The Flickr Highlanddress Image Generatr

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This page simply reformats the Flickr public Atom feed for purposes of finding inspiration through random exploration. These images are not being copied or stored in any way by this website, nor are any links to them or any metadata about them. All images are © their owners unless otherwise specified.

This site is a busybee project and is supported by the generosity of viewers like you.

Morale of The Story by Kerrowdown Photography

© Kerrowdown Photography, all rights reserved.

Morale of The Story

I'm sure we as photographers, all are always courteous...

Here's an example of how karma works in your favour.

I was asked to shoot a small Highland Wedding at a venue that I was not familiar with. When applying the due diligence, I went to the venue a couple of days prior to the event. To both introduce myself to the Registrar and to quickly scout the location.

The meeting went extremely well... so much so, I was granted additional access to an out of bounds area, without even asking for it.

This allowed for this image to be taken with an exclusive and unique viewpoint. I hasten to add which my couple were most delighted with.

Moral of this tale is, always be courteous... rewards will most certainly follow.

Bow carrier by ross_cowan_

Available under a Creative Commons by-nc license

Bow carrier

Servant carrying a bow and targe (strapped to his back). Detail of 'The Highland Chieftain' portrait of Lord Mungo Murray by John Michael Wright, c. 1683. In Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum, Glasgow, UK. collections.glasgowmuseums.com/mwebcgi/mweb?request=recor...

Used as an illustration in my MHM article 'Lairds of Battle': www.academia.edu/123320466/Lairds_of_Battle

Mungo Murray by ross_cowan_

Available under a Creative Commons by-nc license

Mungo Murray

'The Highland Chieftain'. Portrait of Lord Mungo Murray by John Michael Wright, c.1683. In Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum, Glasgow, UK. collections.glasgowmuseums.com/mwebcgi/mweb?request=recor...

Used as an illustration in my MHM article 'Lairds of Battle': www.academia.edu/123320466/Lairds_of_Battle

Prince Charles Edward Stuart, 1739 by failing_angel

Prince Charles Edward Stuart, 1739

Louis Gabriel Blanchet
Oil on canvas

Within a year of his accession, George I was faced with a challenge to his legitimacy from Jacobites who aimed to restore the Stuart bloodline to the throne. This is an early portrait of Prince Charles, grandson of James II and VII, widely known as 'Bonnie Prince Charlie'. The 19-year old prince is portrayed as a warrior, wearing breastplate and pauldron, one ungloved hand restong on a helmet, the other on his sword hilt. He wears both the Scottish Order of the Thistle (on a green riband) and the blue sash and star of the English Order of the Garter.
Charles Stuart understood the value of wearing Highland dress to demonstrate his Scottish heritage and is reported to have entered Edinburgh in 1745 wearing a short tartan coat, red velvet trews and a green velvet bonnet trimmed with the white rose cockade of the Jacobites, a description that corresponds with his appearance in a later miniature.*

From the exhibition


Style & Society: Dressing the Georgians
(April to October 2023)

The display brings together over 200 works from the Royal Collection, including paintings, prints and drawings by artists such as Gainsborough, Zoffany and Hogarth, as well as rare surviving examples of clothing and accessories. The exhibition builds up a layer-by-layer picture of what the Georgians wore - from the practical dress of laundry maids to the glittering gowns worn at court - and chart the transformation of clothing and silhouettes from the accession of George I in 1714 to the death of George IV in 1830.
At the heart of the exhibition is a rarely displayed, full-length portrait of Queen Charlotte by Thomas Gainsborough, c.1781, which usually hangs in the White Drawing Room at Windsor Castle. Painted by candlelight, it depicts the Queen in a magnificent gown, worn over a wide hoop and covered with gold spangles and tassels. The painting is be shown alongside a beautifully preserved gown of a similar style, worn at Queen Charlotte’s court in the 1760s, on loan from the Fashion Museum Bath.
On display for the first time is Queen Charlotte’s book of psalms, covered in the only silk fabric known to survive from one of her dresses. The expensive fabric, decorated with metal threads to glimmer in candlelight, was most likely repurposed after the dress had passed out of fashion. As textiles were highly prized, Georgian clothing was constantly recycled, even by the royal family, and there was a thriving market for second-hand clothes.
The exhibition includes items of jewellery from Queen Charlotte’s famed collection, such as a diamond ring featuring a miniature of her husband George III, given to her on her wedding day. Other accessories on display will include beautiful English and French fans, which reached their fashionable zenith during this period, some representing topical events such as the first hot air balloon flight, and jewel-encrusted snuffboxes, reflecting the craze amongst both men and women for taking snuff throughout the 18th century.
The exhibition reveals how the Georgians ushered in many of the cultural trends we know today, including the first stylists and influencers, the birth of a specialised fashion press and the development of shopping as a leisure activity. From the popularity of fancy-dress and the evolution of childrenswear, to the introduction of military uniforms and the role of clothing in showing support for revolutions at home and abroad, Style & Society will explore what clothing can tell us about all areas of life in the rapidly changing world of 18th-century Britain.
[*IanVisits]


