are of the Dutch Reformed Churches whose steeples are visible for miles around in the vast, semi-desert region that lies, metaphorically and geographically, at South Africa’s centre.
There is something about these Karoo towns, in particular, that has always spoken to me - the stillness of the empty streets in the heat of the day, the white, shuttered cottages, the big skies overhead. And always, at the edge of town, or sprawling out into the arid land, the coloured settlement or African location. In South Africa, as elsewhere, as Faulkner wrote, ‘The past is never dead. It’s not even past.’
"PRIX DE LAUSANNE 2023"
Le Prix de Lausanne 2023, qui fêtait son 50e anniversaire avec cette édition, a ainsi désigné deux premiers ex aequo : l’espagnol Millán De Benito de Royal Conservatory of Dance Mariemma et Fabrizzio Ulloa Cornejo, élève de l’école de Bâle.
Une petite entorse à la règle pour récompenser deux grands talents, aux même choix de variation classique (Flammes de Paris) qui ont chacun brillé en scène.
A McGregor cottage of a different kind - stylistically a nod to traditional Karoo architecture, but turned inside out, face to the rear with only a solitary door leading onto the street, and not a window in sight. The monumental, monolithic, almost abstract quality of this construct is what interested me, along with what it says about social relations and sense of community.
Established in 1861, the small Karoo village of McGregor was originally called Lady Grey. It was renamed in 1905 in honour of the Rev. Andrew McGregor, who for forty years had served as the Dutch Reformed Minister for the area.
The once-sleepy village has become something of a refuge in recent years for those seeking respite from the big city blues, in search of quieter, slower, more creative or adventurous lifestyles. For visitors and weekenders, too, McGregor offers the perfect Karoo getaway, within easy driving distance from Cape Town, yet a world away. Still, the old persists with the new, and the influx of new money can’t wholly hide the inequalities that lurk on the outskirts.
Taken over a ten-year period, between 2012 and 2022, this series of photographs is from a project on South African country villages and towns. Many of the images are of small Karoo towns, and many of these in turn are of the Dutch Reformed Churches whose steeples are visible for miles around in the vast, semi-desert region that lies, metaphorically and geographically, at South Africa’s centre.
There is something about these Karoo towns, in particular, that has always spoken to me - the stillness of the empty streets in the heat of the day, the white, shuttered cottages, the big skies overhead. And always, at the edge of town, or sprawling out into the arid land, the coloured settlement or African location. In South Africa, as elsewhere, as Faulkner wrote, ‘The past is never dead. It’s not even past.’
I have this in a little box with about 4-5 other charms and pins. My handwritten note says "From Grandma Winterbottom -- her dad maybe?"
I have always been told that Scottish is included (among several others) in my lineage, but I don't remember ever hearing the name McGregor. So who knows.
The background lighting here is coming from an LED lighted running safety vest. Sadly this unanticipated effect is about the closest I got to seeing the aurora borealis in the past few days.
Behind the scenes:
This is the grave of Rob Roy McGregor, his wife Helen and two of his sons at Balquhidder Church. Rob Roy McGregor is a Scottish folk hero.