Your R System Images - March 2024

Thanks. Having fun with the reno? :)
Hi Only RF,

Emptying, gutting, first fix and re-plastering done (now drying), the garage is chock full of boxes of new kitchenalia - and the final fix is next week... :)

(Then comes the bill... :cool: ).

P&K
 
Back to a spot I call Cormorant Rock for an evening shoot.

_G7A0824-Enhanced-NR-2.jpg
  • Canon EOS R7
  • RF100-500mm F4.5-7.1 L IS USM + EXTENDER RF1.4x
  • 700.0 mm
  • ƒ/10
  • 1/5000 sec
  • ISO 5000


_G7A0902-Enhanced-NR-Edit.jpg
  • Canon EOS R7
  • RF100-500mm F4.5-7.1 L IS USM + EXTENDER RF1.4x
  • 700.0 mm
  • ƒ/10
  • 1/5000 sec
  • ISO 2500


_G7A0919-Enhanced-NR.jpg
  • Canon EOS R7
  • RF100-500mm F4.5-7.1 L IS USM
  • 300.0 mm
  • ƒ/10
  • 1/1000 sec
  • ISO 1000


_G7A0886-Enhanced-NR-Edit.jpg
  • Canon EOS R7
  • RF100-500mm F4.5-7.1 L IS USM + EXTENDER RF1.4x
  • 700.0 mm
  • ƒ/10
  • 1/5000 sec
  • ISO 2500


_G7A0888-Enhanced-NR-Edit.jpg
  • Canon EOS R7
  • RF100-500mm F4.5-7.1 L IS USM + EXTENDER RF1.4x
  • 700.0 mm
  • ƒ/10
  • 1/5000 sec
  • ISO 2500
 
Hi Only RF,

Emptying, gutting, first fix and re-plastering done (now drying), the garage is chock full of boxes of new kitchenalia - and the final fix is next week... :)

(Then comes the bill... :cool: ).

P&K
I hate the bill part :oops:
 
Images from a recent visit - yes, this actual current month… 😮 - (and another one in 2022!) to Calke Abbey, Ticknall, Derbyshire, England.

(Shot raw and processed using: DxO PhotoLab Elite/ ViewPoint/ Nik Silver Efex, Adobe LrC/ PS with TK-9 Panels and Topaz Labs Photo AI).

You can find out more about Calke Abbey by clicking Here.

Phil and Karen


1. Calke Abbey stands on the site of a medieval religious house established in the 12th century, initially as an independent community and then from 1172 as a ‘cell’ of Repton Priory.

RF-S-CA-1.jpg
  • Canon EOS R5
  • RF14-35mm F4 L IS USM
  • 14.0 mm
  • ƒ/8
  • 1/400 sec
  • ISO 160


2. Following the fallout from the Dissolution of the Monasteries during the reign of King Henry VIII, a 99-year lease for Calke priory was negotiated in 1537 by John Preste, a Master Grocer of London. He converted the priory at Calke into a Tudor house.

RF-S-CA-2.jpg
  • Canon EOS R5
  • RF14-35mm F4 L IS USM
  • 14.0 mm
  • ƒ/5
  • 1/160 sec
  • ISO 1250


3. In 1622, Sir Henry Harpur bought the estate - and it stayed in the Harpur family for over 350 years, until it was handed to the National Trust in 1985.

RF-S-CA-3.jpg
  • Canon EOS R5
  • RF14-35mm F4 L IS USM
  • 14.0 mm
  • ƒ/4
  • 1/60 sec
  • ISO 1600


4. When Sir Henry Harpur, 7th Baronet, inherited the estate and title from his father in 1789, he started Calke's vast natural history collection, much of which was assembled by Sir Vauncey Harpur-Crewe, 10th Baronet. (It is the largest natural history collection in the National Trust, despite around half of it being sold off to settle death duties by Hilda, Sir Vauncey’s daughter).

