Clevedon Pier.
Clevedon, Somerset, U.K.
March 2026.
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Clevedon Pier.
Clevedon, Somerset, U.K.
March 2026.
A couple of photos from a Sharpe event at Books on the Hill, Clevedon, on the 23rd of November. It's Jason Salkey, Paul, and another actor from the Sharpe cast (sorry I can't remember his name).
Found them on the Books on the Hill Instagram account.
curious about this shot. I've been searching all over Google Maps to find where it was filmed... It might be a restaurant.
So while I didn't enjoy go2 it did remind me that I am David Tennant trash so I am now watching broadchurch, and I forgot that loads of it was filmed in the town I lived in ages 4-8 and so it's so weird that it's like David Tennant and Olivia Colman solving murders in my dreams. Like oh that's the high street. That's the place my mum used to steal samphire, that's where me and my brother used to run around like idiots.
Clevedon, Dame Bucht von Alfred Robert Quinton
Farblithographie, Private Collection
A little sample of this weekend's products from a Saturday afternoon walk in Clevedon. I'm generally not a huge fan of winter photography, but I've recently found a new style that works really well for this time of year, going for a more gritty, grimy, urban atmosphere. It's a style that works well with the stark contrast of taking photos into the low afternoon sun in crisp air, often benefiting from the dramatic cloud patterns we see quite a lot in winter around Bristol.
Clevedon Pier Symmetry .....
Clevedon Pier is a seaside pier in the town of Clevedon, Somerset, England on the east shore of the Severn Estuary. It was described by Sir John Betjeman, as "the most beautiful pier in England" and was designated a Grade I listed building in 2001.
The pier was built during the 1860s to attract tourists and provide a ferry port for rail passengers to South Wales. The pier is 312 m (1,024 ft) long and consists of eight spans supported by steel rails covered by wooden decking, with a pavilion on the pier head.
The pier opened in 1869 and served as an embarkation point for paddle steamer excursions for almost 100 years. Two of the spans collapsed during stress testing in 1970 and demolition was proposed, but local fund raising and heritage grants allowed the pier to be dismantled for restoration and reassembled. It reopened in 1989, and ten years later was awarded the Pier of the Year from the National Piers Society, and a Civic Trust Award. The pier now offers a landing stage for steamers and is a popular attraction for tourists and anglers.