CCT
Location / Studio Portfolio
CCT
-
44
Locations / Studios
30/10/2024
Moodboard
View as PDF
All Locations / Studios
Showing All - Default
Location #10222618
9 photos
8 of 9 photos
Location #10222618
With stunning views across the Pennines and Lake District, St Ninians stands remote and lonely down a long track. The setting of this surprisingly low sandstone building within a walled field is thoroughly captivating and adds to the forlorn atmosphere. The interior has remained unaltered since the church was completely rebuilt by Lady Anne ...
Location #10240171
2 photos
2 photos
Location #10240171
Information about this location has been provided by Kent Film Office. This pretty church is an ideal resting point for walkers crossing the beautiful North Downs. It dates back to Norman times. The south chapel of 1697 contains a touching memorial to the Bertie family, with life-size marble figures of a husband and wife holding hands. In ...
Location #10240170
1 photo
1 photo
Location #10240170
Information about this location has been provided by Kent Film Office. For more information and images:http://www.visitchurches.org.uk/Ourchurches/Completelistofchurches/All-Saints-Church-West-Stourmouth-Kent/
Location #10229699
2 photos
2 photos
Location #10229699
This speckled red church sits down a surprisingly quiet lane considering its close proximity to the large boatyard on the River Douglas. It is a modest church: both exterior and interior are paradigms of simplicity, yet the atmosphere is warm and it is clear this is a reverent space.
Location #10235327
3 photos
3 photos
Location #10235327
Half Saxon and half Norman: the Saxon church had a nave and chancel but in 1170 the Normans removed the latter and extended the church eastwards, doubling its original length and adding a tiny new chancel.
Location #10222957
2 photos
2 photos
Location #10222957
Beautiful brasses, carvings and monuments can be found in this slender-towered estate church located near a 14th-century Castle. The church dates from the late 11th or early 12th century. Additions and alterations were made in the 13th and 14th centuries.[1] Further alterations took place in the 18th century, when the top stage was added to the ...
Location #10235330
1 photo
1 photo
Location #10235330
Built in the 12th-century, this tiny, elegant church stands barn-like in the attractive grounds of 15th-century Eldon House. Its unassuming and simple exterior belies its history of near ruin and repair over the centuries. It was substantially restored in 1729 to save it from collapse, and then again in the 1860s and in 1975. In the 19th-century, ...
Location #10235318
7 photos
7 photos
Location #10235318
St John's, a severely elegant building in pale brick, is a very rare and almost unchanged example of an evangelical 'preaching house'. Though dating from the early years of the 19th century, its architecture clearly looks back to the classical style of the 18th. Unusually, it was not built as a parish church, but was privately funded and then ...
Location #10235580
6 photos
6 photos
Location #10235580
Founded in the 12th century to serve a priory and villagers in the riverside location, it has experienced little change despite a 19th-century restoration. Its ancient chancel arch and doorway have remarkable carvings with "grotesque, boggle-eyed monsters", rare beakhead figures and chevron ornamentation. Standing in a picturesque[3] ...
Location #10235320
7 photos
7 photos
Location #10235320
The church is in the simple shape of a cross and remains virtually unaltered since Medieval times; its calm and peaceful atmosphere evokes centuries of prayer.
Location #10222956
4 photos
4 photos
Location #10222956
This 15th-century church stands in the grounds of a school.
Location #10235324
3 photos
3 photos
Location #10235324
Grade II listed church which has been on the site since the 10th century. The present church dates from the 12th century. The plan of the church consists of a nave with a south porch and a north transept, a chancel, and a west bellcote. The walls of the nave are constructed in rendered rubble, and the chancel and buttresses are in flint. The ...
Location #10240169
2 photos
2 photos
Location #10240169
Information about this location has been provided by Kent Film Office. Becket himself is said to have preached in this small Norman Wealden church. The tower was partly rebuilt after a fire in 1639. Inside, the crown-post roof is striking and there are some interesting fittings. Most significant however, are the extensive Medieval ...
