View allAll Photos Tagged stoop

kyle's building

Bayou Boogaloo 2017

Bayou St. John

Mid City

New Orleans, Louisiana

This is my favorite shirt, and my favorite skirt, and I always want to wear them together, but know that it looks kind of silly and wrong. Is that symbolic?

 

I'm on the fire escape in my summer room. I have never had a fire escape. We are making friends. The camera is sitting inside on the dresser that I took for free from my last roommate when I moved. It is not a particularly good dresser, but, you know. It seems you need stuff.

This Stoop is on the B5035 at the junction to Brassington.

completed stoop by STUDIO handyman Alex Rothera

Day 19. Park Slope Brooklyn at Night. Shot with the D200 on a tripod in the snow.

And they survived the hail storm, unlike the rest of my plants and the neighbors' mums.

in greenpoint brooklyn

STOOP, design by Julien de Smedt.

 

Photo: Adam Stirling/Vestre

After Roman times, roads developed to meet local needs. In 1555, an Act of Parliament made local parishes (or often townships in the North) responsible for their upkeep and boundary markers became more important.

 

In 1697, County Justices were ordered to erect guideposts (stoops) on the moors and where highways crossed. These are often beautifully inscribed, with old spellings and letttering, wigh cuffed hands indicating directions and distances in'long miles', about a quarter longer than statute miles.

 

This mile post with oneside showing a hand pointing to Thunderbridge now hidden by courtesy of the post office contractors, is at the corner of Stocksmoor Road and Cross Lane. The face shown indicating the way to Shepley.

 

12th February 2013

Just chillin with a Sofles piece

Cellar / pipe runs

Many of the stoop rails and steps in my neighborhood were not shoveled yet and were thick with freshly fallen snow.

Taken with a 1942 Ciro-flex TLR.

The Sanibel Stoop event on Feb. 17. Designed to break a Guinness Book World Record in the largest shell scavenger hunt category, it urges islanders and visitors to show up for an aerial photo and to sign their names to be sent to the Guinness to prove the island has broken the 208-person record.

Gargoyles seen in the courtyard at Haddon Hall!

 

Haddon Hall is Grade I listed.

 

Haddon Hall, Nether Haddon

 

SK 26 NW PARISH OF NETHER HADDON HADDON ROAD

2/28 (North Side)

29.9.51 Haddon Hall

GV I

  

Large double courtyard, fortified manor house. Seat of the Dukes of Rutland

and built by the Vernon family. Fragments of C12 work but mainly of two periods

with the upper courtyard built mainly in the second quarter of Cl4 and the lower

courtyard built mostly in C15, but also with major refashionings and alterations

of C16 and C17 and a major restoration between 1920 and 1930, supervised by Mr

Leonard Stanhope, the Clerk of Works. Limestone and gritstone rubble and ashlar

gritstone with gritstone dressings and quoins. Leaded roof, mostly hidden by

embattled parapets with ridgeback copings, roofs and parapets mostly C20.

Numerous stone ridge and side wall stacks, mostly C20, some with crenellated tops,

plus massive late C15 external stacks to west side of Great Hall and, possibly

C14, corbelled out stone stacks to north walls. Two storeys with four storey

north-west gatetower, and three storey eastern Peveril Tower and north-east

lodgings to upper courtyard. Double courtyard plan on sloping site with upper

courtyard to north-east and lower courtyard to south-west. Upper courtyard has

Peveril's Tower, the original entrance, and the state bedroom to east range, Long

Gallery to south and the present Duke's apartments to north, whilst the lower

courtyard has the continuation of the private apartments and the north-west entrance

tower to north, offices and lodgings to west and the Chapel and the Earl's Bedroom

to south, between the two courtyards the Great Hall and its service rooms.

North elevation has late C15 entrance tower to west with C14 kitchen range to east

and beyond the Duke's apartments, mostly C17 but much restored. Entrance tower

has steps up to moulded, shallow pointed arch with hoodmould and double studded

oak doors. To west a slit window and beyond an ornate ashlar, stepped buttress with

relief carving to upper part. Above door a blank plaque with hoodmould and 3-light

cavetto moulded mullion window with pointed lights and incised spandrels, set in

ovolo moulded recess with hoodmould. Above again similar plaque, but decorated with

upturned acorns, and similar 3-light window. Similar blank plaque and window over

with large coat of arms immediately above, breaking through the moulded stringcourse

with gargoyles,on to the parapets. Beyond the C14 stacks to east, a Cl7 wing with

range of recessed and chamfered mullion windows. Attached to west corner of tower

an embattled ashlar wall with four-centred arched doorcase with hoodmould, under

large coat of arms of the 'Kings of the Peak', which has to either side a carved

frieze of the Vernons family shields. West side of tower has polygonal staircase

turret to south corner, corbelled out at first floor level.