From the Queen's Gallery, Buckingham Palace

Buckingham Palace
Royal Palace. 1825 design, begun 1826 by John Nash, rebuilding Buckingham House of 1705 as a palace for George IV, completed 1837 with alterations by Edward Blore; The east range added 1847-50 by Blore; the Ballroom block of 1853-54, with Ambassadors' Court, by Sir James Pennethorne; the east front refaced 1913 by Sir Aston Webb for George V
Marble faced east front, the rest Bath stone except for Blore's west quadrangle front in Caen stone; slate and leaded roofs. Quadrangle plan. Monumental Graeco-Roman, composed with picturesque intent by Nash; Webb's east front a stiff Dixhuitieme exercise constrained by Blore's existing range but with elegant detailing: East front: three storeys with ground and attic floor mezzanines. Fenestration in rhythm 3:7:3:7:3 with centrepiece and terminal pavilion. Channelled ground floor with semicircular arched central gateway flanked by square headed doorways, all with fine ornamental iron gates of 1847; end pavilions and main range with square headed and semicircular arched gateways respectively; architraved sashes with open pediments on first floor and cornices on second floor; fluted Corinthian pilasters rise through first and second floors supporting main entablature with blocking course and balustraded parapet; centrepiece and terminal pavilions with Corinthian columns in antis and plain outer pilasters, in pairs on centrepiece, crowned by blind attics with pediments; continuous balustraded balcony to first floor.
West front: of Blore's east range; advanced centrepiece with tetrastyle giant fluted Corinthian column portico above archway; sculpture in pediment. North and South quadrangle ranges: by Nash and given uniform three storey height, with attic, by him in 1828; slightly advanced five-window wide pilastered centrepieces; ground floor Greek Doric colonnades filled in by Blore; to the south Ambassadors' Court with temple portico-porch and flanking ranges with Corinthian colonnade in antis, adjoining Pennethorne's 1853-1854 Ballroom block which continues giant columned corner pavilion theme of Nash's garden front.
East front of Nash's West range: originally open to deep forecourt and Mall, has storeys and attic main block, 11 windows wide, with three storey three-window wings, the main block with prominent, tetrastyle, two storey portico centrepiece, its low ground storey with cast iron coupled Greek Doric columns and the upper with giant coupled stone Corinthian columns carrying entablature and pediment with sculpture by Baily and crowning figures in Coade stone by W Croggan; the cast iron Doric colonnade is returned across ground floor of main block which has pavilion end bays dressed with giant pairs of Corinthian columns; tall blind attic; the friezes either side of portico by Westmacott and originally intended for the attic of Marble Arch.
West garden front, by Nash: Long symmetrical composition with five accents; basement, ground floor, piano nobile through two storeys and attic to main block with three-storey wings; the main block with five-window central bow and three-window side ranges terminating in one-window pavilions; the wings each of four windows with similar pavilion end bays; ground floor channelled, giant engaged Corinthian columns to bow and detached coupled Corinthian columns to pavilions carrying entablature with rich rinceau frieze; large frieze panels of Coade stone over first floor by Croggan; the attic above half dome of bow (Blore's replacement of Nash's dome) has a frieze by Westmacott intended for Marble Arch; the range is flanked at east of terrace by projecting conservatories in the form of hexastyle Ionic temples with pediments; the south conservatory altered as palace chapel in 1893 and as the Queen's Gallery in 1962.
Interior: State Apartments in west range at firs floor level, with two suites divided by the Picture Gallery, c1829-36 by Nash and Blore, in rich and already eclectic Graeco-Roman style with Louis XIV and Wren details in mouldings and motifs, approached via the Grand Hall with marble columns and Nash's recasting of the original Buckingham House staircase as well as by Pennethorne's Grand Staircase to south extended by Pennethorne to give access to his Ballroom block; the Picture Gallery redecorated 1914; the interior of the Ballroom retains Pennethorne's ceiling and throne recess but redecorated by Ludwig Gruner in 1902 when the walls, windows and doorways were remodelled by Verity; the plainer ground floor rooms below the State Apartments survive virtually as designed by Nash. Marble Arch (qv) designed by Nash in 1828 as the forecourt gateway was removed by Blore's east range and re-erected in 1851 on its present site.
[Historic England]

