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A detail of my one and only and much treasured suede leather jacket.
Thank you so much everyone, for viewing and faving! Have a wonderful start into the new week.
Sex'i poses - Live for music
Marked - Quartz earring and Triquetra necklace
Nero - Suede overcoat
ManCave
Norrsken över Umeå stad. Aurora Borealis.
europa.eu/newsroom/events/eu-arctic-forum_fr
ec.europa.eu/fisheries/press/save-date-eu-arctic-forum-oc...
â“’Rebecca Bugge, All Rights Reserved
Do not use without permission.
Tomb from the church of Näshult, which predates the current church (the church is from 1735 - the burial from 1572). And the photo lies a bit - the stone is placed in the floor, not standing up, but I liked the effect from this angle.
The man buried here is Nils Persson from Holma, of the noble Silfversparre family (Silfversparre is a description of the coat of arms which later was used as a family name, so if you look at the stone you can see that coat of arms, but the name Silfversparre isn't actually mentioned). Nils Persson was first mentioned in 1529 and had several important functions in the higher echelons of society - though they are hard to translate to English so I won't try. He died October 19 1572, at six in the afternoon (according to the stone). Nils Persson had acquired a lot of land in his life-time and he seems to have been rather ruthless - and he had actually killed a man in 1551. He had at least three children, including a daughter - who was also accused of murder. She was later executed, but not for that, but for treachery towards the king. You can't help but get the feeling that if you were important enough, back in the day, you really could get away with murder...
© Leanne Boulton, All Rights Reserved
Street photography from Glasgow, Scotland.
Previously unpublished archive shot from February 2019. Enjoy!
Capturing the morning light as it cast across the dunes creates a soft glow and shadow contrasts that paint a pretty picture.
â“’Rebecca Bugge, All Rights Reserved
Do not use without permission
An old window at Eksjöhovgård (lit. Oak lake manor). And note the thickness of the walls!
The manor is situated just outside of the town Sävsjö, built in the 1650s by Carl Mauritz Lewenhaupt (who died with the title of field marshal in 1666). But it was not completed by the time of his death and his family could not complete the project. It saw substantial remodelling in the 1730s (including the tearing down of the top floor - so it is now a two storey structure). In 1812 the copper roof was sold and the manor quickly deteriorated - as buildings with no roof on tend to do...