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STONEMASONRY

Photography Monochrome/Black and White posted on Dec 13, 2013
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Description


Taken at a friends workshop who is a stonemason. Stonemasonry is one of the earliest trades in civilisation's history. During the time of the Neolithic Revolution and domestication of animals, people learned how to use fire to create quicklime, plasters, and mortars. They used these to fashion homes for themselves with mud, straw, or stone, and masonry was born. The Ancients heavily relied on the stonemason to build the most impressive and long lasting monuments to their civilizations. The Egyptians built their pyramids, the civilizations of Central America had their step pyramids, the Persians their palaces, the Greeks their temples, and the Romans their public works and wonders. Among the famous ancient stonemasons is Sophroniscus, the father of Socrates, who was a stone-cutter. Castle building was an entire industry for the medieval stonemasons. When the Western Roman Empire fell, building in dressed stone decreased in much of Western Europe, and there was a resulting increase in timber-based construction. Stone work experienced a resurgence in the 9th and 10th centuries in Europe, and by the 12th century religious fervour resulted in the construction of thousands of impressive churches and cathedrals in stone across Western Europe. Medieval stonemasons' skills were in high demand, and members of the guild, gave rise to three classes of stonemasons: apprentices, journeymen, and master masons. Apprentices were indentured to their masters as the price for their training, journeymen had a higher level of skill and could go on journeys to assist their masters, and master masons were considered freemen who could travel as they wished to work on the projects of the patrons. During the Renaissance, the stonemason's guild admitted members who were not stonemasons, and eventually evolved into the Society of Freemasonry; fraternal groups which observe the traditional culture of stonemasons, but are not typically involved in modern construction projects. A medieval stonemason would often carve a personal symbol onto their block to differentiate their work from that of other stonemasons. This also provided a simple quality assurance system. Please ZOOOOOM for full Flavour. Have a nice day.

Comments (14)


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jayfar

2:24AM | Fri, 13 December 2013

This is a super 'workshop' shot Steve. Masonry being the basis of Freemasonry!

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prutzworks

2:39AM | Fri, 13 December 2013

interesting Industrial shot are these polishing machine's?

GARAGELAND

2:49AM | Fri, 13 December 2013

Yes.

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rhol_figament

2:52AM | Fri, 13 December 2013

The stones have weathered but they remember... ;)

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photosynthesis

3:04AM | Fri, 13 December 2013

Great use of monochrome - you really captured a wide range of tonal values here. Looks like the kind of work that requires skill, patience & physical strength...

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SunriseGirl

3:28AM | Fri, 13 December 2013

Thank you for the mini lesson. Very interesting info and photo.

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giulband

6:41AM | Fri, 13 December 2013

very very great shot

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Rob2753

8:16AM | Fri, 13 December 2013

It's a great shot Steve and a lovely piece of information too, just perfect and regular as you might say :)

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MrsRatbag

9:15AM | Fri, 13 December 2013

Hard work, but it has such beautiful results. Fantastic capture and information!

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durleybeachbum

11:15AM | Fri, 13 December 2013

What a fascinating place!

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wysiwig

12:22AM | Sat, 14 December 2013

Looks like you caught this monument in its infancy. I always learn something from your commentary. Interesting and thorough.

whaleman

2:01AM | Sat, 14 December 2013

I would like to see more of different stages in the worked piece. Great photo!

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sossy

3:45AM | Tue, 17 December 2013

interesting inf and a fantastic capture of history! ;o)

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moochagoo

3:02PM | Fri, 20 December 2013

Love the atmosphere here.

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Celart

6:26AM | Tue, 14 January 2014

Professional B&W. Bravo


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