Multi-coloured window jambs on an office building in central Brussels. From head on the building looks fairly normal: its only when you look up and along the walls that the hidden colours become visible.
Photo: Stavanger bridge
The Stavanger City Bridge crosses the Strømsteinsundet from the centre of Stavanger, Norway to the islands of Grasholmen and Sølyst in the harbour. It’s more than 30 years old, but looks brand new…
Processed with VSCO film.
Photo: Let's paint the town red
Photo: Stavanger windows
Despite its significant wealth – Stavanger is the heart of Norway’s oil industry – there are still plenty of lovely old wooden buildings around the waterfront and the old town.
Photo: Mooring bouys
Photo: Raw hide
Close-up of an Indian rhinoceros at the Edinburgh Zoo.
Photo: Old Glory
An American flag, just for our American friends for the 4th of July.
Photo: Glasgow cranes
Three cranes from the BVT (BAE) shipyard in Govan in Glasgow – one of the last remaining shipyards on the River Clyde.
Photo: Bicycle on a street
Photo: Sweet evening breeze
Tall grass waves in the wind at sunset in along the banks of the River Zaan in a semi-rural part of the Netherlands.
Photo: Wait!
Photo: Divine window
Photo: Faded glory
Photo: Bodleian library window
Detail of carving outside the windows of the Bodleian library, Oxford.
Photo: The Whittle Arch
The Whittle Arch in Coventry, England is a memorial to Sir Frank Whittle, the inventer of the turbo jet engine. The arch is made of a pair of aerofoil sections, with perforated stainless steel sheathing covering a tubular frame and steel lattice.