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Images from a visit (in 2021 - our first such outing following the pandemic! ) to Tyntesfield, North Somerset, England.
(Shot raw and processed using: DxO PhotoLab Elite/ Viewpoint and Adobe Lightroom Classic/ Photoshop with TK-9 Panels).
You can find out more about Tyntesfield by clicking Here.
Phil and Karen
1. In 1844, the Georgian house and estate known as Tyntes Place, were purchased by William Gibbs.
2. William renamed it Tyntesfield in 1863 when he transformed it into a Gothic Revival masterpiece. All visitors entered through the intensely Gothic Cloister.
3. Mr Gibbs’s Room. William was an astute merchant with a wide trading network spanning Europe and South America.
4. The 3,000 volumes found in the Library make up just a fraction of Tyntesfield's 10,000 book collection – one of the largest in the National Trust.
5. The Dinning Room. Tyntesfield contains over 72,000 objects collected by William, his family and heirs.
6. The Chapel, commissioned in 1873, was not fully completed before William’s death in 1875. Although licensed for family services, it was never consecrated.
(Source: National Trust).
(Shot raw and processed using: DxO PhotoLab Elite/ Viewpoint and Adobe Lightroom Classic/ Photoshop with TK-9 Panels).
You can find out more about Tyntesfield by clicking Here.
Phil and Karen
1. In 1844, the Georgian house and estate known as Tyntes Place, were purchased by William Gibbs.
2. William renamed it Tyntesfield in 1863 when he transformed it into a Gothic Revival masterpiece. All visitors entered through the intensely Gothic Cloister.
3. Mr Gibbs’s Room. William was an astute merchant with a wide trading network spanning Europe and South America.
4. The 3,000 volumes found in the Library make up just a fraction of Tyntesfield's 10,000 book collection – one of the largest in the National Trust.
5. The Dinning Room. Tyntesfield contains over 72,000 objects collected by William, his family and heirs.
6. The Chapel, commissioned in 1873, was not fully completed before William’s death in 1875. Although licensed for family services, it was never consecrated.
(Source: National Trust).
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