A weekend visit to Lacock Abbey was an interesting excursion, especially as it was once owned by William Henry Fox Talbot, the inventor of the "Calotype" photography process and the first person to produce a photographic negative. The oldest negative in existence is of an Oriel window at Laycock Abbey. This is my image of that exact window at Laycock:

Not quite the atmosphere of Fox Talbot's image!
More of the Abbey:
The main frontage

Two Tudor ladies (one assured me she was Anne Bolyn - complete with her head sown back on):

A view from the grounds:

The great Hall:

The Blue Parlour:

A gallery:

The Cloisters, people "Snaphealed" out:

And a couple of visitors:
Golden Eagle

Gyrfalcon

E-M5 plus Leica 14-150mm for all but the birds (M75-300mm)
David

Not quite the atmosphere of Fox Talbot's image!
More of the Abbey:
The main frontage

Two Tudor ladies (one assured me she was Anne Bolyn - complete with her head sown back on):

A view from the grounds:

The great Hall:

The Blue Parlour:

A gallery:

The Cloisters, people "Snaphealed" out:

And a couple of visitors:
Golden Eagle

Gyrfalcon

E-M5 plus Leica 14-150mm for all but the birds (M75-300mm)
David

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