Showing posts with label City of London. Show all posts
Showing posts with label City of London. Show all posts

31 Jul 2018

Iceland #14 - The Flight Home

My flight home from Iceland was a dream! I dropped the car off with no damage (hurray!), which is always a massive relief after a winter drive - especially one with conditions like I'd had the previous day and as I'd had to change the flights at the last minute, the only BA one I'd been able to get was on Avios in business class and it was wonderful. I had a wonderful view of both sides of the plane (free seats on both sides), delicious food and booze, and the views as I left both Iceland and arrived in London were stunning. There's nothing quite like flying home to your home city in glorious golden hour light, seeing a whole host of its treasures from the air. A perfect end to another incredible trip to Iceland. Here is a photographic version of my journey:

The village of Hafnir in the distance
The road from Grindavík

The Blue Lagoon, with Grindavík in the distance
Windy road along the south coast of the Reykjanes Peninsula
Reykjavik in the afternoon sun
The Hellisheiði Power Station
The Hellisheiði pass down to Hveragerði - doesn't look as steep from above
Selfoss, with the Route 35 heading off into the Golden Circle
River Þjórsá
The little town of Hella
The striking mountain of Þríhyrningur (Three Peaks Mountain)

The peaks of infamous Eyjafjallajökull above its snow-covered top
A river meandering off towards Þorsmörk

Snow on Myrdalsjökull

More snow on Myrdalsjökull
The hill on the bottom right is Skálarfjall, just east of Vík
The ring road crossing the Myrdalssandur

The south coast at Kudafljót

Last glimpse of Iceland - the top of Vatnajökull

Awesome cloud shadows

And an awesome cloud!

More awesome clouds over the North Atlantic Ocean - the Faroe Islands are somewhere down there!
More cool cloud shadows
I seem to be seeing more and more other planes in the sky these days when I'm flying...

Cloud shadows over Scotland

Getting a bit sunset-y as we approach London and stack

More lovely clouds and light as we stack for Heathrow

The Chiltern Hills, seen while stacking
Flying over my parents' house in Little Chalfont!!

And finally we make our descent - first heading east north of the Thames

And how glorious the River Thames looks, snaking off towards the sunset
Not easy shooting into the sun from a plane window with a big zoom lens...
The City of London
Flying over the office in Canary Wharf!

And turning to the south for a different view - Tower Bridge the first bridge visible

Oh London!

Yup, my home town is awesome :)

And finally we're off to Heathrow
A little view of the Natural History Museum, The Royal Albert Hall and Kensington Gardens

The Sky Campus - photos between Kensington and there were sadly blurred by engine guff


And last but not least, a final view of Wembley Stadium before landing.

16 Dec 2015

30 Day Photo Challenge - Week 3

My #30dayPhotoChallenge is into week 3. It's not going well!


Day 21 - Brilliant
Well, last day of week 3 - brilliant. Wasn't the easiest, although not too hard when you're out for some Christmas drinks with great friends. This is my wonderful, gorgeous friend Mandy, with an Ancho chilli - who knows what tomorrow brings...



Day 20 - Childhood
I don't have all that many possessions from my childhood, but probably the oldest - and dearest - is my old teddy bear. He used to be called Ted, but somehow got renamed Bear along the way. He was from Habitat, and I got him for my 11th birthday; he was lovely and soft and his nose hairs were perfect. Now he's looking a bit old and shabby (his is pretty old) and lives in a cupboard :(



Tomorrow - Brilliant

Day 19 - Artificial Light
Thought I'd use the 40mm lens again, and candlelight as my source of artificial light. The subject-matter is my two bone scrimshaw figurines that we bought in Greenland a few years ago, with some black clothes as the backdrop.




Day 18 - Worth a 1000 Words
I could probably write down at least 1000 words to explain just how damned gorgeous this little chap is! Or a 1000 words to explain that look. The shot was taken on my new 40mm pancake lens - early Christmas pressie from hubby! It's so light and tiny and so far I love it - will make carrying the camera around next week while I'm still at work a lot easier.







Day 17 - Mother Nature
One of the things I love about London (and there's lots) is the trees. Wherever you go there are trees, even in the middle of the City. I went for a little wander at lunchtime to Finsbury Circus, where I used to work a few years ago. In the middle there used to be a bowling green; now it's a CrossRail building site. But the enormous London plane trees are still there, looking wonderful even with most of their leaves gone. It was so grey that the photo looks black & white, but it's not. I wish I'd had my wide angle lens with me.






Day 16 - Star Wars
Not a fan. Not remotely interested. Christmas work lunch at lunch-time and Christmas party in the evening so no chance of photos. So, a rubbish one from the walk to work taken on the rubbish old iPhone 4S, seen in the window of a launderette on the King's Road.