Prince Charles Edward Stuart, 1739 by failing_angel

Prince Charles Edward Stuart, 1739

Louis Gabriel Blanchet
Oil on canvas

Within a year of his accession, George I was faced with a challenge to his legitimacy from Jacobites who aimed to restore the Stuart bloodline to the throne. This is an early portrait of Prince Charles, grandson of James II and VII, widely known as 'Bonnie Prince Charlie'. The 19-year old prince is portrayed as a warrior, wearing breastplate and pauldron, one ungloved hand restong on a helmet, the other on his sword hilt. He wears both the Scottish Order of the Thistle (on a green riband) and the blue sash and star of the English Order of the Garter.
Charles Stuart understood the value of wearing Highland dress to demonstrate his Scottish heritage and is reported to have entered Edinburgh in 1745 wearing a short tartan coat, red velvet trews and a green velvet bonnet trimmed with the white rose cockade of the Jacobites, a description that corresponds with his appearance in a later miniature.*

From the exhibition


Style & Society: Dressing the Georgians
(April to October 2023)

The display brings together over 200 works from the Royal Collection, including paintings, prints and drawings by artists such as Gainsborough, Zoffany and Hogarth, as well as rare surviving examples of clothing and accessories. The exhibition builds up a layer-by-layer picture of what the Georgians wore - from the practical dress of laundry maids to the glittering gowns worn at court - and chart the transformation of clothing and silhouettes from the accession of George I in 1714 to the death of George IV in 1830.
At the heart of the exhibition is a rarely displayed, full-length portrait of Queen Charlotte by Thomas Gainsborough, c.1781, which usually hangs in the White Drawing Room at Windsor Castle. Painted by candlelight, it depicts the Queen in a magnificent gown, worn over a wide hoop and covered with gold spangles and tassels. The painting is be shown alongside a beautifully preserved gown of a similar style, worn at Queen Charlotte’s court in the 1760s, on loan from the Fashion Museum Bath.
On display for the first time is Queen Charlotte’s book of psalms, covered in the only silk fabric known to survive from one of her dresses. The expensive fabric, decorated with metal threads to glimmer in candlelight, was most likely repurposed after the dress had passed out of fashion. As textiles were highly prized, Georgian clothing was constantly recycled, even by the royal family, and there was a thriving market for second-hand clothes.
The exhibition includes items of jewellery from Queen Charlotte’s famed collection, such as a diamond ring featuring a miniature of her husband George III, given to her on her wedding day. Other accessories on display will include beautiful English and French fans, which reached their fashionable zenith during this period, some representing topical events such as the first hot air balloon flight, and jewel-encrusted snuffboxes, reflecting the craze amongst both men and women for taking snuff throughout the 18th century.
The exhibition reveals how the Georgians ushered in many of the cultural trends we know today, including the first stylists and influencers, the birth of a specialised fashion press and the development of shopping as a leisure activity. From the popularity of fancy-dress and the evolution of childrenswear, to the introduction of military uniforms and the role of clothing in showing support for revolutions at home and abroad, Style & Society will explore what clothing can tell us about all areas of life in the rapidly changing world of 18th-century Britain.
[*IanVisits]


