Peter, all three are delightful. My preference is for the second shot with the greater contrasts. I find the play of light on the chapel walls and the clearer delineation of the stonework creates a feeling that the building is almost concealing itself... fanciful, I know
In first image I keep being drawn to the tree growing out of the bank on the left. At first I thought it was a prop for the walls. I might try toning it down a bit if it were my shot.
But, the sequence has given me a yen to get to the site myself! (I have a cousin who lives in Hastings, who I see fairly often, though since 'lockdown'.......)
Very pleasing and inviting picturiztion of a beautiful spot.
It is in a lovely location, in the middle of a dense wood but a narrow track does run along one side, high up the bank to the left. I cant wait to get back there in misty or snow conditions.
I did some research and it was built in 1880 as both a school and church for the hamlet of Bedham. There would be a fabric down the middle to create two "classrooms" during the week, and on Friday the fabric would be pulled away and the chairs turned to the altar in preparation for Sunday service. The school closed in the 1930's and a dwindling population (Bedham can not even be called a village today) meant the last service was in 1959.
There a few more pictures on my Flickr page....link below.
I did take some from the path but the dense trees and high contrast light meant they were no good. I will go back in winter and try and get some moody misty snowy shots.
I used bracketed exposures for most of these images at 0/-1/-2 and merged them in LR. Otherwise I would have had too many blown highlights.