Wednesday 23 November 2011

Burton Photo Society Exhibition 2011


In a closely fought contest, I managed to win the contract to do the publicity photography for the Burton Photo Society Annual Exhibition.

Or I suppose you could say......Steve and Jim were doing weddings, I was a poor third and no money changed hands.

Eric took the above pic of me with my children.


Katie and her Mum helped me take some trial shots.


Eric won best Mono Intermediate and is standing in front of my boat picture which didn't.


The Mayor, Councillor Patricia Ackroyd, arrived and presented the awards for the Open Competition sponsored by Burton College.


She was lovely and having a very busy day with a memorial service to attend as well.




My contract included the evening awards ceremony presented by our judge Heather Woodhams, who was neither 69, a bloke, or came from Smethwick. How refreshing.


Eric, trying to drag the judge back to his lair.


Steve reveals the secret of his success is a starting handle in a strategic place......


and receives the Advanced Mono Print Challenge Cup and the Advanced Projected Image Trophy.


Jimbo receives the Best Portrait in the Exhibition and the Judge's Award.


Suzy did well with many certificates, as did Ruth.


Who's panel of 4 prints of bramble shadows was Highly Commended and particularly lovely.


I did good too and breathed a sigh of relief once I'd downloaded the pics and backed them up.

Monday 21 November 2011

PDI's for Thursday BPS




This are my projected digital images for the Burton Photo Society 2nd Internal Comp on Thursday 24th Nov.
I can't make it to the comp, so could you write down the judge's remarks, but only if the're nice?

Friday 16 September 2011

LRGT Celebrity Lecture with Chris Beardshaw




The Leicester and Rutland Gardens Trust hold an annual Guest Celebrity Lecture the profits from which go towards our Education in Schools Project



This year's guest was Garden Designer and broadcaster Chris Beardshaw talking about 'Unlocking the Charm of Hidcote Manor Garden'.

Whilst Hidcote Garden is one of the most visited and popular gardens in the country, it must be one of the few gardens in England that our Chairman had never been to! Chris had visited the garden since early childhood and decided to design and build a Chelsea Flower Show Garden in 2007 to celebrate their centenary for which he won the People's Choice Award.

The lecture had been a sell out for quite a few weeks before the date and there was a cancellation waiting list. Chris is a captivating speaker and his observations and undisguised enthusiam made for an excellent talk. His horticultural knowledge and in depth understand of design principles stem from a thorough education in all aspects of gardening and hands on practice.




I'd been asked to take some photos of the event and had been practising using on camera flash.  Fortunately Chris was very approachable and had brought some books which he signed for people after the lecture.





I'd heard Chris Speak before at the Ticknall Gardening Club in Derbyshire and had been looking forward to hearing him again.  He feels strongly that if there is something in your garden which you don't like and and are not prepared to spend the 'rest of eternity' with you should take it out. I'm with him on this and am prepared to make major changes where necessary (especially to other peoples' gardens).  This had also come up at his Ticknall talk, I was sitting next to my friend and fellow garden designer K who works for many top end clients and has a particularly well thought out and lovely garden.

She said as she looked through her kitchen window into the garden, the only thing out there that she really wasn't sure about was her husband..........

Friday 9 September 2011

Broughton Castle with the LRGT

I'd been looking forward to this trip with the Leicester and Rutland Gardens Trust for quite a while and wasn't disappointed. We arrived at Broughton Castle to stunning views, coffee and loos.

With those needs taken care of, we wandered around the grounds a while. I must say it probably ticked all the boxes for me.  The weather was beautiful too.


Broughton Castle is the ancestoral of the  Twisleton-Wykeham-Fiennes Baronets, of Banbury and remains privately owned.  Many LRGT members had read the William Fiennes book The Music Room prior to our visit which details his early life at the castle with his epileptic brother. For him it was a normal upbringing.  From The Independent 'This is an exceptionally honest, beautifully-written and observed memoir of a strange childhood'.



Herons feature in the book, stalking the massive moat which surrounds the castle.



I quickly switched to my new 28 300mm Nikon lens and crept closer, but I'd been spotted and off it flew.


Inside the castle was spectacular too, but it had a very comfortable, welcoming feel unlike other stately homes I've visited which set me on edge.


Our pleasant and very knowledgeable guide showed us through the castle, which was closed to the public on this day, giving us the extensive history of the building and family.




I'm developing a fascination for English Longhorn Cattle, they just look so lovely in a landscape, they're so impractical too. Their colours and languid approach to life appeal and that aura of strength.  This ancient panorama surrounding the moated castle was better than an oil painting.



I've put this last picture in for Mr Bright. They're Colchicum autumnale or Naked Ladies.

