Peter Pan
© Stephen (view gallery)
With a cobweb.
Barrie began planning the Peter Pan statue in 1906. He took photos of the six-year-old Michael Llewelyn Davies (the inspiration for the Peter Pan character) wearing a special Peter Pan costume to help a sculptor recreate his vision. In 1912, he found the man to make the statue, Sir George Frampton, and by May 1 that year the sculpture was in place in Kensington Gardens. Image cannot be loaded
Royal Stairway in Kensington Palace, London
© Patricia Anne Kidd (view gallery)
The opulent appearing staircase made you walk cautiously and carefully yet feeling quite privileged to walk up to the next beautiful floor. No matter how many times I visit it is still a wonderful feeling and sight. Image cannot be loaded
The White Garden, Kensington Palace in memory of Princess Diana
© Paul V. A. Johnson (view gallery)
It’s a visual that’s equal parts beautiful and haunting: a sea of tributes and flowers, an estimated more than 60 million individual blooms, laid to rest outside Princess Diana’s former home at Kensington Palace, just as she was laid to rest herself.
Cleanup took weeks: Fresh flowers were brought to London hospitals and nursing homes, teddy bears distributed to needy children, and poems boxed away. But the decaying bouquets? They were turned into fertilizer for the Palace Garden adjacent to Diana’s former home.
Two decades later, the mulch from those flowers turned into something beautiful: the White Garden, a stunning floral tribute to the late, great princess. Image cannot be loaded
The White Garden, Kensington Palace in memory of Princess Diana
© Paul V. A. Johnson (view gallery)
It’s a visual that’s equal parts beautiful and haunting: a sea of tributes and flowers, an estimated more than 60 million individual blooms, laid to rest outside Princess Diana’s former home at Kensington Palace, just as she was laid to rest herself.
Cleanup took weeks: Fresh flowers were brought to London hospitals and nursing homes, teddy bears distributed to needy children, and poems boxed away. But the decaying bouquets? They were turned into fertilizer for the Palace Garden adjacent to Diana’s former home.
Two decades later, the mulch from those flowers turned into something beautiful: the White Garden, a stunning floral tribute to the late, great princess. Image cannot be loaded
The White Garden, Kensington Palace in memory of Princess Diana
© Paul V. A. Johnson (view gallery)
It’s a visual that’s equal parts beautiful and haunting: a sea of tributes and flowers, an estimated more than 60 million individual blooms, laid to rest outside Princess Diana’s former home at Kensington Palace, just as she was laid to rest herself.
Cleanup took weeks: Fresh flowers were brought to London hospitals and nursing homes, teddy bears distributed to needy children, and poems boxed away. But the decaying bouquets? They were turned into fertilizer for the Palace Garden adjacent to Diana’s former home.
Two decades later, the mulch from those flowers turned into something beautiful: the White Garden, a stunning floral tribute to the late, great princess. Image cannot be loaded
The White Garden, Kensington Palace in memory of Princess Diana
© Paul V. A. Johnson (view gallery)
It’s a visual that’s equal parts beautiful and haunting: a sea of tributes and flowers, an estimated more than 60 million individual blooms, laid to rest outside Princess Diana’s former home at Kensington Palace, just as she was laid to rest herself.
Cleanup took weeks: Fresh flowers were brought to London hospitals and nursing homes, teddy bears distributed to needy children, and poems boxed away. But the decaying bouquets? They were turned into fertilizer for the Palace Garden adjacent to Diana’s former home.
Two decades later, the mulch from those flowers turned into something beautiful: the White Garden, a stunning floral tribute to the late, great princess. Image cannot be loaded
The White Garden, Kensington Palace in memory of Princess Diana
© Paul V. A. Johnson (view gallery)
It’s a visual that’s equal parts beautiful and haunting: a sea of tributes and flowers, an estimated more than 60 million individual blooms, laid to rest outside Princess Diana’s former home at Kensington Palace, just as she was laid to rest herself.
Cleanup took weeks: Fresh flowers were brought to London hospitals and nursing homes, teddy bears distributed to needy children, and poems boxed away. But the decaying bouquets? They were turned into fertilizer for the Palace Garden adjacent to Diana’s former home.
Two decades later, the mulch from those flowers turned into something beautiful: the White Garden, a stunning floral tribute to the late, great princess. Image cannot be loaded
The White Garden, Kensington Palace in memory of Princess Diana
© Paul V. A. Johnson (view gallery)
It’s a visual that’s equal parts beautiful and haunting: a sea of tributes and flowers, an estimated more than 60 million individual blooms, laid to rest outside Princess Diana’s former home at Kensington Palace, just as she was laid to rest herself.
Cleanup took weeks: Fresh flowers were brought to London hospitals and nursing homes, teddy bears distributed to needy children, and poems boxed away. But the decaying bouquets? They were turned into fertilizer for the Palace Garden adjacent to Diana’s former home.
Two decades later, the mulch from those flowers turned into something beautiful: the White Garden, a stunning floral tribute to the late, great princess. Image cannot be loaded
The White Garden, Kensington Palace in memory of Princess Diana
© Paul V. A. Johnson (view gallery)
It’s a visual that’s equal parts beautiful and haunting: a sea of tributes and flowers, an estimated more than 60 million individual blooms, laid to rest outside Princess Diana’s former home at Kensington Palace, just as she was laid to rest herself.
Cleanup took weeks: Fresh flowers were brought to London hospitals and nursing homes, teddy bears distributed to needy children, and poems boxed away. But the decaying bouquets? They were turned into fertilizer for the Palace Garden adjacent to Diana’s former home.
Two decades later, the mulch from those flowers turned into something beautiful: the White Garden, a stunning floral tribute to the late, great princess. Image cannot be loaded