Day 15 - Internet in Real Life
I was completely stumped by this topic. I even Googled it for ideas, but found nothing other than a weird Wikipedia page explaining that "in real life" is a term used to contrast with one's internet life, which presumably isn't real. All a bit odd! I guess I do have some internet friends who I've never met in real life, but I couldn't conjure any of them up for the purpose of the photo today. So I just took a photo of something I'd been meaning to for a while - a cool view that I see when I get my lunch each day. One day I'll go back with the tripod and do a long exposure with clouds moving across the sky above when the light's not so dull and overcast. Anyway, it was in real life, and now it's on the internet, so does that count?



25 Jan 2015

A Grey Afternoon at the Sky Garden

Three weeks ago I read on Twitter that a new, free attraction was opening in London - the Sky Garden at the top of the Walkie Talkie building (20 Fenchurch Street is its official name). I'm not a fan of the building at all - I think the design is ugly, and really doesn't fit the evolving London skyline, but I do like the views from high buildings, so was keen to visit to check out the view. I booked tickets to visit with my hubby today, a Sunday afternoon, an hour before sunset. Sadly the weather was grey and uninspiring.


In preparation for my visit I did a little research into what was allowed in terms of photography, and their rules stated that commercial photography was not allowed without permission, and neither was any "specialist" equipment, such as tripods. I emailed to see what I had to do to get a permit and got a reply ten days later telling me that it wasn't possible. I followed up to confirm whether I could pay for a permit, since it stated online that this was possible, but didn't get a response, so gave up on the idea of taking photos with a tripod. I also left my zoom lens at home, not wanting to risk them being a bit funny about it and not letting me in. Before I set off I also read some reviews of the Sky Garden - this one in the Guardian describing the building as "bloated, inelegant, thuggish" did not help my expectations...

On arrival our tickets and picture IDs were checked, bags put through security machines, and then we headed up in the lift to the 35th floor. We walked out into the large atrium, which has a bar/café in the middle, with chairs, tables and sofas dotted around towards the window to the south. The Shard dominates the skyline across the river to the south-east.

To the east and west sides of the building are staircases leading upwards, with shrubs and small trees on the banks beside them. In the middle of the building are two further floors containing restaurants, one of which faces out onto the Sky Garden bar/café area.

We walked around, starting on the west of the building. Through the windows that side St. Paul's Cathedral dominates the view, with a short stretch of the river also visible, and the bones of another skyscraper going up south of Blackfriars Bridge.

At the top of the stairs we reached another wide viewing area, looking north to Tower 42 (which I will always think of as the NatWest Tower), the Cheesegrater (122 Leadenhall Street) and the Gherkin (30 St Mary Axe). The Heron Tower is hidden behind the Cheesegrater. On this side it isn't possible to get close to the window, so definitely no chance of putting the camera against the glass and getting reflection-free shots, which was just about doable on the side windows.

The distant towers of Canary Wharf, the Tower of London and Tower Bridge can be seen to the east, although the full view is annoyingly obscured by the structure of the building. It would have been stunning to see the moat filled with red poppies a few months ago from there.

When we got back to the atrium we had a brief glance at the cocktail menu (reasonably-priced for a London skyscraper), sat down for a while at the window with coffees and had a look around at the other visitors. The crowd was predominantly young, as I guess that's the age-group that read about the "garden" on social media sites. A woman showed off her TK Maxx purchases to her friends at the table next to us. No-one took off their coats, as it was a bit chilly and felt as if we were outside, even though the terrace doors are closed until March. People snapped away on their smartphones.


We wandered around again, and I took a few more photos, but the combination of the concave shape of the windows, reflections from the lights, and the shape and position of the building all conspired to make getting any decent shots tricky. In spite of being so high up I felt very disappointed with the views. If the building had been built with its footprint shifted round 45 degrees, then the views would have been massively improved! The three skyscrapers to the north just looked dull from this angle. St. Paul's was swamped by building sites surrounding it, the London Eye was at the south-west corner and pretty much hidden behind the corner structure, and only a small part of the meandering Thames could be seen east or west. Even when the terrace opens in March, there is eye-level-height glass, so no way to get a glass-free photo without holding your SLR up high and dangling it over the edge. The tripod, it turned out, wouldn't have helped much!


Having worked on the highest floors of one of the towers in Canary Wharf I'm used to great views from a skyscraper, but for some reason the views from this one don't really work, not for me, anyway. The design is bulbous and quite frankly a little dull, and I think it's been built in totally the wrong spot.

Oh well, there is one positive thing about the view - at least this building isn't in it!