Photo of the Week – Grapes of Bordeaux

Visiting Chateau Ducru Beaucaillou in St. Julien was a neat experience since we got a private tour.  But, of course, my eyes go to the grapes and the vines.  Thinking how these little round things will produce a wonderful liquid for us humans to enjoy…  This picture is to not me about perfection in photographic technique but about the grapes, full of color, full of pulp, and ready to be taken…

grapes, vine, Bordeaux, France

 

The Awesome Ceilings of The Hermitage in St. Petersburg, Russia

The Hermitage in St. Petersburg, Russia is a fabulous building (actually a series of connected buildings, one of which is the “real” Hermitage).  The museum contains, of course, great pieces of art.  It is also a historical site having being built in 1764 by Catherine the Great as the Winter Palace (more about the Winter Palace:  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hermitage_Museum).  But it is definitely an architectural jewel.

In another post I shared pictures of the spectacular chandeliers.  Here I would like to focus on theceilings.  I do not think I have seen ceilings like these in other European palaces, though perhaps it is more that the style of these ceilings is more to my taste not because other palaces’ ceilings are not spectacular in their own right.

Ceilings of The Hermitage in St. Petersburg, Russia

Ceilings of The Hermitage in St. Petersburg, Russia

Ceilings of The Hermitage in St. Petersburg, Russia

Ceilings of The Hermitage in St. Petersburg, Russia

Ceilings of The Hermitage in St. Petersburg, Russia


Read more about St. Petersburg architecture: “St. Petersburg: Architecture of the Tsars”


Ceilings of The Hermitage in St. Petersburg, Russia

Ceilings of The Hermitage in St. Petersburg, Russia

Chandeliers of The Hermitage

While I am not obsessed with chandeliers and the like, I noticed after getting home from visiting St. Pete (as I call it), how many pictures of chandeliers I took at The Hermitage (and of the ceilings).  They are definitely elegant but their designs were not too stuffy.  Not being a connoisseur, but still having opinions, I would say they were made to be interesting not over-bearing.  (Click on the picture to see a larger version.)

Any experts out there who can enrich the readers??

 

 

Photo of the Week – The Aged Streets of Old San Juan

Old world charm in the new world.  Streets that have seen a lot of history and major empires fighting for them.  Old San Juan’s charm lies in its setting by the water, in its history, and in its well-preserved architectural jewels (including the “adoquines“, the cobblestone used to pave the streets a few centuries ago).  The wavey adoquines resemble the sea around Old San Juan, reminding us of its place in the Spanish Empire as a key port.

Old San Juan, San Juan, Puerto Rico, cobblestone, traffic, travel, tourism

Cobblestoned streets with their modern load

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