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Tintinhull House - inside - staircase : 無料・フリー素材/写真

Tintinhull House - inside - staircase / ell brown
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Tintinhull House - inside - staircase

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ライセンスクリエイティブ・コモンズ 表示 2.1
説明A visit to Tintinhull Garden in the village of Tintinhull, Somerset.Is run by the National Trust.This is Tintinhull House in South Somerset, and surrounding buildings.Grade I listed building.Tintinhull House, TintinhullTintinhull House, Farm Street.14/3467/346------------------------------------Tintinhull House, Farm Street.14/3467/346------------------------------------TINTINHULL CP FARM STREET (North side)ST501914/346 Tintinhull House19.4.61GV IDetached house. C17, reshaped early C18 and later. Ham stone ashlar; stone slate roofs between stepped coped gables;stone chimney stacks. Double roof plan with additions. Two storeys with attics; east entrance elevation 5 bays, ofwhich bay 1 is a projecting gable. Continuous string to ground floor and eaves course; single-storey flat roofedaddition bays 2 and 3 probably early C20; hollow-chamfer mullioned windows; bay 1 has 3-light below, with mouldedcambered-arched door to right, and above a 5-light window, with 3-light to attic, all with labels; small blind windowin return at first floor level; bays 2 and 4 have 3-light windows, and bay 3 a 2-light transomed and mullioned, allwith labels; to lower bay 4 and a 5-light window with chamfered cambered-arched doorway to right; small square windowupper bay 5 and one blocked below; attic dormer window with flat roof between bays 2 and 3; in corner a stone watercistern. West front, added c1720, also 5 bays but in classical style: this has hipped stone tile roof and chimneys withmoulded caps: high rusticated plinth, rusticated outer pilasters, eaves cornice; centre 3 bays enclosed by plainpilasters with Tuscan caps carrying simple pediment above eaves course; 2-light mullioned and transomed windows, beadedwith architraves, rectangular-leaded with iron-framed opening lights having curl stays; to lower bay 3 a doorway, up 5steps, with part-glazed panelled door, surround having attached Tuscan columns and entablature with segmental pediment;in main upper pediment a circular attic window with iron-framed casements, scrolled decorative frame; and in roofbetween bays 1 and 2 and 4 and 5 are 2-light dormer windows with pediments over; small 2-light basement windows inplinth bays 2 and 4. South elevation, to street, has two prominent gables, each crowned by chimney stacks, and severalmullioned windows; north elevation has one gable, with 3-light hollow-chamfer mullioned window in recess above andsimilar ovolo-mould window under label below, and in western section are four 12-pane sash windows with thick glazingbars in nave mould recesses. Interior in two distinct halves, the east C17 and the west C17; two staircases, the olderin the south-east corner, has-carved oak 3-centre-arched overthrow in moulded frame at foot of stairs, the balusterslater; the second staircase in centre of east section is early C18, dog-leg pattern, with turned balusters and deepmoulded curved handrail, bottom step with very generous side curl, and fielded panelled dado to wall sides. Principalrooms in western section; the centre room has timber cornice and fielded dado panelling, Keinton stone flag floor,simple surround to fireplace, and on axis with outer door a doorway into the stair hall has an ornate fanlight. Thedining room in the south-west corner is similar in detail, with a shell-hood recess with shaped shelves in north wall.The north west corner drawing room fitted out c1740, with 'new' sash windows in north wall - here the cornice is moreelaborate, panelling is full height, with much use of egg-and dart decoration to panels and window openings, and thefireplace surround, still restrained, is more elaborate in detail. First floor rooms not seen. A significant house inits own right, with celebrated garden developed by two early C20 owners: it was the property of the Napper family (whoalso owned Tintinhull Court, q.v) by 1630, although they did not always occupy it, and seems to have been sold by themsometime after 1814: the C20 gardeners were the Revd. Dr. S.J.M. Price, up to l924, and from 1933 Mr. and Mrs. F. E.Reiss. Gardens included in Register of Parks and Gardens of special historic interest in England, HBMC, 1985 (GradeII). The house now the property of the National Trust. (Oswald A. Country Life 19th April 1956, article on p798 et seq;Journal of the Royal Horticultural Society, January 1955).Listing NGR: ST5024619742The original house dates back to 1630 and was built for the Nappers, a prosperous local family. Built in pale Ham stone, its most striking aspect is the west front - a classic five-bay facade which was added in 1722. In 1933, the property was bought by Phyliss Reiss and her husband, Captain Reiss.Mrs Reiss gave the house and garden to the National Trust in 1954.Inside the house - was the only house that week that I could take photos inside (wasn't allowed at Sherborne Castle).Took a few in here, but we weren't inside the house for long.Staircase.
撮影日2012-05-04 10:49:43
撮影者ell brown , Birmingham, United Kingdom
タグ
撮影地Tintinhull, England, United Kingdom 地図
カメラFinePix S1500 , FUJIFILM
露出0.02 sec (1/50)
開放F値f/2.8


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