RF-S-CA-4.jpg
  • Canon EOS R5
  • RF14-35mm F4 L IS USM
  • 19.0 mm
  • ƒ/4
  • 1/60 sec
  • ISO 1250


5. The research library of Sir John Gardner Wilkinson, an early scholar of ancient Egypt who spent 12 years studying there. His books accompanied field trips to the Valley of the Kings. He bequeathed his work to Sir John Harpur Crewe, 9th Baronet (his wife, Georgina Lady Crewe, was Wilkinson’s cousin).

RF-S-CA-5.jpg
  • Canon EOS R5
  • RF16mm F2.8 STM
  • 16.0 mm
  • ƒ/3.5
  • 1/200 sec
  • ISO 6400


6. The National Trust decided not to restore most rooms at Calke, which had remained untouched for many years, but rather preserve them as they were found. (The interiors have scarcely changed since photographs were taken in 1886).

RF-S-CA-6.jpg
  • Canon EOS R5
  • RF14-35mm F4 L IS USM
  • 35.0 mm
  • ƒ/4
  • 1/60 sec
  • ISO 400


7. Calke Staff photograph from 1910. (As presented above, with edited version below). The image itself is not ‘R System’ of course, but it was captured using an R System camera - with permission.

RF-S-CA-7.jpg
  • Canon EOS R5
  • RF14-35mm F4 L IS USM
  • 35.0 mm
  • ƒ/4
  • 1/160 sec
  • ISO 6400


(Sources: National Trust, Wikipedia).
 
Last edited:
Images from a recent visit - yes, this actual current month… 😮 - (and another one in 2022!) to Calke Abbey, Ticknall, Derbyshire, England.

(Shot raw and processed using: DxO PhotoLab Elite/ ViewPoint/ Nik Silver Efex, Adobe LrC/ PS with Tony Kuyper TK-9 Panels and Topaz Labs Photo AI).

You can find out more about Calke Abbey by clicking Here.

Phil and Karen


1. Calke Abbey stands on the site of a medieval religious house established in the 12th century, initially as an independent community and then from 1172 as a ‘cell’ of Repton Priory.

View attachment 26606

2. Following the fallout from the Dissolution of the Monasteries during the reign of King Henry VIII, a 99-year lease for Calke priory was negotiated in 1537 by John Preste, a Master Grocer of London. He converted the priory at Calke into a Tudor house.

View attachment 26607

3. In 1622, Sir Henry Harpur bought the estate - and it stayed in the Harpur family for over 350 years, until it was handed to the National Trust in 1985.

View attachment 26608

4. When Sir Henry Harpur, 7th Baronet, inherited the estate and title from his father in 1789, he started Calke's vast natural history collection, much of which was assembled by Sir Vauncey Harpur-Crewe, 10th Baronet. (It is the largest natural history collection in the National Trust, despite around half of it being sold off to settle death duties by Hilda, Sir Vauncey’s daughter).

View attachment 26609

5. The research library of Sir John Gardner Wilkinson, an early scholar of ancient Egypt who spent 12 years studying there. His books accompanied field trips to the Valley of the Kings. He bequeathed his work to Sir John Harpur Crewe, 9th Baronet (his wife, Georgina Lady Crewe, was Wilkinson’s cousin).

View attachment 26610

6. The National Trust decided not to restore most rooms at Calke, which had remained untouched for many years, but rather preserve them as they were found. (The interiors have scarcely changed since photographs were taken in 1886).

View attachment 26611

7. Calke Staff photograph from 1910. (As presented above, with edited version below). The image itself is not ‘R System’ of course, but it was captured using an R System camera - with permission.

View attachment 26612

(Sources: National Trust, Wikipedia).
I've done a lot of genealogical research on my family over the years and spent many hours looking at various British census records from the 19th century and always amazed that so many family entries included a cook, a butler and perhaps a gardener or maid.
 

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