Sunday, June 7, 2026

Berrington Hall, 2026, 2

 Continuing our visit to Berrington Hall...

Among the numerous clothing displays

Looking out upon Capability's parkland

In the dress-up room; see 2016...

Everything you ever wanted to know about 18th century make-up


Steps to undressing...

A banyan...18th century male loungewear...I want one!

Not everyone was amused

21st century answer to it all

Incredibly beautiful fan

Servants' stairs

Butler's room

Housekeeper's

Christmas guest list

One of Capability's trees

Now in the garden areas

Workspace

Spare parts, showing a bit of the 12 foot garden wall

Auricula Theater...



Larger view of the garden...great house and garden!


Berrington Hall, 2026, 1

It was another long drive--65+ miles through the hedgerows and hollow ways*--from Kilpeck to Welsh Pool and Powys, our next base camp--and so we decided to stop off at Berrington Hall, another National Trust site, for a look at the house and garden. Of course, being pretty well traveled in this part of England and Wales, we had been to Berrington before, in June of 2016. Berrington is one of the best-preserved of the the Trust's many "great" houses...associated with a Mayor of London, with one of the Royal Navy's great leaders, and its landscape was the last done by the legendary Capability Brown. The pix below are fairly self-explanatory and hopefully won't duplicate very many of those from the previous visit. The are:

https://roadeveron.blogspot.com/2016/06/berrington-hall.html
https://roadeveron.blogspot.com/2016/06/berrington-parkland-culpabilitys-last.html.

The main house

Election hankie...click to enlarge

Among Berrington's major themes was dress in Georgian times; so there
are examples in nearly every room

We were pretty taken with the ceiling treatments throughout the house;
mostly by the Italian painter Biagio Rebecca, among the finest surviving






The floor treatments were pretty nice too






Admiral Rodney battle scene, no doubt

Really nice stairwells for the great and the good























"Trains and feathers..." required



Re-creation of the gown and train...see photo


Which is saying something...


Much more on the jumbo dresses in the 2016 posts










































*remember, you're going 20mph, tops, on a single-lane track, very limited visibility, stopping often at the intermittent turn-outs for opposing traffic or to let impatient drivers behind you pass...oh yes, driving on the "proper" side of the road, too...

Return To Kilpeck, 2026

As students of this blog know, we have long been fond of Romanesque sculptural grotesques--hunky-punks, chimeras, or, as we mostly call them, funny faces--and we have travelled long and far all over western Europe to find some of the best examples and to post pix of them here. (Enter "funny faces" in the search box; maybe fix yourself a snack and beverage first.) The place where this all began, in 2009, is in the hamlet of Kilpeck, near Hereford, at the early 12th century parish church of St. Mary and St. David. We returned once again on May 23rd, our 4th visit. As usual, we found all the familiar faces but also found some new images and features at which to marvel. I'll post pix of only a few of the couple score of grotesques below and refer to previous posts for fuller coverage:

https://roadeveron.blogspot.com/2009/10/parish-church-of-st-mary-and-st-david.html
https://roadeveron.blogspot.com/2016/05/return-to-kilpeck-1.html
https://roadeveron.blogspot.com/2016/05/return-to-kilpeck-2_29.html
https://roadeveron.blogspot.com/2022/05/return-to-kilpeck-2022.html.

These posts also provide a bit more information on the Hereford School of Romanesque Sculpture, the Sheela-na-gig, and other matters. BTW, grotesques and gargoyles are different beasts: grotesques are purely decorative while gargoyles have a mainly plumbing function, in addition to the aesthetics.

The parish church of SS Mary and David...completed about 1130-1145

Portal...click to enlarge and see whether you can find any
obviously Christian symbols...

Lots of Celtic or so...

Ditto

The funny faces appears as corbels, sort of, between the
roof and outer wall, running all around the building; all
of them secular...or even profane

Or Celtic




The bell tower, as it were


The Sheela-na-gig; very famous among the hundreds
known to exist


Whenever you're sad, try to think of this 12th century 
dog and bunny show



Or the stupid ant-eater tricks


It's not easy being green

Fiddler on the roof

Sorry to disappoint: actually a wrestling hold, not an embrace



Now inside, where the more clearly Christian sacred things might be







A favorite place