The Limbo Connection's photos with the keyword: Brew House

Nights In White Satin

01 Jul 2020 7 2 158
Nikon D700 + Nikkor-O.C 35mm f/2 lens.

Hinge

29 May 2020 4 2 169
Lacock Abbey Brewhouse. AF-S DX Nikkor 35mm f/1.8G on a Nikon D2Xs.

Light

07 Apr 2017 3 241
Fox Talbot knew this scene. He may even have photographed it. Photographed with a Nikon D700 and a Nikkor O.C 35mm f/2 lens, factory converted to AI capability.

Brew House Table

06 Apr 2017 2 228
Photographed with a Nikon D700 and a Nikkor O.C 35mm f/2 lens, factory converted to AI capability.

Brew House Window

03 Apr 2017 2 2 247
Lacock Abbey Brew House. Nikon D700 + Nikkor 20mm f/3.5 AI-S lens.

Lacock Abbey Brew House

02 Apr 2017 1 1 335
Lacock Abbey, Wiltshire: The Brew House. The Brew House, as it is known, in the courtyard of Lacock Abbey was one of the additions made by Sir William Sharington when he acquired the building in 1539. Previously Lacock was a monastery. It was secularised after the Reformation. People of the sixteenth century drank beer in preference to water because it was safer. The Brew House was sympathetically restored during the 1970s, having lain derelict for many years. The equipment would still be capable of brewing beer if desired, but it would not be to the standards of the modern brewing industry. However reviled some of today’s makers of beer have the misfortune to be, the absence of hygiene would not be a criticism they would expect to endure. Photographed with a Nikon D700 and a Nikkor 20mm f/3.5 AI-S lens.

Brew House Steps

01 Apr 2017 2 271
Lacock Abbey, Wiltshire: The Brew House. The Brew House, as it is known, in the courtyard of Lacock Abbey was one of the additions made by Sir William Sharington when he acquired the building in 1539. Previously Lacock was a monastery. It was secularised after the Reformation. People of the sixteenth century drank beer in preference to water because it was safer. The Brew House was sympathetically restored during the 1970s, having lain derelict for many years. The equipment would still be capable of brewing beer if desired, but it would not be to the standards of the modern brewing industry. However reviled some of today’s makers of beer have the misfortune to be, the absence of hygiene would not be a criticism they would expect to endure. Photographed with a Nikon D700 and a Nikkor 20mm f/3.5 AI-S lens.