Misplaced Lens Cap

Product Placement
Keni
"I'm Dorothy Gale from Kansas"

祝日 / Permanent Vacation
KIROKAZE
No title available
RMH
hello vonnie

No title available

tannertan36

Andulka

Kaledo Art
we're not kids anymore.
art blog(derogatory)
Jules of Nature
Show & Tell
Three Goblin Art

Love Begins

ellievsbear
seen from Indonesia

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from Singapore

seen from Türkiye
seen from United States

seen from Russia

seen from Canada

seen from Malaysia
seen from Brazil
seen from Argentina

seen from T1

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Singapore
seen from United States

seen from Netherlands
seen from Japan
@duchesscamilla
Happy Birthday Camilla ❤️ 73rd Birthday
Angela Merkel: "Happy birthday, Your Royal Highness!"
Camilla: "Thank you and the same to you, Mrs. Merkel!"
Camilla and Angela Merkel on the telephone (17 July 2020)
Governor, Pensioners, Members of Staff,
It is a huge pleasure to be at the Royal Hospital Chelsea today, after the disappointment of not being able to join you in person on Founder’s Day. You were much in my thoughts on 4th June, and I was deeply touched by the wonderful message you sent me.
I know that you have been through a particularly tough time of late, having lost ten Pensioners to COVID-19. I should like to express my heartfelt sympathy to the families of those who have died, and to each of you as you go through the painful process of adjusting to the gap left by those much-loved friends.
As some of you may know, the brilliant writer A. A. Milne for many years lived in a house a few streets away from the Royal Hospital Chelsea. While living there, he wrote his famous poem, “Buckingham Palace”, which my late father (a highly decorated war veteran) delighted in reading to us when we were children. Most of you will be familiar with this verse:
They’re changing guard at Buckingham Palace
Christopher Robin went down with Alice
Alice is marrying one of the guards
A soldier’s life is terribly hard, says Alice.
A soldier’s life is terribly hard. For all his apparent light-heartedness, Milne knew what he was talking about: he had fought in the First World War and was injured at the Battle of the Somme.
Now you and your families also know more than most about the challenges and sacrifices of military duty. And you know, too, the extent to which we depend on our soldiers. This has been clearly demonstrated by two recent examples. Firstly, a few weeks ago, we marked the 75th anniversary of VE Day, a day which some of you might remember. We recalled with gratitude the great victory that our Armed Forces won for us. Then, in a very different context, we turned to a younger generation of Servicemen and women as the recent pandemic broke out. Proving themselves your worthy successors, they have helped to build hospitals, establish testing sites, repatriate our citizens, deliver PPE at home and abroad and develop a track and trace application to help combat the spread of the virus. And all the while continuing to assure our Defence at home and abroad.
In times of war and times of peace, whether seen or unseen, the Armed Forces support and strengthen our nation, just as each one of you Chelsea Pensioners did throughout your careers. I should like to thank you from the bottom of my heart for all that you have done for us.
Ladies and gentlemen, you are a source of inspiration, reassurance and pride to this country, and as a fellow pensioner I salute you all.
Camilla, The Duchess of Cornwall (15 July 2020)
“In times of war and times of peace, whether seen or unseen, the Armed Forces support and strengthen our nation, just as each one of you Chelsea Pensioners did throughout your careers. I should like to thank you from the bottom of my heart for all that you have done for us. Ladies and gentlemen, you are a source of inspiration, reassurance and pride to this country, and as a fellow pensioner I salute you all.”
Camilla, The Duchess of Cornwall (https://www.princeofwales.gov.uk/speech/speech-hrh-duchess-cornwall-royal-hospital-chelsea)
Governor, Pensioners, Members of Staff,
“shall look forward to the day” - “You’re so excited because you haven’t seen them for three-and-a-half months … Your first reaction is to run up and hug them, and you have to sort of put up your hands. It’s a very odd feeling,”
Camilla on her grandchildren
“I’ve been very, very happy with my jeans. It will be very hard to get out of them again. I think you get into a sort of way of life, don’t you?”
Camilla on wearing jeans during the lockdown
Camilla to discuss life in lockdown and Charles´ fitness in radio interview ⚜️ The Duchess of Cornwall will discuss life in lockdown, missing her grandchildren and how Charles is the fittest man she knows for his age in an upcoming radio interview.
Camilla is due to cover a wide range of topics as she undertakes her first-ever radio guest edit on BBC Radio 5 Live’s The Emma Barnett Show on Tuesday July 7.
The duchess will say how her husband, the Prince of Wales, remains in good shape despite catching Covid-19 earlier this year.
In a pre-recorded segment of the show, Camilla will say: “He is probably the fittest man of his age I know. He’ll walk and walk and walk. “He’s like a mountain goat, he leaves everybody miles behind.”
The duchess will also talk about missing her grandchildren during lockdown and how she “shall look forward to the day” she can hug them.
“You’re so excited because you haven’t seen them for three-and-a-half months … Your first reaction is to run up and hug them, and you have to sort of put up your hands. It’s a very odd feeling,” she will say.
On the topic of the coronavirus lockdown, Camilla will talk about her fondness for wearing jeans and how she has familiarised herself with online video conference calling.
