There is something pleasing about the aged, worn materials that form these roofs in Stamford, Lincolnshire. Just as there is something attractive about the way they all differ, all cluster together, and collectively make a jumble that the eye finds fascinating. Collyweston stone tiles, slates from Wales and Westmoreland, bricks from locally dug pits and Peterborough, stone from nearby Barnack and elsewhere, and clay chimney pots from who knows where, can all be seen and all make a contribution. The constituent parts of the buildings look timeless but few, if any, date from before the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, and quite a bit is nineteenth century.
photo © T. Boughen Camera: Sony DSC-RX100
Sunday, 19 February 2017
Friday, 17 February 2017
Pool by the River Slea
I've passed this pool a couple of times on a walk along the River Slea from Sleaford and never worked out why it is there. It borders the river but its flow into the Slea is controlled. The hut at one end of it appears to be linked with its purpose.The pool is clearly man-made, at times looks stagnant, and has reeds encroaching on it. My eye is drawn to it because the straw-burning power station can be glimpsed beyond and together, on a frosty morning, they make an interesting composition.
photo © T. Boughen Camera: Olympus OMD E-M10
photo © T. Boughen Camera: Olympus OMD E-M10
Wednesday, 15 February 2017
St Margaret, King's Lynn
The building of King's Lynn's church of St Margaret began around 1101 and from those early days evidence may be seen in the base of the west towers. However, like most large churches its construction took a few hundred years. The oldest tower is the far one (south west) built in the 1100s and 1200s, but with a new bell stage added in the 1300s. The other tower mainly dates from 1453 and the following years. Since they were each built in the style(s) of the times they differ considerably. The church had a priory attached in the early days. In 2011 it was re-designated King's Lynn Minster by the Bishop of Norwich.
photo © T. Boughen Camera: Olympus OMD E-M10
photo © T. Boughen Camera: Olympus OMD E-M10
Labels:
architecture,
church,
King's Lynn,
medieval,
minster,
Norfolk
Monday, 13 February 2017
Wooden angel with lute
The worshippers in England's medieval churches were often surveyed from on high by angels. Wooden angels, of the kind shown above, that is.These angels were frequently playing instruments - making music and singing - as they were said to do in the Bible. Almost all of those above the nave and chancel of the church of St Nicholas in King's Lynn, Norfolk were equipped with stringed, wind and percussion instruments, and all but two were made of unpainted wood. Only those in the chancel near the altar received colour. Incidentally, photographing these angels is always difficult due to the glare from windows and artificial lights. You can see it creeping in at the bottom of the frame.
photo © T. Boughen Camera: Olympus OMD E-M10
photo © T. Boughen Camera: Olympus OMD E-M10
Labels:
angel roof,
church,
King's Lynn,
Norfolk,
St Nicholas
Saturday, 11 February 2017
Inshore fishing boat, King's Lynn
A number of fishing boats can be seen moored at Kings Lynn in Norfolk. These inshore boats mainly fish in the large, shallow bay between Lincolnshire and East Anglia called The Wash. Their principal catch is, I read, cockles, most of which are processed in the town and then sold to Spain. Though the boats are usually tied fast to the quayside sometimes one is more loosely fastened, like "Seagull" above, making for a more interesting photograph.
photo © T. Boughen Camera: Olympus OMD E-M10
photo © T. Boughen Camera: Olympus OMD E-M10
Thursday, 9 February 2017
Green Man misericord
A misericord is a seat in church choir stalls. It folds up and offers a small ledge on which a medieval monk would lean. This would rest his weary legs and make onlookers think he was standing during the periods of the long religious service when that was required. The one in the photograph, is raised (the ledge is above the carved head), and has like most misericords, a carving on its base. Here it is a "Green Man", a character that is widely thought to be pre-Christian i.e. pagan, but which the church adopted and adapted. This example is one of the "disgorging" variety. That is to say, leaves come only from his mouth. It dates from c.1370-80 and is one of a group in the church of St Margaret at King's Lynn in Norfolk.
photo © T. Boughen Camera: Olympus OMD E-M10
photo © T. Boughen Camera: Olympus OMD E-M10
Labels:
carving,
Green Man,
Kings Lynn,
misericord,
Norfolk,
seat,
St Margaret,
wood
Tuesday, 7 February 2017
Palace Theatre, Newark on Trent
The Palace Theatre at Newark on Trent in Nottinghamshire was built in 1920 as a cinema, but with the facility to offer stage shows too. To furnish additional income two shops were added to the building. Unlike many cinemas and theatres it appears to have weathered the ups and downs of public taste and continues to offer a wide programme of shows. The Palace stands on a corner and its decorative facade wraps around it. As befits a building dedicated to fun and fantasy it is ornate, the most striking ornament being the three slender towers topped with onion domes.
photo © T. Boughen Camera: Olympus OMD E-M10
photo © T. Boughen Camera: Olympus OMD E-M10
Sunday, 5 February 2017
Frosty Fenland landscape
Winter trees make good photographic subjects. They give landscapes detail and their skeletal silhouettes offer a stark beauty. On a frosty winter day the contrast between black branches and the overcast sky and whitened ground is stronger still. In the photograph the mist is enhancing this effect further. The trees visible above are managing to hang on in an intensively farmed area because they have grown either on the side of a drainage ditch or next to a farm building and so are are no impediment to the vehicles that cultivate the land and harvest the crops.
photo © T. Boughen Camera: Olympus OMD E-M10
photo © T. Boughen Camera: Olympus OMD E-M10
Labels:
agriculture,
black and white,
Fens,
fields,
frost,
landscape,
trees,
winter
Friday, 3 February 2017
Fenland smallholding
The Fens used to be a land of small, independent farmers and smallholders, each earning a living from the fertile soil of this drained, lowland area. However, mechanisation and the pressure for cheap food led to consolidation, bigger farms and contractors working the land. Smallholders still exist, but in much reduced numbers, often as hobbyists. This old smallholding appears to have been recently sold. I photographed it on a frosty morning as dark clouds moving in from the west began to obscure the sun and turn the day darker than was promised.
photo © T. Boughen Camera: Olympus OMD E-M10
photo © T. Boughen Camera: Olympus OMD E-M10
Labels:
Fens,
frost,
landscape,
morning,
silhouettes,
smallholding,
winter
Wednesday, 1 February 2017
Misty Town Bridge, Boston
photo © T. Boughen Camera: Sony DSC-RX100
Labels:
Boston,
Lincolnshire,
mist,
morning,
photography,
River Witham,
Town Bridge,
weather
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