Showing posts with label Cymru. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cymru. Show all posts

Sunday, 3 January 2016

The picture I have chosen to upload for today is of the rear entrance to the extensive walled  at Llanerchaeron This shot was taken on a bright sunny day in June 2015 as a three shot HDR. However rather than just process as an HDR I have here, converted it to a "Artistic Monochrome" in Photomatix and bled colour back to 20%. Following that I have increased the green hue using Photoshop. I think it adds a mysterious but inviting look into the walled garden.


Llanerchaeron, onetime known as "Llanayron House" , is a grade I listed mansion on the River Aeron, near Aberaeron, Ceredigion designed and built in 1795 by John Nash for Major (later Colonel) William Lewis as a model, self-sufficient farm complex.
The neighbouring parish church of St Non was also redesigned by Nash.

Thursday, 31 December 2015

First today was Opulant Dining at Tredegar House, simply shot at 3200 DIN, 1/40th of a second and f3.5.

later I lightened the shadows and added just a hint of contrast.




Tredegar House / Tŷ Tredegar
is a 17th-century Charles II-era country house mansion in Coedkernew, at the western edge of the city of Newport.
 
For over five hundred years it was home to the Morgan family, later Lords Tredegar (until they left in 1951); one of the most powerful and influential families in the area. Described by John Newman in his book The Buildings of Wales, as "The grandest and most exuberant country house" in Monmouthshire and one of the "outstanding houses of the Restoration period in the whole of Britain".
 
The house stands in a now reduced landscaped garden of 90 acres (36.5 Hectares).
 
After 1951 the house was bought by the Catholic Church as a convent school with boarders, later St. Joseph's Roman Catholic comprehensive school. It was bought by the Newport Corporation Council in 1974, giving rise to its then status as "the grandest council house in Britain".
 
In December 2011 the National Trust signed an agreement with Newport City Council to take on the management of the building, as well as the 90 acres of gardens and parkland, on a 50-year lease from 2012. The Trust said that Tredegar House was of "great importance" as many similar properties had been lost in the past 100 years.