She will say: “I’m ashamed to say that I really hated the internet. I didn’t understand it and I thought, ‘what’s the point of this?’.
“Since lockdown, it’s been so brilliant because I’ve been able to communicate with family, my children, my friends.
“But it’s also taught children … otherwise children who aren’t at school what would they have done without it?”
Camilla said she had also been enjoying wearing jeans during lockdown, adding: “I’ve been very, very happy with my jeans. It will be very hard to get out of them again. I think you get into a sort of way of life, don’t you?”
Her radio feature will also cover domestic violence, her passion to raise awareness about the issue and her involvement with the charity SafeLives.
Speaking about how she became involved with the domestic abuse charity, Camilla will recall hearing a story about a man who used a hammer to kill his wife.
“I don’t think any of us could believe what we were hearing. I could feel the tears starting to drip down my face,” the duchess says.
“It was so moving and so horrific that afterwards, I met her mother, a grandmother who had taken charge of the children.
“I just remember saying to her that ‘I don’t know what I can do, but if there’s anything, I promise you, I’ll try and find a way’. That’s really how it began.”
The Emma Barnett Show is on BBC Radio 5 Live every Monday to Thursday between 10am and 1pm.
“Although it may be her personal choice and preference, I can’t understand why Camilla only wears the Greville Tiara (besides the 1 time she wore the Delhi Durbar). It makes me wonder if the Queen is really strict regarding Tiara loans, but then again Kate and Sophie have borrowed more than Camilla. I hope we see her in more tiaras once she becomes Queen, or we may just see that she really loves the Greville.” - Submitted by Anonymous
We love the Greville Tiara so much, I think she don’t want to wear to much tiaras , and that’s right... I think she will use the same tiarias after the coronation.
“I think the reason for why the BRF isn’t talking about BLM it’s because that movement is more of an American thing. I know there is racism in the UK, but the US has the high rate of Police brutality. Another reason is because COVID 19. Kate and William, and other members of the royal Family are focused on the works that they have been for the past few months” - Submitted by lady-june-love
Prince’s Trust... talk about it, the association support BLM.
Clarence House garden
The house was built between 1825 and 1827 to a design by John Nash. It was commissioned by the Duke of Clarence, who in 1830 became King William IV of the United Kingdom (reigned 1830–1837). He lived there in preference to the adjacent St James's Palace, an ancient Tudor building which he found too cramped.
From William IV, the house passed to his sister Princess Augusta Sophia, and, following her death in 1840, to Queen Victoria's mother, Princess Victoria of Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld. In 1866, it became the home of Queen Victoria's second son Alfred, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha (also Duke of Edinburgh), until his death in 1900.
Alfred's younger brother Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn, Queen Victoria's third son, used the house from 1900 until his death in 1942. During his tenure, for a brief period in the 1930s, it was the location of the library of the School of Oriental and African Studies until all universities in London were evacuated in 1939, and the school temporarily relocated to Cambridge.
During World War II, it suffered damage by enemy bombing during The Blitz (1940–41). Following the death of the Duke of Connaught in 1942, it was used by the Red Cross and the St John Ambulance Brigade as their headquarters during the rest of World War II.
Following their marriage in 1947, it became the residence of Princess Elizabeth and her husband Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. Their daughter, Princess Anne, was born there in 1950.
In 1953, after the death of her father King George VI (d. 6 February 1952), and her accession as Queen Elizabeth II, she moved to Buckingham Palace. Her mother, Queen Elizabeth, and Princess Margaret moved into Clarence House. Also at the start of her widowhood, the Queen Mother purchased the Castle of Mey in Scotland as a summer residence.
Princess Margaret later moved into an apartment in Kensington Palace, whilst the Queen Mother remained at Clarence House and at the Castle of Mey, until her death in March 2002. In 2003, the Prince of Wales moved to Clarence House.
Wikipedia Sources
Clarence House
Clarence House is a British royal residence on The Mall in the City of Westminster, London. It is attached to St James's Palace and shares the palace's garden. From 1953 until 2002, it was home to Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother.[1] It has since been the official residence of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his wife Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall.
Clarence House was also the official residence of Prince William from 2003 until April 2011, and of Prince Harry from 2003 until March 2012. It is open to visitors for approximately one month each summer, usually in August (it is currently closed to the public until August 2020). The four-storey house is faced in pale stucco. Over the years, it has undergone extensive remodelling and reconstruction, most notably after the Second World War, and little remains of the original structure as designed by John Nash. Since 2003, the term Clarence House has been used as a metonym for the Prince of Wales's private office. (The term St James's Palace had been used previously.) It is Grade I listed on the National Heritage List for England.
Wikipedia sources
Clarence House (virtual tour) PT.4
Clarence House (Virtual Tour) PT.3
Clarence House (Virtual Tour) PT.2