Location #10235321
9 photos
8 of 9 photos
Location #10235321
13th-century sandstone church with 18th Century interiors. Splendid views across to the Iron Age fort of Chanctonbury Ring on the South Downs. This simple sandstone 13th century building, up a narrow lane with splendid views across to the Iron Age fort of Chanctonbury Ring on the South Downs, has a charm of its own but does not prepare you ...
Location #10235583
4 photos
4 photos
Location #10235583
Built in 1876-78, the church is lavishly decorated Medieval-style church with Italian marble mosaic floors in such a rural location.
Location #10235322
5 photos
5 photos
Location #10235322
Italian Renaissance style and symmetry and grandeur of this 1827 church by the famous architect Sir Charles Barry, perfectly matches the neighbouring squares and terraces.
Location #10239961
4 photos
4 photos
Location #10239961
Information about this location has been provided by Kent Film Office. Small Norman country church in lovely rural setting.
Location #10240167
1 photo
1 photo
Location #10240167
Information about this location has been provided by Kent Film Office. St Catherine"s is the only complete Anglican church designed by Victorian architect E W Pugin. Built in 1866, it has a needle-sharp spire and richly coloured stained glass. Inside and out, it is a time capsule of Victorian church design that has remained almost exactly as ...
Location #10240166
1 photo
1 photo
Location #10240166
Information about this location has been provided by Kent Film Office. Pretty medieval church set in the grounds of Knowlton manor house. Medieval in origin but outwardly Victorian.
Location #10222952
6 photos
6 photos
Location #10222952
Within a stone's throw of the new builds on the outskirts of Milton Keynes, the rich Victorian stained glass of St Lawrence sheds light on one of the greatest Medieval treasures in the area - a series of stunning Medieval wallpaintings.
Location #10239962
2 photos
2 photos
Location #10239962
Information about this location has been provided by Kent Film Office. Small Medieval Church in churchyard.
Location #10239991
3 photos
3 photos
Location #10239991
Information about this location has been provided by Kent Film Office. This (Consecrated) Church building offers a very large open space (300 seated) with clear view of stage area, Indoor facilities include Stage/Heating/WC/Kitchen/Lighting. Originally AD 700 - rebuilt 3 - 4 times.
Location #10240173
2 photos
2 photos
Location #10240173
Information about this location has been provided by Kent Film Office. The 850-year-old church of St Mary's is hidden in a farmyard on marshland fringes to the south of the River Swale. The west doorway, with zig-zag decoration, is mid 12th-century, whilst the exceptionally long chancel was built about a hundred years later. Inside, a ...
Location #10235581
2 photos
2 photos
Location #10235581
This 12th century church, set prettily amongst trees, was probably built to serve Gains Castle, a Norman fortification now vanished. A long, very narrow building of local stone, flint and brick, it consists only of nave, chancel and south porch, with two bells hung in small arches in the west gable.
Location #10222954
4 photos
4 photos
Location #10222954
Surrounded by trees, in the middle of fields, it consists only of a nave, chancel, and porch. The village it served has long since disappeared. The church was built in the 12th- and 13th-centuries, probably on the site of an earlier church. There is a quaint Norman font, a beautiful chancel arch rebuilt in the 14th-century, and a fine 15th-century ...
Location #10235582
5 photos
5 photos
Location #10235582
Originally built by nuns, the church now consists of a 13th-century nave and chancel, while the transepts and flint tower are 19th-century additions.
Location #10235326
6 photos
6 photos
Location #10235326
Victorian jewel of a church clearly inspired by the soaring elegance of the 13th-century Sainte Chapelle in Paris, chapel of French kings.
Location #10222958
2 photos
2 photos
Location #10222958
Charming little flint church built in the 12th- and 13th- centuries, its Norman origins can be seen in the north doorway and chancel arch. Limewashed walls set off the delicate stained glass. Restoration in 1849 removed much else but left some handsome woodwork, including the Medieval roofs and a Jacobean pulpit and communion table.
Location #10239964
1 photo
1 photo
Location #10239964
Information about this location has been provided by Kent Film Office. Medieval Gothic Church on a hilltop location.
