HFF Everyone - Hawthorn tree and the distant Skiddaw Fells, Cumbria

Black and White (some with a single colour)


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05 Mar 2021

15 favorites

26 comments

240 visits

Veil over the Vale

Fog filling the Vale of Pickering, with the hills of the Yorkshire Wolds barely visible on the horizon.

18 Apr 2021

25 favorites

33 comments

292 visits

Gathering dust and fading into history

Marconi British Air Ministry (A.M.) D Type Morse Key. 10F/7373. RAF (Royal Air Force) Type D Morse key, dating from the 1940's. The base and cover (not shown) is Bakelite, the key itself is of solid brass. Used by myself in the late 1960's and into the late 70's. The last time I used Morse code was 1987, in the Falkland Islands.

13 Jun 2021

31 favorites

29 comments

236 visits

Out of the east comes the light

Monochrome sunrise

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10 Jul 2021

27 favorites

32 comments

277 visits

Dracula Territory

Bram Stoker arrived in Whitby in July 1890, having been recommended to visit the Yorkshire coastal town by the actor Henry Irving. He spent a week exploring Whitby alone before being joined by his wife and baby son for a family holiday. Stoker quickly became enchanted by the winding cobbled streets, dramatic cliffs and red rooftops. From the Royal Crescent where he was staying, to the dramatic Abbey headland, Stoker gathered ideas and inspiration everywhere he went. In fact, the name of Dracula’s first victim, Swales, is taken from one of the weather-beaten gravestones which cluster around St Mary’s Church. Stoker created the famous vampire based on a 15th-century prince Vlad Tepes, known as Dracula the ‘son of the dragon’ as it was said he impaled his enemies on wooden stakes. Bram Stoker’s Dracula arrives on the shores of Whitby aboard a shipwrecked boat, all the sailors are found dead including the captain who has been tied to the helm. The only living creature aboard is a fierce black dog which bounds up the 199 steps leading to the Abbey: Dracula ready to inflict terror on the unexpecting town. This too is based on real life events; 5 years earlier a Russian boat had run aground on Tate Hill Sands, rearranging the name, Stoker created Demeter from Varna, the novel’s doomed vessel.

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08 Oct 2021

57 favorites

71 comments

564 visits

Curve (HFF Everyone)

This short length of fence forms part of the Marine Drive/Royal Albert Drive seawall. The wall runs the 1.6 mls (2.57 km) from North Bay to South Bay around the promontory upon which Scarborough Castle stands.

08 May 2022

24 favorites

24 comments

244 visits

Glowing!

33 items in total