Saturday 20 August 2011

Didn't We Have a Luverly Time, The Day We Went to Bath.



We set off early and arrived at Laycock.  The girls, me Suzy and Ruth, had been thrown around like rag dolls on a white knuckle ride in Eric's Renault. Upholding my reputation for empty seat pictures here's our first point of call.  We resisted the urge for a pint and had a coffee.

Laycock Abbey was an amazing place and had been the location for alot of the Harry Potter films.  Steve said he didn't like the cloisters because 'They repeat on me'

We toured the rooms and Steve (nutter magent) was able to take advantage of the extremely knowledgeable room stewards and also got told off for flashing.


Laycock Abbey was the home of William Fox Talbot, one of the early photographic pioneers. The museum was well worth a visit with lots of old pictures and equipment on display.


















Talbot engaged in photographic experiments beginning in early 1834 and the picture below shows Eric giving him a hand in those early days.




Wednesday 10 August 2011

Inflatable Tree

The more you learn about photography, the more tips and tricks you absorb.  It's a well known fact that many photographers carry with them, as part of their kit, an inflatable tree.  Some carry inflatable sheep, cows and round bales so that they can artistically arrange them in a landscape to best effect.  They can then say 'It's better to get it right in camera than in Photoshop afterwards'  You often need a chain saw as well, which is much easier than the clone tool in may ways although does make abit more mess invariably.









The bales take a bit of blowing up.......



Dungeness


The landscape of Dungeness must be about as far removed from the landscape of the Midlands as it is possible to get. Breathtakingly beautiful and strangely bleak, one corner all tattoos and 99s other places quite desolate.

I'd read and seen pictures of the garden at Dungeness created by the late Derek Jarman (31 January 1942 – 19 February 1994), I wasn't sure if it still existed or whether I'd be able to find it if did. 


Without exception, everyone I've mentioned this trip to has said, 'I used to work/ live/ holiday/have a relative in or near Dungeness'.  I'd never been before and I wasn't disappointed. The shingle spit stretches into the sea, the Nuclear Power Station sits ominously next to wooden shacks. The new lighthouse was built because the power station hid the old one, massive pylons stretch into the distance and there sits a Prospect Cottage.



















A small, black. wooden shack with yellow painted windows in a shingle garden with no apparent boundaries. Something so 'right' about the place and we garble on about 'Spirit of Place' and all that. Imagine transporting it to anywhere else and how it wouldn't work, but here it sat comfortably as an old hat.


I enjoy company and I enjoy being alone. Having the luxury of time and no fixed agenda was bliss.  Having a camera and calling yourself a photographer allows you wander around pointlessly enjoying the scene in a similar way to going fishing.  You probably won't catch anything but having a purpose gives you the excuse to stare at the sea just watching waves.


 Wooden boats left abandoned after being hauled ashore for the last time with power station in the background.

An unearthly place.

Monday 1 August 2011

Billy No Mates Goes to Kent

I was feeling particularly good last week, and decided to tick a few more boxes on the list of things I've been wanting to do.  I'd just finished a big garden design project and decided to escape to Kent for a few days.  Paul and Saffy were invited but if they have to stand still while I take a photo for more than 3 minutes, Saffy starts eating grass and Paul Simpson rolls in fox poo.



Great Dixter
First on the list was Great Dixter, which is run as a charitable trust since the death of its owner Christopher Lloyd in 2006.  He is famed for his bold planting and clashing colours. Most of the original garden design was by Lutyens and there are meadow areas, overflowing mixed borders and topiary.


I really liked this garden and it certainly lived up to expectations. It was probably more compact than I'd expected.  A while back I'd been to a talk by Head Gardener Fergus Garrett and his enthusiasm was infectious.



There were lots of special little areas and I don't think my photography really did them justice, I was using a circular polariser but the sky was not very helpful.  It must be a tourist hot spot as well and there were a lot of visitors making the narrow paths rather tortuous. There's always someone wearing a red anorak in your background where ever you go!





For me the garden was all the more enjoyable for it not being a National Trust Property. Don't get me wrong, I've a lot to thank the NT for and they do make a good job of looking after their properties, but this independent garden was refreshing.

I had a good wander round until the German tourists got the better of me.  Returning to the car, I saw Fergus shovelling soil into a gas fired soil sterilizer which closely resembled a dragon trapped in a potting shed, one hard working head gardener.

It will definitely be a garden to revisit, maybe earlier in the year.








Some amazing planting and combinations.





And some lovely quiet bits.  Trying to keep my reputation for empty chair photos!






I tootled on down to Hythe on the coast and found the Best Western Stade Court Hotel, then set off on my main mission to find whether the Derek Jarman garden on the beach at Dungeness still existed.

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