Location #10228267
4 photos
4 photos
Location #10228267
Redundant Anglican church, constructed in local sandstone, mostly dating from 14th century. The spire was rebuilt in 1889. The church contains a full set of 18th-century box pews, and a chancel rail with turned balusters from the same period. The font dates from about 1662.
Location #10235325
3 photos
3 photos
Location #10235325
The walls and roof of the current building are 13th-century and the windows and chancel screen are 15th. The interior was remodelled in 1703 and its character today comes largely from that period.
Location #10228788
2 photos
2 photos
Location #10228788
Location #10239963
29 photos
8 of 29 photos
Location #10239963
Information about this location has been provided by Kent Film Office. Outstanding medieval church, now redundant, with original stone floors, high timber framed roof and tombs. Large windows provide natural light. No pews so wide open space with double nave. Crypt with natural daylight and 2 vestries. Stone font. Some original wall paintings. ...
Location #10220411
4 photos
4 photos
Location #10220411
A beautiful Medieval church, located in an attractive tree-filled churchyard. It's great treasure is its Norman arcade, dating to around 1160 and fabulously carved with zig-zags and lozenge shapes. This was rescued from serious decay and respectfully restored in 1862. The chancel arch is a little later and the aisles are an 1863 rebuild of ...
Location #10222951
5 photos
5 photos
Location #10222951
This simple little church, with pre-Norman origins, stands in an idyllic spot beside a water meadow next to the River Lambourn.
Location #10235578
6 photos
6 photos
Location #10235578
13th-century chancel of a large Norman church. The main part of the church was removed in 1864 and rebuilt in the centre of Selsey.
Location #10229871
1 photo
1 photo
Location #10229871
St Wilfred's stands in a tranquil corner of a large churchyard, down a little lane beside Pagham Harbour. At first sight it appears to be a simple cemetery chapel. In fact it is the 13th century chancel of a large Norman church. The main part of the church was removed in 1864 and rebuilt in the centre of Selsey to serve the growing population of ...
Location #10229908
13 photos
8 of 13 photos
Location #10229908
This charming, ancient church, dating from Saxon and Norman times, is a flint-walled gem, set in parkland. The interiors are light, limewashed with a stunning medieval wall painting and an odd but delightful 18th-century shingled cupola over the tower. The church boasts early-medieval origins, but with a 19th-century remodelling of the south ...
Location #10240165
4 photos
4 photos
Location #10240165
This medieval church has been updated with 19th-century fittings, including Victorian stained glass featuring scenes from the New Testament. There is also some medieval stone carving in corbels flanking the windows, as well as medieval glass and fifteenth-century brasses. The atmosphere is dignified and commanding.
Location #10240168
6 photos
6 photos
Location #10240168
The colourful mix of building materials used gives St Mary’s a unique texture, mirroring the surroundings and giving the church an organic, harmonious feel. The interior is simple with white plastered walls and stone-flagged floors. It is a peaceful church, fitting in perfectly with its rustic surroundings.
Location #10222953
8 photos
8 photos
Location #10222953
On an isolated chalk hillock with fine views from its churchyard, this church is a noble landmark in the vale of Aylesbury; it has a massive 14th-century limestone tower and the rest is to scale.
Location #10222955
6 photos
6 photos
Location #10222955
St Mary's Church, Pitstone, is a beautiful, calm, and well-ordered medieval building (13th/15th centuries). It has a tall tower, a long nave, chancel with beautifully carved capitals, medieval tiling and 18th-century wall-paintings. The gentle nineteenth-century restoration has left an unspoiled medieval atmosphere.
Location #10239960
4 photos
4 photos
Location #10239960
Borrowing details from various sites throughout the country, St Michael’s is unique and moving. The interior is a vast open space, allowing for versatility. Fabulously unconventional and yet appropriately reverent, this church is a one-of-a-kind delight.
Location #10235323
14 photos
8 of 14 photos
Location #10235323
In a small, wooded churchyard adjoining the 18th-century Preston Manor, this simple square-towered church was constructed in the 13th-century. Built from flint with stone dressings and a tiled roof, St Peter’s exterior has a comforting air of familiarity. The interior is the same: a light space with a number of beautiful furnishings flatteringly ...