Queen's Park Railings on the Southside of Glasgow. I'm not too sure why one is so obviously different from the others, but I suspect it may be due to the need to make a repair to a listed structure clearly discernable from the original parts.
I love these railings around the 1882 Jacobean style former Woodside Public School on Eldon Street in the West End of Glasgow. According to the foundry mark on them they were made at the Gowanbank Iron Foundry which (I think) was based at the Old Basin Works on the Forth and Clyde Canal in the north of the city.
I love the angel railings of the 1850s townhouses on Woodlands Terrace in the Park area of Glasgow. Whether by design or by accident, all the angels face towards the main tower of Trinity College, the former Free Church Seminary, which stands at the end of this street.
The railings of the former Woodside Public School in the west end of Glasgow appear to be the point on a Venn Diagram of the city where Medieval Weaponry and Victorian school architecture overlap!
Janitor's Lodge House on Eldon Street in Glasgow. Built in 1882, this was part of the Jacobean style Woodside Public School by Robert Dalglish. Both the lodge and the school were surrounded by the ornate, and rather lethal-looking, spiked railing visible in foreground.
Ornamental ironwork on Glasgow's Central station. The lion rampant is the symbol of the Caledonain Railway Company for whom the station was built in the 1870s, nd can be found on many of their railway buildings.
Love this little detail on the railings for George Smith's 1837 Townhouse development on Caledonia Place (now Newton Place) in the West End of Glasgow.
Ornamental railings of the Necropolis on Wishart Street in Glasgow. This design always reminds me of half-peeled bananas. I have no idea why one of them is painted red, or who did it.