We have helped with Funeral Streaming all over the UK and we have also funeral streamed in Lambeth Funeral Videographer & Funeral Streaming
Funeral Streaming Lambeth
Funeral Video Lambeth
Funeral Videography Lambeth
Funeral Audio Visual is a Full Audio-Visual Support / Funeral Video Production & Funeral Streaming Company for funerals in the UK.
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Funeral Streaming at 1 or multiple locations
Funeral Filming / Funeral Videography
Memorial Streaming & Memorial Filming
We can create Funeral or Memorial Tribute slideshow videos
Editing and improving ‘crematoriums stream videos’
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Funeral Videographer Lambeth London. We can help with funeral videographer, Funeral Videography, and Funeral Streaming both crematorium & Graveside Streaming
Funeral streaming
treatham (/ˈstrɛt.əm/ STRET-əm) is a district in south London, England. Centred 5 miles (8 km) south of Charing Cross, it lies mostly within the London Borough of Lambeth, with some parts extending into the neighbouring London Borough of Wandsworth.
Streatham was in Surrey before becoming part of the County of London in 1889, and then Greater London in 1965. The area is identified in the London Plan as one of 35 major centres in Greater London.[2]
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History[edit]
A map showing the Streatham ward of Wandsworth Metropolitan Borough as it appeared in 1916.
Streatham means "the hamlet on the street". The street in question, the London to Brighton Way, was the Roman road from the capital Londinium to the south coast near Portslade, today within Brighton and Hove. It is likely that the destination was a Roman port now lost to coastal erosion, which has been tentatively identified with 'Novus Portus' mentioned in Ptolemy's Geographia.[3] The road is confusingly referred to as Stane Street (Stone Street) in some sources and diverges from the main London-Chichester road at Kennington.
After the departure of the Romans, the main road through Streatham remained an important trackway. From the 17th century it was adopted as the main coach road to Croydon and East Grinstead, and then on to Newhaven and Lewes. In 1780 it then became the route of the turnpike road from London to Brighton, and subsequently became the basis for the modern A23. This road (and its traffic) have shaped Streatham's development.
Streatham's first parish church, St Leonard's, was founded in Saxon times but an early Tudor tower is the only remaining structure pre-dating 1831 when the body of the church was rebuilt. The mediaeval parish covered a wider area including Balham and Tooting Bec.[4]
Streatham appears in Domesday Book of 1086 as Estreham. It was held by Bec-Hellouin Abbey (in Normandy) from Richard de Tonbrige. Its domesday assets were: 2 hides, 1 virgate and 6½ ploughlands of cultivated land and 4 acres (1.6 ha) of meadow and herbage (mixed grass and bracken). Annually it was assessed to render £4 5s 0d to its overlords.[5]
Streatham Village and Streatham Wells[edit]
Streatham Green with the spire of the Catholic English Martyrs Church beyond.
The village remained largely unchanged until the 18th century, when its natural springs, known as Streatham Wells, were first celebrated for their health-giving properties. The reputation of the spa, and improved turnpike roads, attracted wealthy City of London merchants and others to build their country residences in Streatham.[6]
In spite of London's expansion, a limited number of developments took place in the village in the second half of the nineteenth century, most notably on Wellfield Road and Sunnyhill Road. These roads are today considered an important part of what remains of the historic Streatham village.
Wellfield Road, which had previously been known as Leigham Lane, was renamed to reflect its role as the main route from the village centre to one of the well locations. Another mineral well was located on the south side of Streatham Common, in an area that now forms part of The Rookery.[7]
Streatham Park or Streatham Place[edit]
Main article: Streatham Park
In the 1730s, Streatham Park, a Georgian country mansion, was built by the brewer Ralph Thrale on land he bought from the Lord of the Manor - the fourth Duke of Bedford. Streatham Park later passed to Ralph's son Henry Thrale, who with his wife Hester Thrale entertained many of the leading literary and artistic characters of the day, most notably the lexicographer Samuel Johnson. The dining room contained 12 portraits of Henry's guests painted by his friend Joshua Reynolds. These pictures were wittily labelled by Fanny Burney as the Streatham Worthies.[8]
Streatham Park was later leased to Prime Minister Lord Shelburne, and was the venue for early negotiations with France that led to the Peace Treaty of 1783. Streatham Park was demolished in 1863.
Park Hill[edit]
One large house that survives is Park Hill, on the north side of Streatham Common, rebuilt in the early 19th century for the Leaf family. It was latterly the home of Sir Henry Tate, sugar refiner, benefactor of local libraries across south London, including Streatham Library, and founder of the Tate Gallery at Millbank.
Urbanisation[edit]
Development accelerated after the opening of Streatham Hill railway station on the West End of London and Crystal Palace Railway in 1856. The other two railway stations followed within fifteen years. Some estates, such as Telford Park to the west of Streatham Hill, were spaciously planned with facilities like tennis clubs.[9] Despite the local connections to the Dukes of Bedford, there is no link to the contemporary Bedford Park in west London. Another generously sized development was Roupell Park, the area near Christchurch Road promoted by the Roupell family. Other streets adopted more conventional suburban layouts. Three more parish churches were built to serve the growing area, including Immanuel and St Andrew's (1854), St Peter's (1870) and St Margaret the Queen's (1889). There is now a mixture of buildings from all architectural eras of the past 200 years.
