"Heather and Stone Moondance"
Wrapped Canvas Print: A single ancient stone of the Ring of Brodgar stands beneath a partial moon with a bed of heather in the foreground near Stromness on Orkney Island, Scotland, UK. The ring was built around 2500-2000 BCE, covering an area of almost 8,500 square meters. It is the third largest stone circle in the British Isles. According to legend, it was a religious shrine and possibly a place of ritual, while others believe the ring was built for the astronomical observation of the equinox and solstice.
This is also available as a paper print here.
(click on image to enlarge)
Wrapped Canvas Print: A single ancient stone of the Ring of Brodgar stands beneath a partial moon with a bed of heather in the foreground near Stromness on Orkney Island, Scotland, UK. The ring was built around 2500-2000 BCE, covering an area of almost 8,500 square meters. It is the third largest stone circle in the British Isles. According to legend, it was a religious shrine and possibly a place of ritual, while others believe the ring was built for the astronomical observation of the equinox and solstice.
This is also available as a paper print here.
(click on image to enlarge)
Wrapped Canvas Print: A single ancient stone of the Ring of Brodgar stands beneath a partial moon with a bed of heather in the foreground near Stromness on Orkney Island, Scotland, UK. The ring was built around 2500-2000 BCE, covering an area of almost 8,500 square meters. It is the third largest stone circle in the British Isles. According to legend, it was a religious shrine and possibly a place of ritual, while others believe the ring was built for the astronomical observation of the equinox and solstice.
This is also available as a paper print here.
(click on image to enlarge)