- Artist -
#SixTownsSketchbook at Barewall
https://www.barewall.co.uk/collections/ian-pearsall
Original Drawings & Prints 10% Off Across the Catalogue - Voucher SAVE10 : https://flowerboxorguk.etsy.com/?coupon=SAVE10
Ian R. Pearsall
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This is Hedgehog House, where the British Hedgehog Preservation Society is based. It's not in Ludlow but at Dhustone, an industrial hamlet on Clee Hill. I remember it from 20 years ago, when it was empty and I wondered at such a large post office being built in so remote a location. 1/2
Jonathan Calder
Alongside roads, dual carriageways and motorways, everywhere nowadays 😎
www.wildlifetrusts.org/wildlife-exp...
Wendy leaves a whole side of our garden for wild flowers.
All spring through to the end of autumn different colours appear.
All sown from seeds taken from wild flower buds after they're gone over.
To and fro-ing across the meadow throughout the day between workshop and house and marvelling every time on the spectacular grasses and the gorgeous colours .. clusters of flowers here and there .. and in the evening - a little summation in this shot!
The clay flask from Palaikastro (top right in my previous post) is one of the most iconic vases of the ‘Marine Style’ and a masterpiece of the Minoan potter’s art during the New Palace period, around the middle of the 2nd millennium BC. Photo by me. More info: ca.heraklionmuseum.gr/ca/pawtucket...
'Whitmore Entry (from Sun Street)'
Graphite Sketch
Paul Sherratt
Ian R. Pearsall
Alison Fisk
Jarl Graham Kirk. Photo of me 1965
Ian R. Pearsall
'Street and Towpath (Cliffe Vale)'
Graphite Sketch
#Words Welsh
Mind you, there's a sign on the escalators in Regent Arcade that says "Guide Dogs must be carried."
It's not even written in Braille.
"Is ‘Fairytale of New York’ a product of the Potteries? What are the odds? Eighteen-to-one?"
'Fairytales?' #TheHighClearing
@ianrpearsall.bsky.social @philshallcross.bsky.social @minxyowlwriter.bsky.social @barewall.bsky.social
Ian R. Pearsall
H e t e r o t o p ia
Dave 'Him Over There' Proudlove 🏴☠️
www.wildlifetrusts.org
Often growing in swathes along a roadside or field margin, the oxeye daisy is just as at home in traditional hay meadows. The large, white, daisy-like flowers are easy to identify.