‘I had been working in colour for ten years or so and looked at digital and liked the possibilities it gave me.’
Fay Godwin (British landscape photographer) – February 17, 1931 – May 27, 2005.
Photography & General Ramblings…
‘I had been working in colour for ten years or so and looked at digital and liked the possibilities it gave me.’
Fay Godwin (British landscape photographer) – February 17, 1931 – May 27, 2005.
All’s well that…
Olympus OM-1N + F.Zuiko 50mm f/1.8 Auto-S – 1/250s, f8 – Kodak Portra 400 rated at ISO 200
‘Hudswell’ a cast builder’s plate adorning ‘Albert Fields’, a 260hp 0-6-0 diesel-mechanical locomotive built by Hudswell, Clarke & Co Ltd of Leeds in 1958 as works no.D1114.
The loco is now preserved at the Midland Railway-Butterley in Derbyshire having spent its working life at a number of local collieries, ending up at Butterley Engineering, a company famous for many engineering projects including the Barlow train shed at London St Pancras International railway station, the Falkirk Wheel and the Spinnaker Tower in Portsmouth.
Scan by Ag Photo Lab with minimal cropping and tweaking in Lightroom Classic CC.
LMS, February 2018
Olympus OM-1N + F.Zuiko 50mm f/1.8 Auto-S – 1/250s, f8 – Kodak Portra 400 rated at ISO 200
Scan by Ag Photo Lab with minimal cropping and tweaking in Lightroom Classic CC.
Tin Tabernacle, February 2018
Canon Sure Shot Sleek, – Kentmere 400
A shot from my first roll of Kentmere 400 film, one of three that was a Christmas present from my wife, the Canon Sure Shot Sleek was yet another charity shop find.
St Saviour’s Church dates from 1898 and was originally built with support from the Midland Railway in Westhouses, Derbyshire, a village that grew up around the company’s locomotive shed there.
Now relocated to Swanwick Junction station at the Midland Railway-Butterley in Derbyshire, the ‘Tin Tabernacle’ is now used for various events including the occasional wedding blessing.
Scan by AgLab with minimal cropping and tweaking in Lightroom Classic CC.
Leawood Pumphouse, January 2018
Fujifilm X-T1, Fujinon XF 18-135mm f3.5~5.6 R LM OIS WR at 24mm, 1/105s, f8, ISO 400
Leawood Pumphouse was built in 1849 to supply water to the Cromford Canal in Derbyshire. A Watt-type beam engine draws water from the River Derwent through a 150 yard tunnel to a reservoir in the basement and then up 30 feet and into the canal.
The pump’s piston has a diameter of 50 inches, a stroke of 10 feet and works at seven strokes per minute and is capable of moving 39,000 tons of water in 24 hours! The immense size of the pump is due to the fact that there were restrictions on removing water from the river, doing so was only allowed between 8pm on Saturdays and 8pm on Sundays.
The pump house closed along with the canal in 1944 but it was restored in 1979 and is regularly steamed.
Abbey Snooker, September 2017
Fujifilm X-T1, Fujinon XF 18-135mm f3.5~5.6 R LM OIS WR at 44mm, 1/75s, f8, ISO 200
Birmingham reflection, December 2017
Nikon FM, Nikkor 50mm f/2 – 1/60s, f5.6, – Ilford FP4+
Another image from the roll I shot in December for Emulsive’s FP4 Party but that didn’t return from the lab in time for post week.
I was changing trains (and stations) in Birmingham, on my way to December’s Beer & Cameras event in Worcester and spotted the Odeon and the iconic Rotunda building mirrored in the reflective surface cladding the Grand Central shopping centre that sits atop New Street railway station.
Scan by AgLab with minimal cropping and tweaking in Lightroom Classic CC.
Sheffield Hallam University’s Owen Building
Fujifilm X-T1, Fujinon XF 18-135mm f3.5~5.6 R LM OIS WR at 22mm, 1/70s, f8, ISO 400
Another image from my recent trip to Sheffield. The Owen Building isn’t the most photogenic of structures but in the right light it can look pretty special (in my opinion anyway…)
‘Well, I suppose nothing is meant to last forever. We have to make room for other people. It’s a wheel. You get on. You go to the end. And someone else has the same opportunity to go to the end. And so on. And somebody else takes their place.’
Vivian Maier (American street photographer) – February 1, 1926 – April 21, 2009
The old Post Office, Ilkeston
Minolta Dynax 505si Super, Minolta AF 50mm f/1.7 – 1/45s, f4, – Ilford FP4+ rated at ISO 200
I have a fondness for what are known as ‘Ghost’ signs… that is to say old painted, carved or tiled signs advertising long defunct businesses and I photograph them whenever possible.
Hogarths Gin Palace now occupies the building that this particular sign adorns, while the Post Office resides in a tiny, nondescript location closer to the centre of town.
This is an image from the roll of film I shot for January’s Emulsive FP4 Party.
Scan by AgLab with minimal cropping and tweaking in Lightroom Classic CC.
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