John Preston
10.3K posts

John Preston
@JohnPLeeds
Changing lives thro' business development for The Conservation Volunteers across North +children, allotments, birding, stained glass & pilot's licence Own Views
Beigetreten Mayıs 2013
618 Folgt493 Follower

@SundPamela I finally cracked and found time to make the shelves. Lots of sorting still to do.

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John Preston retweetet

It was another amazing day of cloud inversions on Helvellyn today, it was a special day to be on the high fells! We just need some snow now! #helvellyn #cloudinversion #summitsafely

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@MichelleU_Wood A Merry Christmas Michelle. Successful painting in 2025
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An unusual window, the tracery and designed to be viewed from the enclosed staircase, lit by the room/outer window beyond. Fountains Hall @fountainsabbey In memory of two lost in WW2
As many gather with friends and family- remember those who will not be there, @BSMGP


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@WriterHannahBT That would be a more colourful first bird series. It is wet and windy I have been listening for #firstbirdofmyday nothing. So chilly I will be forced to get up.
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it is lovely, although I fear the bike slightly undersize?
CatherineRosamundLowe@CathyRLowe
The Postal Museum archives yield more rejected treasures! I thought I might as well put "Nash" speculatively into the search box, and up came this handsome watercolour, pencil, & pastel poster design. Rejected by the Poster Advisory Group on 12 February 1936. @churchartnature
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An archway leads to a balcony above the entrance hall of the John Rylands Library, Manchester. By Basil Champneys, 1890-99, a private commission by Rylands' widow Enriqueta. It cost £230,000, roughly £24,000,000 in today's money.
John Rylands was a wealthy entrepreneur employing 15,000 people in Manchester manufacturing textile goods. In the early days, much of the cotton was picked by enslaved people on plantations in the southern United States, although the Rylands family themselves owned no slaves or plantations, and the company also offered 'freely picked' alternatives to some of its products, which was considered unusual and enlightened at the time.
Nevertheless, Rylands was Manchester's first multi-millionaire, and one of the richest men in Europe. His activities as a philanthropist included paying for schools, orphanages, retirement homes and non-conformist chapels, as well as a number of public buildings in Stretford, including the Town Hall, although he never held any public office himself. He bankrolled the Manchester Ship Canal when it looked like the project might fail. When he died in 1888 his estate was valued at £2,574,922, roughly £270,000,000 in today's money.

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Painting of a celebration in 1953 signed simply BZ. ..the banner in the painting says Acrobatics of Burley...in the background is a church steeple...many others from different Burleys suggested Leeds.
could it be a celebration in @BurleyPark Any insight @ahistoryinart @HWarlow

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@MichelleU_Wood On the Folly Flanuse website. A weekly post on Follies. The painting is c 1908 and in the Kirklees collection
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@JohnPLeeds I can totally see what you mean John, it really does look like my style. Where did you come across the painting?
Thanks for sharing it with me, it’s a beautiful artwork.
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@ahistoryinart I saw the early 1990s exhibition twice some remarkable total landscapes with naval and northern. Thus one really different
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John Preston retweetet

As it’s a chilly old day, make a pot of tea, put a blanket on your knees, shut your eyes for ten minutes and listen to short passages from the past. I’d be thrilled if you would join me☔️🤗 podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/gre…
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@WriterHannahBT A couple of solo crows riding the wind as it curls off the roofs of the bigger terraces. A couple of six times craw calls of joy? from ones playing king of the chimney pots And we have had a mistle thrush drop by to finish off the final rowan berries #FirstBirdofMyDay
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First bird of my day: a wren, in the low branches of a shrub, luckily light and small and hidden from the 65kmph gusts of wind. #FirstBirdOfMyDay #WhatsYours
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