View allAll Photos Tagged whodunnit

Crime Fiction class with NMH teacher and author John Corrigan at Northfield Mount Hermon, April 24, 2015. Students investigate a staged crime in the classtoom. Photographs by Glenn Minshall.

Crime Fiction class with NMH teacher and author John Corrigan at Northfield Mount Hermon, April 24, 2015. Students investigate a staged crime in the classtoom. Photographs by Glenn Minshall.

Mike Windle, of the North East Yorkshire Geology Trust, entertaining children with a dinosaur whodunnit.

Crime Fiction class with NMH teacher and author John Corrigan at Northfield Mount Hermon, April 24, 2015. Students investigate a staged crime in the classtoom. Photographs by Glenn Minshall.

Crime Fiction class with NMH teacher and author John Corrigan at Northfield Mount Hermon, April 24, 2015. Students investigate a staged crime in the classtoom. Photographs by Glenn Minshall.

Crime Fiction class with NMH teacher and author John Corrigan at Northfield Mount Hermon, April 24, 2015. Students investigate a staged crime in the classtoom. Photographs by Glenn Minshall.

Crime Fiction class with NMH teacher and author John Corrigan at Northfield Mount Hermon, April 24, 2015. Students investigate a staged crime in the classtoom. Photographs by Glenn Minshall.

Crime Fiction class with NMH teacher and author John Corrigan at Northfield Mount Hermon, April 24, 2015. Students investigate a staged crime in the classtoom. Photographs by Glenn Minshall.

The first draft of a graphic interpretation of the poem, Giallo, by Simon Barraclough. See www.simonbarraclough.com

Crime Fiction class with NMH teacher and author John Corrigan at Northfield Mount Hermon, April 24, 2015. Students investigate a staged crime in the classtoom. Photographs by Glenn Minshall.

Crime Fiction class with NMH teacher and author John Corrigan at Northfield Mount Hermon, April 24, 2015. Students investigate a staged crime in the classtoom. Photographs by Glenn Minshall.

Crime Fiction class with NMH teacher and author John Corrigan at Northfield Mount Hermon, April 24, 2015. Students investigate a staged crime in the classtoom. Photographs by Glenn Minshall.

Line 'em up! Okay, now whodunnit?

Crime Fiction class with NMH teacher and author John Corrigan at Northfield Mount Hermon, April 24, 2015. Students investigate a staged crime in the classtoom. Photographs by Glenn Minshall.

Crime Fiction class with NMH teacher and author John Corrigan at Northfield Mount Hermon, April 24, 2015. Students investigate a staged crime in the classtoom. Photographs by Glenn Minshall.

Day 50: 19.2.09

 

Wasn't me. It was like that when I got here. If you ask me I think he's just doing it to get himself some attention. "Oh look at me I've been shot and left to expire". It's all me me me me me.

 

Well don't pay him any attention. I'm getting the faint wiff of tomato sause. *sniff* Heinz perhaps *sniff sniff* oh yes definately Heinz. He doesn't smell dead either more like Toblerone and 7up.

 

Well he doing well at playing possum but I'm thinking a good poke with a pointy stick will get him movng :oP

Love these old images ... another image no longer in copyright ... some TLC.

 

VIEW

Looking south at the entry gate into the OBG, along the northern wall. In this artwork, the artist captured the light from the setting sun in the southwest.

 

The garden project started in 1621, was built, grown-in and opened in 1632.

 

WHODUNNIT

After reviewing the Wikipedia pages for the father Augustus Charles Pugin (artist, architectural draughtsman & writer), and the son Augustus Welby Pugin (architect, designer, artist and critic) I have concluded this work was done by the father.

 

The listed date of 1816 makes the son a 4 year old. Gifted son ... but not likely.

 

The son has zero completed buildings in Oxford, but did submit complex designs for multiple campus buildings to Balliol College, and Magdalen College in 1843-1844.

 

The son has no freehand sketches painted in colour to make the Danby Gate fit in with his palette of work.

 

The father spent a great amount of time in Oxford between 1821-1831 for multiple published books about Gothic (go thick?) architecture, including dimensioned drawings of the top of the Magdalen Tower, across the street from the Danby Gate.

 

The father sketched quite frequently, and painted in colour regularly. This does make the Danby Gate fit in with his palette of work.

 

This image is 193-203 years old, as of the May2024 uploading to our photostream.

 

Image Title: Botanic Gate

Image Date: 1821-1831 c.

Artist: Augustus Chalres Pugin (the father)

Source: Wikipedia

Crime Fiction class with NMH teacher and author John Corrigan at Northfield Mount Hermon, April 24, 2015. Students investigate a staged crime in the classtoom. Photographs by Glenn Minshall.

Fred Miller, science editor (Hey! That's me!) (U of A System Division of Agriculture photo by Fred Miller)

The sticker was pealing a bit so i stuck it back - I'm sure the woman walking past who gave me a snooty look as I took this picture thought I'd stuck this up myself!

 

Whodunnit?!

Crime Fiction class with NMH teacher and author John Corrigan at Northfield Mount Hermon, April 24, 2015. Students investigate a staged crime in the classtoom. Photographs by Glenn Minshall.

Crime Fiction class with NMH teacher and author John Corrigan at Northfield Mount Hermon, April 24, 2015. Students investigate a staged crime in the classtoom. Photographs by Glenn Minshall.

Looks like we can close the books on these two.....

I always loved how Pertwee appeared during his stints on the Doctor Who convention circuit. Soft craggy features, pure white hair and the staple velvet and frills.

Made in Super Sculpey.

For more, check out my Instagram!

www.instagram.com/jamesthesculptor/?hl=en

Emily and Iris both had birthdays while here in Colorado, and had parties with their friends. Abby's birthday is in July, and since we won't be here then, we went ahead and had a Happy 11 5/6th birthday party for her with her friends. She wanted to have a mystery party with her friends -- kudos to Andrea for coming up with an appropriate cake!

And quite frankly my daughter has been generally vile and is lucky it wasn't her.

Mount Hekla. Iceland’s most active volcano and the medieval “Mouth of Hell”. In my fictional saga, which was the inspiration for Tolkien to write Lord of the Rings, this is the Mount Doom into which a Viking tosses the magic ring that he discovered in the Rhine. There are bits of Iceland that look a lot like Mordor. In my novel "Where The Shadows Lie", this lost saga turns up, and a professor is murdered. Would people kill for the saga that inspired Tolkien? You bet they would! My detective Magnus has to work whodunnit.

 

To find out more see www.michaelridpath.com .

Lithograph

Crayon black on Hahnemuhle copperplate bright white

22" x 30"

 

This is about to go into edition and will be available for purchase soon.

The three books form a stage, which I thought was quite apt, and better still, they supported each other while I took the photo. I put the camera in macro mode and moved in close so that the edges didn't show.

The books are #1, 2 and 4 in the series. My wife has read all of these. I can't get past chapter one in the first book although I've tried three times.

Poster for the 'whodunnit' spoof. Blatella Productions available for commission www.blatella.co.uk

Gerda Loynes. Is she good? or is she bad? you'll have to come to a tall tale mysteries event to find out.

www.facebook.com/TallTalesMysteries/

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