The inter-war period[edit]
After the First World War Streatham developed as a location for entertainment, with the Streatham Hill Theatre, three cinemas, the Locarno ballroom and Streatham Ice Rink all adding to its reputation as "the West End of South London". With the advent of electric tram services, it also grew as a shopping centre serving a wide area to the south. In the 1930s large numbers of blocks of flats were constructed along the High Road. These speculative developments were not initially successful. They were only filled when émigré communities began to arrive in London after leaving countries under the domination of Hitler's Germany. In 1932 the parish church of the Holy Redeemer was built in Streatham Vale to commemorate the work of William Wilberforce.[10]
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Lambeth Crematorium Funeral Videographer & Funeral Streaming
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Lambeth Cemetery is a cemetery in Tooting, in the London Borough of Wandsworth. It is one of three cemeteries owned by Lambeth London Borough Council, the others being West Norwood Cemetery and Streatham Cemetery.
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History[edit]
Like nearby Streatham Cemetery, Lambeth Cemetery was developed by a parish burial board in 1854 following the Metropolitan Burial Act of 1852, which was a response to the second cholera epidemic of 1848-49.[1][2].
The cemetery is laid out as a rectangular grid of paths, has a few trees and is sited just east of the River Wandle in what was countryside in the 1850s and was largely to remain so for some decades. There are two lodges beside the main gate in Blackshaw Road and a memorial chapel, all built in brick in a Gothic style and designed by F. K. Wehnert and J. Ashdown.[3]The cemetery was extended to the south in 1874 when Robert Taylor was chairman of Lambeth Burial Board, and Hugh Mcintosh was the surveyor who laid out the extension.[4] There is a crematorium and Garden of Remembrance opened in May 1969 in 10 acres (40,000 m2) of gardens at the northern end.[5]
Another noteworthy feature is the screen wall memorial, in the south-west corner of the cemetery, unveiled in 1953 for both First and Second World WarCommonwealth service personnel whose graves could not be marked by CWGC headstones. There are 217 Commonwealth war graves from the First and 145 from the Second World War, besides one Belgian war grave and 29 British non-world-war service graves.[6]
Interments and current use[edit]
Lambeth Cemetery is said to contain 250,000 burials and was associated with Victorian music hall artists, including the comedians Dan Leno and Stanley Lupino. Between 1969 and 1991 it was subject to "lawn conversion",[7] and today has a layout of straight paths dotted with trees. The cemetery features predominantly modern, late-20th-century gravestones, many of which have been staked to stop them falling over, with occasional 19th-century gravestones and monuments. The cemetery is visited by green woodpeckers and sparrowhawks and the site is predominantly neutral grassland.[8] The Garden of Remembrance near the Crematorium is maintained as mown grass parkland.
Funerals can be very sad times but we must also remember it’s a time to celebrate the life they had.
We are here to help through these difficult times with technical support & video services. If you might expect a large crowd and the venue is too small we can help with sound and vision outside.
We mainly help in videoing the funeral so you can share with friends and family across the world who cannot make it. It helps with closure.
Below is a frame export from one of our cameras and at the bottom of the page is a short compilation video of a recent video so you can see the quality of hour work. The way the video is put together & sound are critical.
The services we offer ...
Filming for same day or next day viewing ( depends on service time )
PA systems inc Outdoor PA / Microphones & large Led TVs on stands
Editing photographs to music to show at service on our displays
Moste recent customer testimonial to come shortly ...
We can video the service, discreetly and capture perfect sound, then in the same day or next day we will edit the video send to you so you can send to friends and family who could not make the service so they feel they were still part of this day. This can help with closure.
We can film at Churches or Crematoriums
if you wish we can scene set by filming the location from the outside and film the hearse arriving & the cortege. We tend not the film the guests if we do its from a distance .
We can also create a video of photos you send us so that we can show this in the Church.
Supply Large LED / Plasma screens in the Church so we can play the photo video during the service as a reminder of the great life they had.
Supply microphones and outdoor & Indoor PA systems for when you know the church is too small for people coming to pay their respect.
Please contact us ASAP so we can help.
daz4421@me.com
07766 754944 or click the link below
One of our own stories...
I have recently gone to my uncle’s service. It was a very moving service and a celebration about his life and all the things, he had done. It was tearful but also laughter at the things he did and the way he was. He really was quite a character.
Many of my relatives could not make it to the service, some are too old to safely make it, some were not very able people and others just live in a different part of the world.
They would have loved to have watched the service later that evening the same day or the following day just so they could feel part of the love, laughter and help with closure.
We can help make that happen, We can video, edit and deliver online using the internet so you can send the link to download the film that very day or the nest day. They too can join the amazing gathering of people and the respect listen to the stories.
We don't film the committal unless asked.
We are unobtrusive and very respectful and experienced
If you need help as this difficult time please contact us as soon as possible
daz4421@me.com
07766 754944 or click the link below
To help with discreetness while filming funeral services we use a small GH5 4k camera so we get exceptional quality but with a very small camera.
Funeral videos of the service make so much sense these days as the technology is there so we can help connect people.
Please contact us today
daz4421@me.com 07766 754944