The harmony between great Victorian revival castles and their surrounding ornamental grounds is rarely seen to such perfection as at Johnstown Castle. Located on County Wexford, the mature woodlands and lakes of this demesne provide the perfect setting for this turreted and battlemented castle of gleaming silver-grey ashlar, built for the Grogan-Morgan family between 1810 and 1855 and incorporating part of a more ancient castle.
31 Oct 12:25
mau67
scenario spettacolare!
31 Oct 12:38
gearoid
Thank you, Maurizio
More to come, but I can only post 1 per day
31 Oct 14:27
iciworm
Also a 10 Picture for me.
31 Oct 15:05
caldera
Very, very nice indeed, love the vibrant green colours & the reflections!
31 Oct 15:15
pandarino
big
31 Oct 16:13
rcuello
Excellent perspective of the castle, its environment well appreciated.
The reflections give a plus, and the process not to speak.
31 Oct 18:58
cloudberry
Natural, Just perfectly processed HDR
31 Oct 20:21
daze420
stunning!
01 Nov 01:24
widows_son
Where's the "11" on this pull down rating menu?
01 Nov 17:50
drugo
Beautiful scenery, but the image is poorly defined and has a shade "linear" in my opinion, too bad ...
The harmony between great Victorian revival castles and their surrounding ornamental grounds is rarely seen to such perfection as at Johnstown Castle. Located on County Wexford, the mature woodlands and lakes of this demesne provide the perfect setting for this turreted and battlemented castle of gleaming silver-grey ashlar, built for the Grogan-Morgan family between 1810 and 1855 and incorporating part of a more ancient castle.
scenario spettacolare!
Thank you, Maurizio More to come, but I can only post 1 per day
Also a 10 Picture for me.
Very, very nice indeed, love the vibrant green colours & the reflections!
big
Excellent perspective of the castle, its environment well appreciated. The reflections give a plus, and the process not to speak.
Natural, Just perfectly processed HDR
stunning!
Where's the "11" on this pull down rating menu?
Beautiful scenery, but the image is poorly defined and has a shade "linear" in my opinion, too bad ...
I appreciate all the comments made