From the Queen's Gallery, Buckingham Palace

Buckingham Palace
Royal Palace. 1825 design, begun 1826 by John Nash, rebuilding Buckingham House of 1705 as a palace for George IV, completed 1837 with alterations by Edward Blore; The east range added 1847-50 by Blore; the Ballroom block of 1853-54, with Ambassadors' Court, by Sir James Pennethorne; the east front refaced 1913 by Sir Aston Webb for George V
Marble faced east front, the rest Bath stone except for Blore's west quadrangle front in Caen stone; slate and leaded roofs. Quadrangle plan. Monumental Graeco-Roman, composed with picturesque intent by Nash; Webb's east front a stiff Dixhuitieme exercise constrained by Blore's existing range but with elegant detailing: East front: three storeys with ground and attic floor mezzanines. Fenestration in rhythm 3:7:3:7:3 with centrepiece and terminal pavilion. Channelled ground floor with semicircular arched central gateway flanked by square headed doorways, all with fine ornamental iron gates of 1847; end pavilions and main range with square headed and semicircular arched gateways respectively; architraved sashes with open pediments on first floor and cornices on second floor; fluted Corinthian pilasters rise through first and second floors supporting main entablature with blocking course and balustraded parapet; centrepiece and terminal pavilions with Corinthian columns in antis and plain outer pilasters, in pairs on centrepiece, crowned by blind attics with pediments; continuous balustraded balcony to first floor.
West front: of Blore's east range; advanced centrepiece with tetrastyle giant fluted Corinthian column portico above archway; sculpture in pediment. North and South quadrangle ranges: by Nash and given uniform three storey height, with attic, by him in 1828; slightly advanced five-window wide pilastered centrepieces; ground floor Greek Doric colonnades filled in by Blore; to the south Ambassadors' Court with temple portico-porch and flanking ranges with Corinthian colonnade in antis, adjoining Pennethorne's 1853-1854 Ballroom block which continues giant columned corner pavilion theme of Nash's garden front.
East front of Nash's West range: originally open to deep forecourt and Mall, has storeys and attic main block, 11 windows wide, with three storey three-window wings, the main block with prominent, tetrastyle, two storey portico centrepiece, its low ground storey with cast iron coupled Greek Doric columns and the upper with giant coupled stone Corinthian columns carrying entablature and pediment with sculpture by Baily and crowning figures in Coade stone by W Croggan; the cast iron Doric colonnade is returned across ground floor of main block which has pavilion end bays dressed with giant pairs of Corinthian columns; tall blind attic; the friezes either side of portico by Westmacott and originally intended for the attic of Marble Arch.
West garden front, by Nash: Long symmetrical composition with five accents; basement, ground floor, piano nobile through two storeys and attic to main block with three-storey wings; the main block with five-window central bow and three-window side ranges terminating in one-window pavilions; the wings each of four windows with similar pavilion end bays; ground floor channelled, giant engaged Corinthian columns to bow and detached coupled Corinthian columns to pavilions carrying entablature with rich rinceau frieze; large frieze panels of Coade stone over first floor by Croggan; the attic above half dome of bow (Blore's replacement of Nash's dome) has a frieze by Westmacott intended for Marble Arch; the range is flanked at east of terrace by projecting conservatories in the form of hexastyle Ionic temples with pediments; the south conservatory altered as palace chapel in 1893 and as the Queen's Gallery in 1962.
Interior: State Apartments in west range at firs floor level, with two suites divided by the Picture Gallery, c1829-36 by Nash and Blore, in rich and already eclectic Graeco-Roman style with Louis XIV and Wren details in mouldings and motifs, approached via the Grand Hall with marble columns and Nash's recasting of the original Buckingham House staircase as well as by Pennethorne's Grand Staircase to south extended by Pennethorne to give access to his Ballroom block; the Picture Gallery redecorated 1914; the interior of the Ballroom retains Pennethorne's ceiling and throne recess but redecorated by Ludwig Gruner in 1902 when the walls, windows and doorways were remodelled by Verity; the plainer ground floor rooms below the State Apartments survive virtually as designed by Nash. Marble Arch (qv) designed by Nash in 1828 as the forecourt gateway was removed by Blore's east range and re-erected in 1851 on its present site.
[Historic England]

Dagger by Zog the Frog

© Zog the Frog, all rights reserved.

Dagger

The prompt for today was "Dagger". This is a Dirk, a Thrusting dagger, Wikipedia calls it. It's Scots name is Sgian Dubh, meaning Black Knife. This sketch is based on my own Sgian Dubh which I only wear with highland dress at weddings.

Faber Castell 1.4mm mechanical pencil
Pigma Micron 005 and 03 black pen
Cass Art watercolours
Seawhite A4 sketch book

The Highlander by f22photographie

© f22photographie, all rights reserved.

The Highlander

Traditional Scottish attire.

JUST BRING YOU by Gordon McCallum

© Gordon McCallum, all rights reserved.

JUST BRING YOU

Uphill on Buchanan Street where people pay in a store to go uphill.

