Joe, Son of the Rock's photos with the keyword: Canon EF 28mm f/2.8 USM
St Andrews, Church Street from South Street
The Tartan Tree, Foreshore, Dumbarton
10 Jun 2020 |
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Self Challenge: Take a photo every day in June, and use a different lens each day.
10. Canon EF 28mm f/2.8 USM
亭
17 Jan 2021 |
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Ting (Now Demolished), Royal Botanic Garden, Edinburgh
Suggesting a meeting at the ting is always a good, if slightly cruel, test of garden knowledge. Many visitors and quite a few staff don’t know that the correct name for a single story Chinese pavilion is a “ting”(亭) but everyone knows the red structure on the Chinese Hillside. Quoted from the Botanics Stories website
Scottish Parliament
16 Jan 2021 |
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The Scottish Parliament Building is the home of the Scottish Parliament at Holyrood, within the UNESCO World Heritage Site in central Edinburgh. Construction of the building commenced in June 1999 and the Members of the Scottish Parliament (MSPs) held their first debate in the new building on 7 September 2004. The formal opening by Queen Elizabeth II took place on 9 October 2004. Enric Miralles, the Spanish architect who designed the building, died before its completion. Quoted from Wikipedia
West Bay, North Berwick
16 Jan 2021 |
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North Berwick is a seaside town and former royal burgh in East Lothian, Scotland. It is situated on the south shore of the Firth of Forth, approximately 20 miles (32 km) east-northeast of Edinburgh. North Berwick became a fashionable holiday resort in the nineteenth century because of its two sandy bays, the East (or Milsey) Bay and the West Bay, and continues to attract holidaymakers. Quoted from Wikipedia
Rabbies Bar, Royal Mile, Edinburgh
16 Jan 2021 |
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"The Rabbie Burns Restaurant is actually on the Royal Mile and close to the Writers Museum." (Michael Adubato , AFAR Local Expert) The Rabbie Burns Restaurant on the AFAR website
St Andrews, Fixing the Fountain
24 Sep 2020 |
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This memorial is erected in a central part of Market-street in St. Andrew's, where the thoroughfare is of unusual width. The stone used in the structure is principally Dumfries red sandstone, obtained from the well-known Corncockle quarries on the estate of Sir Alexander Jardine, Bart, Lockerbie, and while an agreeable warmth of colour is thus obtained, a telling effect of contrast is secured by the introduction of columns and copings of polished Dalbeattie granite. Quoted from the Scottish Architects' website
Fish and Chips
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