Monochrome Madness: Street Lighting

I confess that I had to do quite a bit of digging to come up with an interesting image of some street lighting. Typically, these are rather mundane artefacts that you wouldn’t often be bothered to get your camera out for.*

[Note to self: a conjunction is the wrong type of word to end a sentence with.]

However, I came across this image, which I had entirely forgotten about. High up on a wall in an old narrow street in the nearby town of Saint-Junien is this rather ornate but ancient lantern. Obviously designed for illumination, it certainly predates electric lights, and maybe even gas ones too.

Monochrome Madness: Street Lighting

Lens-Artists Challenge: Bold

For this week’s challenge, Sofia at Photographias wants to see something bold. Although I only took this photograph last Thursday evening, it strikes me as a suitable response.

This is the Eglise Saint-Pierre-du-Queyroix in the centre of the city of Limoges. We were walking back from a restaurant to our hotel when I noticed how boldly the spire stood out from the night sky with that yellow hue from the sodium lights that illuminate it after dark.

Lens-Artists Challenge: Bold

Streetlight

By law, all houses in France are required to have a light over outside doors (the light doesn’t have to be switched on, but that’s another story).

Typically, the lights around here are of traditional design – an old carriage lamp is very popular, for example). However, in Saint-Junien there is at least one street light of more contemporary design.

Cee’s Black & White Photo Challenge: Lighting