Ben Hamilton by soft pixel photography

© soft pixel photography, all rights reserved.

Ben Hamilton

Magi McGlynn Stewart by soft pixel photography

© soft pixel photography, all rights reserved.

Magi McGlynn Stewart

I met this lovely gent in Callander today he said soon god will free Scotland, he said it with such soul that I believed him. I asked his name about three time but he just kept saying the same words over and over, so for now I’ll just call him Wallace until I find out different. I just had to show his soul in these images. Update: just got a message from one of his friends.

Love your capture of of this man I have known for many years he lives in the woods in balquhidder his name is Magi McGlynn Stewart he is a poet and songwriter he also sings and plays the drum.

Musick Art an Dance.

Revolutioun is ragin at this minnit in time.
The weapons ir Musick Art an Dance
Musick art an dance spell MAD
In Scotland, we're aw MAD
Thir'll be nae casualties, mental nir physical
fae this non violent revelaytioun.
The definnit ootcome wull be
perched watchin waitin fir the breeze
tae pick me up in gentil flicht
ma glide across expansiv seas
this luely warm an moonlit nicht
whaur people's onlie need fir gold
gaes back tae warlds o yung, no auld,
tae watch reflectioun i the sun
in a clene new Warlt which is begun,
nae greed, nae want fir personal gayn
there is onlie luve which has nae payn.
Freedom is truth: stye free!
Scotland an its people.
Freedom.
Hope moves silently,
a braw companioun fir tae hae.

Magi McGlynn

Magi McGlynn Stewart (musick art an dance) by soft pixel photography

© soft pixel photography, all rights reserved.

Magi McGlynn Stewart (musick art an dance)

I met this lovely gent in Callander today he said soon god will free Scotland, he said it with such soul that I believed him. I asked his name about three time but he just kept saying the same words over and over, so for now I’ll just call him Wallace until I find out different. I just had to show his soul in these images. Update: just got a message from one of his friends.

Love your capture of of this man I have known for many years he lives in the woods in balquhidder his name is Magi McGlynn Stewart he is a poet and songwriter he also sings and plays the drum.

Musick Art an Dance.

Revolutioun is ragin at this minnit in time.
The weapons ir Musick Art an Dance
Musick art an dance spell MAD
In Scotland, we're aw MAD
Thir'll be nae casualties, mental nir physical
fae this non violent revelaytioun.
The definnit ootcome wull be
perched watchin waitin fir the breeze
tae pick me up in gentil flicht
ma glide across expansiv seas
this luely warm an moonlit nicht
whaur people's onlie need fir gold
gaes back tae warlds o yung, no auld,
tae watch reflectioun i the sun
in a clene new Warlt which is begun,
nae greed, nae want fir personal gayn
there is onlie luve which has nae payn.
Freedom is truth: stye free!
Scotland an its people.
Freedom.
Hope moves silently,
a braw companioun fir tae hae.

Magi McGlynn

Wm M Houston Gents Outfitter by byronv2

Available under a Creative Commons by-nc license

Wm M Houston Gents Outfitter

Had to take a quick snap of this place I passed while working in Paisley this week, mostly because it was giving me flashbacks to shops I remember vaguely from my childhood, as that pale green signage and the window and door style all look like they have been like that for several decades unchanged. Even "gents outfitters" is something you just don't see on the signage of a men's clothes store these days. Not many like this still left, guessing this one is a family tradition.

Capital Sci-Fi Con 2019 06 by byronv2

Available under a Creative Commons by-nc license

Capital Sci-Fi Con 2019 06

I had to get a pic of this chap who had done a great mash-up costume, a classic Battlestar Galatica Cylon Warrior, but in a kilt!

Edinburgh by cag2012

© cag2012, all rights reserved.

Edinburgh

Edinburgh by cag2012

© cag2012, all rights reserved.

Edinburgh

Edinburgh by cag2012

© cag2012, all rights reserved.

Edinburgh

Edinburgh by cag2012

© cag2012, all rights reserved.

Edinburgh

DSC_4639 by daviemoran1

© daviemoran1, all rights reserved.

DSC_4639

Man in kilt on a bike

Edinburgh_street singer by abtabt

© abtabt, all rights reserved.

Edinburgh_street singer

Edinburgh, Scotland

Edinburgh_bagpipe by abtabt

© abtabt, all rights reserved.

Edinburgh_bagpipe

Edinburgh, Scotland