Joe, Son of the Rock's photos with the keyword: Chair

Logies Lane, 2016

Abandoned Chair

St Andrews Brewing Co. in the Rain

23 May 2023 2 4 104
South Street, St Andrews

Farmore Interiors in the Rain

"Little Italy"

14 Jun 2023 8 12 125
Logie's Lane, St Andrews

River Tay and the Tay Road Bridge

13 Jun 2023 5 4 123
Photographed from inside the V&A Museum, Dundee

River Tay and the V&A Museum

PRET A MANGER

20 May 2023 10 16 117
Market Street, St Andrews

Looking Down College Street

Ice-Cream Trike

21 Mar 2022 11 8 181
Fujifilm X-T1 Voigtländer 28mm f2 VM Ultron F/11.0 1/1,000th sec ISO: 200

Clydebank Town Hall, Wedding Suite

04 Mar 2021 4 6 112
Architect: James Miller James Miller FRSE FRIBA FRIAS RSA (1860–1947) was a Scottish architect, recognised for his commercial architecture in Glasgow and for his Scottish railway stations. Quoted from Wikipedia

Clydebank Town Hall, Main Hall Balcony

04 Mar 2021 6 6 111
Architect: James Miller James Miller FRSE FRIBA FRIAS RSA (1860–1947) was a Scottish architect, recognised for his commercial architecture in Glasgow and for his Scottish railway stations. Quoted from Wikipedia

Dining Room, Moat Brae, Dumfries

19 Jun 2019 6 6 347
Moat Brae is a Georgian townhouse designed by Walter Newall in Dumfries, Scotland. It was built in 1823 in the Greek revival style. J. M. Barrie, creator of Peter Pan, played in the house and garden as a child from the ages of 13-18 whilst at school at Dumfries Academy. Barrie was later presented with the Freedom of the Burgh of Dumfries in 1924 and in his speech said "When Shades of night began to fall certain young mathematicians shed their triangles and crept up trees and down walls in an odyssey which was long after to become the play of Peter Pan. For our escapades in a certain Dumfries garden, which is enchanted land to me, were certainly the genesis of that nefarious work" Quoted from Wikipedia . J.M. Barrie spent many hours playing fantastic games in the gardens at Moat Brae which he recorded in a ‘Log Book’, he probaby sailed with his friends up the River Nith where they often visited the Gordon brothers’ grandfather’s house. Quoted from The Peter Pan Moat Brae Trust website .