Garden front to south of limestone and gritstone rubble with gritstone quoins and

continuous moulded sill bands to first floor windows and continuous moulded eaves

stringcourse. Four bay, early C17, section to east with advanced square, two

storey bay flanked by canted, two storey, bay windows with another window to east,

and attached to west a five bay C16 section, much refashioned in C17, with the Chapel

beyond to west. Eastern section has a range of recessed and ovolo moulded, double

transomed windows to Long Gallery at first floor level with recessed and chamfered

windows below. Lower section attached to west with two storey canted bay window

with large carved crest on parapets, beyond. To west again three, first floor,

oriel windows, each with recessed and ovolo moulded mullion and transomed windows,

central oriel with double angled sides. To extreme west, the Chapel, set at a

different angle, with Perp 5-light east window, two flat headed Perp chancel windows,

C13 lancets in the south aisle and C15 cusped clerestorey windows. To opposite

side of the Chapel in the lower courtyard stands a C15 octagonal bell turret with

cusped Y-tracery arches to all sides at the top. Attached to east end of the Chapel

the remains of C14 timber walling, now mainly enveloped in the late C16 rebuilding

of the Earl's Bedroom which has mullion and transomed canted bay windows at first

floor level. Great Hall to east range of the lower courtyard has C14, 2-light,

low transomed, windows with central quatrefoil over cusped lights, to either side

of late C15 external stack. To north C15 three storey porch and to south projecting

parlour wing.

Interior - the Chapel has two bay arcades of double chamfered pointed arches,

that to north on C15 capital and polygonal column, that to south on mutilated

late C12 scalloped capital and column. Fine 'grisailles' wall paintings to nave

and early C17 oak pews and furnishings, inscribed 'GM 1624'. C15 stained glass

to east, north and south windows, east one inscribed 'Ornate pro animabus Riccardi

Vernon et Benedicte uxoris eius qui fecerunt anno dni 1472'. Below east window

a C14 Nottingham alabaster reredos, introduced in C20. C12 plain circular font

with C17 cover of double curved scrolls meeting at central knob and 1894 marble

tomb to Robert Manners, with figure of dead boy to top and coats of arms and heads

of family to sides, to south side of nave. Opposite a C15 stoop on octagonal stem

with crenellated top. Great Hall has C15 timber screens passage with cusped

panelling and gallery over, also arched braced roof dated 1923, C16 panelled lobby

to south through to parlour and C16 panelling to the walls; large cavetto moulded

fireplace to west and four,four-centred arched doorcases to north of screens

passage, eastern one opens on to the staircase up to the gallery, whilst the other

three lead to the kitchen, pantry and buttery, all have original oak studded doors.

C14 kitchen has two massive segmental fireplaces, impressive C17 oak kitchen

furniture and C16 chamfered cross beam roof supported near centre by braced wooden

pier. Bakehouse beyond to east with breadovens and dough troughs, with slaughter

house beyond again to east. Parlour to south of the Great Hall has its original

cl500 painted ceiling, and panelling throughout,dated 1545, with carved frieze

next to ceiling. Above is the Earl's Bedroom, refashioned in C17, when plasterwork

frieze and ceiling, and panelling inserted. Beyond this room to west another

apartment with the remains of C14 timber walling still visible. Long Gallery

and State Bedroom to east, both C17. Long Gallery has classically inspired

panelling, hugh windows and plasterwork ceiling. State Bedroom beyond, has fireplace

with elborate plaster overmantle similar to those at Hardwick. Sources see

Country Life CVI (1949) December 23, pp 1884, 'Haddon Hall' by Christopher Hussey,

The Royal Archaeological Institute Journal Vol 118, 'Haddon Hall and Bolsover

Castle', pg 188 by P A Faulkner and the National Ancient Monument Review Vol I

'The reinstatement of Haddon Hall' by John Swarbrick pg 135.

  

Listing NGR: SK2348566368

  

This text is a legacy record and has not been updated since the building was originally listed. Details of the building may have changed in the intervening time. You should not rely on this listing as an accurate description of the building.

 

Source: English Heritage

 

Listed building text is © Crown Copyright. Reproduced under licence.

 

Cobble Hill, Brooklyn on the day after a snowstorm

Rundle Street Pavement Mural, Adelaide

Bayou Boogaloo 2017

Bayou St. John

Mid City

New Orleans, Louisiana

stoop sale frog - Jersey City

Bayou Boogaloo 2017

Bayou St. John

Mid City

New Orleans, Louisiana

holga135-07-20

 

CVS 200 film pre-soaked in window cleaner.

Upper East Side, Manhattan, New York City, New York

completed stoop by STUDIO handyman Alex Rothera

Captured in Porto, Portugal.

This Stoop is on the B5035 at the junction to Brassington.

chair next to stoop in northeast baltimore

Fort Greene, Brooklyn

This Stoop is on the B5035 at the junction to Brassington.

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