Tied to dreams
cauldron of chaos black
New crockery design, Phil?
Feel like a woman
The keys to my heart
Bésame Mucho
Time is free but it's priceless
Don't despair
fractal mesh 2 - distort - glass blocks
fractal mesh 2 glass buttons
fractal mesh
fractal bat - repeat - grad
fractal casket lid
The journey is the destination
fantasy fabric
I have less and less idea what is going on
The day Lidl's had no ibuprofen in stock
What have I created?????????
multicoloured trees
Beauty in others
Jar of hearts
Mist on the lake
Old father time
Blue on black
Silks and satins and buttons and bows
Lost in their love
rain
twisted
waves
Reach out....
Oh, funny owl
The object of art
Time for a drink?
Clifford Tower, York Castle
The chemicals you cannot see :-(
What lies at the end of the hall?
Seaside Special
The blue tie
Dreaming
Layers
Goodness Gracious...Great Balls of Fire
In the tall grass
The cycle of life
Physcodelic heavens
Old faithful
Peek- a- boo
Notes of gold
Under the stars
Temptation
My Chihuli Orb ;-)
Struggling for survival
Curbed longing...
Tulip surprises
Slipway at Cromer, Norfolk
At the end of the day. Tribute to BB King
Blues all over me..
Belton House, Grantham, Lincs
Give it up ;-)
Bee on a thistle
Fantasy alley
Mablethorpe Surprise ;-)
Waiting for his boat to come in.....
All that glitters is not gold ;-)
Easter Greetings
April Fool
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- Photo replaced on 18 Feb 2014
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804 visits
Boughton House, Northamptonshire
Boughton was originally a monastic building but Sir Edward Montagu, Lord Chief Justice to King Henry VIII, purchased it in 1528 just prior to the Dissolution of the Monasteries and began to convert it into a mansion. Most of the present building is the work of Ralph Montagu, 1st Duke of Montagu. Montagu was a former English ambassador to France, and Boughton House shows strong French architectural influences. His son, John Montagu, 2nd Duke of Montagu, made little alteration to the House, but made sweeping changes to the landscape and gardens after his return from campaign in Europe with his father-in-law, John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough. Following the death of George, 3rd Duke of Montagu, in 1790, the house passed, through the marriage of his daughter, Elizabeth, to Henry Scott, 3rd Duke of Buccleuch, 5th Duke of Queensberry. They were and remain a Scottish family and own several other country houses. It was little used or altered from the mid 18th century, but was well cared for. Because of this it has some of the best preserved baroque state rooms in the British Isles.
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