Friday, 2 October 2020

Medieval buildings from UK open air museums

 So this post is a little different, there are no pictures of miniatures or terrain in this post. What I have got is a number of photos I've taken of various medieval buildings at open air museums I have visited and as I have accumulated them as reference for terrain building I thought they might be of interest to others thinking of further builds.



15th century barn at Chiltern open air museum 

Iron age Roundhouse interior Chiltern open air museum 
Iron age roundhouse Celtic Harmony camp


Tudor outbuilding Weald and downland open air museum 



Man powered well



High street W&D various timber framed buildings 





Iron age roundhouses Buster open air museum 


Saxon longhouse Buster open air museum 

Iron age roundhouse Buster 













14th century flint cottage W&D 




Saxon longhouse W&D above,15th century Wealdon house below W&D
Period beehives 
High Street W&D various timber framed buildings 

Tudor barn W&D 
I hope this is of interest to some, I'm doing this partly because I was going through theseon my phone as I get ready to start on some dark age buildings.  Legacy blogger hasn't lasted long, so this has been painfully put together in the new format which seems to delight in deleting images left right and centre! I'm afraid there is still a  few lost titles in the post but if I were to try and delete them I would no doubt lose more images, I guess I will preserve but it's much less intuitive on the phone, which I understood was one of the reasons for the change? Next up? Probably cavalry, probably dark ages. 
All the best 
Iain 


45 comments:

  1. Iain, this is a very useful compilation of buildings for period-specific architecture projects. Very interesting.

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    1. Thanks Jonathan! I mostly put them together so I had a reference for scratch building, it's good to know they're interesting!
      Best Iain

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  2. Nice pictures, always glad to see (and mostly visit!) open air museums...

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    1. Thanks Phil! It is,although unlike yours,ours are seen mostly in the rain!
      Best Iain

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  3. Great pics Iain. Love the beehives! Never seen any look like that before?

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    1. Thanks Ray! Medieval style beehives, Simon Chick has made some on his HYW blog,they're fun aren't they?
      Best Iain

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  4. Excellent reference pictures Iain, thank's for sharing

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    1. Thanks Dave! Better books/pictures make modellers better!
      Best Iain

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  5. Very interesting Iain. I too was taken with the beehives.

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  6. Thanks Iain, a good reference for colour and texture.

    re blogger, the images seem to need a proper space to go into, with a space above and below it, otherwise it defaults to shoving the image to end of the post. I get results if I hit the return 3 time to give me three blank lines and then put the image in the middle of them (i.e. the 2nd line).

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    1. Thanks Norm , I shall persevere and try what you have advised, sensibly as always!
      Best Iain

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  7. These look great. I lived near Beaconsfield for two years and never realised that there was the museum nearby.

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    1. Useful pictures I think? Beaconsfield is a bit odd,it's built around a crossroad, more German traditionally we've always avoided doing that in England,crossroads are where we hang people so that their ghosts are confused !
      Best Iain

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  8. Nice pics Iain - the 14th century cottage looks quite similar to how I made one of my Border Reiver cottages look - even has the same V shaped "bump" over the entrance way etc! I was heartened to read you too have had issues with the new Blogger - I was starting to think it was only me! Its no better on a lap top, I can assure you, but I too will persevere!

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    1. Thanks Keith! I guess you get a hump over the doorway when you have low walls? Not enjoying new blogger to be honest! The first picture was used for the scene where the 2 queens meet in a laundry in the Mary Queen of Scots film you liked.
      Best Iain

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  9. Great reference photographs Iain. The last time we were in Germany we came across Cloppenburg, an open air museum in Lower Saxony. They have preserved a large range of buildings from around the 1500s - 1800s. A great reference for my 7YW buildings. Cheers Greg

    https://www.niedersachsen-tourism.com/a-open-air-museum-cloppenburg

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    1. Thanks Greg! I'll have to check it out!
      Best Iain

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  10. I enjoyed these shots a lot, Iain. The Flint Cottage definitely makes me think of a Hobbit dwelling. Bag's End, anyone?

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    1. Thanks Peter! Yes,definitely built for little people! Depopulated in the black death pandemic!
      Best Iain

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  11. Oh, very, very cool! I love visiting places like this. I was fortunate to visit a few sites there back in 2013 - Farnum castle and Stonehenge.

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  12. Thanks Iain very interesting collection, several of which would look good on the table top

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  13. Great photos Iain, always interesting to see these buildings, especially as there hasn't been any reenacting in places like these this year.

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    1. I'm sure you know them well! I guess reenacting has been hammered this year too.
      Best Iain

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    2. We managed to get one private event in and that was it! Have a look https://www.facebook.com/media/set/?set=a.3325463314199774&type=3&__tn__=-UC-R

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    3. Glad you were able to get one event this lousy year!
      Best Iain

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  14. Excellent collection of reference photographs, particularly of interest to me was the different colours and conditions of the thatch. I've often wondered if modern polution affects thatch colouring (as it does in many buildings).

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    1. Good question, I know Trajans column has been eroded by pollutants, so much so that the plaster cast taken in the 18th century in the Victoria and Albert museum is in much better condition than the real thing,I guess that as thatch has a much more limited lifespan as a material there might not be time for it to show?
      Best Iain

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  15. Excellent pictures, very useful for painting buildings!

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  16. Fantastic photos- really useful for this of us who are interested in this kind of thing but live on the other side of the world.

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    1. Thanks Codsticker! We are lucky having it on the doorstep, not that it's stopped you building some excellent period structures!
      Best Iain

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  17. Sweet. I love seeing this kind of buildings and stuff. As the others said, it's quite an useful reference!

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  18. Really cool pictures and I enjoyed seeing them, thanks for sharing. One of the few drawbacks of Being an American is the lack of medieval sites to visit in our own county. 😀
    (Least, there used to be only a few drawbacks to living in America, seems like there has been more recently...😝)

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    1. Thanks Stew! I do remember visiting an interesting castle in Las Vegas?!
      Best Iain

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  19. Most interesting photos Iain. Great to see such things preserved.
    Regards, James

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    1. Thanks James! Yes,glad there has been some preservation!
      Best Iain

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  20. Thanks for posting Iain. Some cool terrain ideas!

    Best wishes,
    Jan

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  21. These are a great reference - thanks for sharing your findings

    (wow... that's almost exactly like some spam comments I've gotten!? Ha! But really, these are great pics showing details of buildings I won't likely ever get to see in person!)

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    1. Thanks Tim! At least your not promoting a casino! I'm glad you think they might come in handy.
      Best Iain

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