With summer on its way, and the nights are getting shorter, I need to take advantage of what darkness there is at the minute for some hand-held night photography around London. For this Bimble I started at Hyde Park Corner just after sunset and a rain front having passed through and walked back to the Travelodge Hotel in Covent Garden, where I was staying, taking in the sights along the way. In the order taken.
The Wellington Arch (built 1826-9)

The Australian War Memorial, built from rock called Laguna Green mined from quarries in South West Australia. Dedicated in 2003.

Place names of where Australian service personnel originated with battle locations Australian Forces served in during the First and Second World War picked out amongst the place names.

The Australian War Memorial, built from rock called Laguna Green mined from quarries in South West Australia. Dedicated in 2003.

Bronze sculpture of ‘Peace Descending On The Quadriga Of War’ by Adrian Jones installed in 1912 on top of the Wellington Arch.

Buckingham Palace from the top step of the Queen Victoria Memorial.

Gilded bronze ‘Winged Victory’ perched on the top of the Queen Victoria Memorial with Courage and Constancy seated at her feet.

25 meters (82ft) tall Queen Victoria Memorial.

Duck Island Cottage, St James’s Park.

Relief frieze around the main portico to the Supreme Court, overlooking Parliament Square, which is the final court of appeal in the United Kingdom.

Façade to what was once the Raymond Revuebar, a theatre and strip club in the heart of London’s Soho district, which opened in 1958 and closed in January 2009. Reopened in 2011 under new management. If you screw your eyes up and tilt your head slightly to one side, you can just about make out what the out of focus video on the screen behind the grill is.

At the entrance to Leicester Square from Piccadilly Circus is the Swiss Glockenspiel, a mechanical clock with 27 bells and moving figures which ring out and move on the hour every hour.

The two centre pieces to the fountains in Trafalgar Square, replacing the originals built in 1845, were designed in the 1930’s by Edward Lutyens as memorials to Lord Jellicoe and Lord Beatty who were both Admirals of the Fleet.

The two centre pieces to the fountains in Trafalgar Square, replacing the originals built in 1845, were designed in the 1930’s by Edward Lutyens as memorials to Lord Jellicoe and Lord Beatty who were both Admirals.

Refurbished clock face on the east side of the Elizabeth Tower (Big Ben) with the clock dial and hands being finished in the original Victorian blue colour scheme and not the black it was in.

Tourist shot across the Thames of County Hall, the old headquarters of the Greater London Council, and the London Eye.

The Palace of Westminster, seat of the United Kingdom Government, with complete refurbishment due to be completed in 2031.

Façade of County Hall an ideal backdrop to psychedelic light shows.

To celebrate 20 years since lesbian, gay and bisexual personnel were legally allowed to serve in the armed forces, the south side of MoD main building is lit up in rainbow colours.

Charing Cross Station with the R.S. Hispaniola restaurant/bar docked on the Thames and the supports lit in blue of the Golden Jubilee Bridge.

King Street, Covent Garden still with christmas lights up.

I arrived at the old Covent Garden just before 10pm with trucks, cherry pickers and contractors congregating outside ready to take down the last of the Christmas mistletoe lights.

Selfie in the constantly changing coloured lights in the mirrored passageway to Conduit Court, Covent Garden.

St. Martin’s Theatre, Seven Dials, opened in November 1916 and a Grade II Listed Building, has been showing a stage version of Agatha Christie’s The Mousetrap since March 1974.

Sony E 16-55mm f/2.8 G APS-C Wide-angle Zoom Lens
Sony a6500/24.2MP E-mount APS-C Camera.
Brian