Forgotten photos

I’m usually pretty swift at downloading and editing my photos, but occasionally I find images I’d forgotten about, still lurking on a memory card. This week I rediscovered some digital photos I took when I visited Copford Church with my pinhole camera. Each pinhole photo took about ten minutes to expose, so while they were ‘cooking’ I made a few digital snaps too. There weren’t many, but these three struck me as worthy of sharing.

Copford Church has some amazing wall paintings - definitely worthy of a second visit on a brighter day as I was working as light which was fading fast!

A close up of the domed painting above the alter.

Photos taken 17 November 2022

North east tour

A work engagement in Middlesbrough in October gave me the chance to take my pinhole camera on a little photographic tour, taking photos on my travels. I began with a few photos from York Station as I waited an hour between trains. I was travelling light, with just my little table top tripod so I had to get creative, using my suitcase to prop it up, or going for a station mouse’s eye view!

From there I went to Scarborough where I took a stroll down the promenade and along to the lighthouse, which presented lots of lovely pinhole opportunities.

I almost got soaked for this one - just a second or two after I stepped away the waves came right over where I’d just been sitting!

Marina views and some spectacular sun flare.

Finally, on Sunday morning my friend Sandra took me to see the Transporter Bridge in Middlesbrough before I caught my train home. It’s not working at the moment, so I was able to position my camera right in the middle of the road to capture this vertiginous view.

Photos taken 7-9 October 2022

Taking things slowly

Back in September we went to the monthly car meet in Barrington for our fix of classic cars. Instead of taking a digital or pinhole camera I went with my uncle’s loaned Rolleiflex - a camera I haven’t used for a while. Photos are composed via the camera’s focusing screen, which presents everything reversed horizontally. This messes with my brain and makes me slow down, although that’s probably no bad thing!

Photos taken September 2022

Exploring Kings Cross

There are occasions when my work presents me with opportunities to fit in some photography along the way. On Saturday I’d allowed extra time to get into London in case of problems resulting from the train strike that day so I took a pinhole camera along in the hope that I may get a little extra time if all went well. My final destination was a church not far from Kings Cross Station, so I took the opportunity tovisit both Kings Cross and St Pancras Stations, as well as some other local sights.

At St Pancras I realised I’d forgotten the tool for removing my tripod plate so I couldn’t use my table top tripod (which doesn’t need a plate). Normally it works loose spontaneously, but of course today it was stuck fast, refusing to move so much as a millimetre! Fortunately I’d brought a back up solution so I spent the rest of the morning using my small beanbag to wedge my camera in interesting spots!

The image above is a close up of the huge statue which stands on the concourse at St Pancras. A passing security guard thought perhaps my little wooden box was a radio and was rather surprised to learn it was actually a camera!

Moving next door to Kings Cross Station, I found a large cinema screen in exactly the spot I’d hope to place my camera, so I improvised, and went behind the stations lattice structure. I can’t help feeling the photo has probably turned out better as a result!

The view from the upstairs gallery, with my camera held firmly against the handrail with my trusty beanbag.

A ten minute walk took me to the Coal Drops Yard area just north of Kings Cross, beside the Regents Canal. The cold weather we’ve had for the last ten days had frozen much of the canal and I managed to find a bridge on which to rest my camera.

The old gas holders here have been turned into a framework for luxury apartments and I couldn’t resist resting my camera at the base of one of the pillars to capture the framework above me.

Down by the canal again, looking for details I could get really close to. One of the canal trust volunteers watched me with much curiosity as I crouched down to take this one and we had a chat about it afterwards!

One of the gas holders has been left as a framework surrounding a public garden area, It’s circled with long mirrored posts so I tried a hand held self portrait of my reflection - my camera even made it into the photo!

A final look back at the gas holders before I headed off to do my afternoon’s work.

Photos taken 17 December 2022

Sunkissed architecture

Alongside the pinhole photos I shared from St John’s yesterday, I spent some time using my digital camera for a different view.

Click on any image to see them enlarged.

The play of light in St John’s is always beautiful

A small detail I’ve never noticed before - coat pegs!

Photos taken 25 September 2022

A quiet moment at St John's

Periodically I return to St John’s Church in Duxford as it’s a building which always has something to offer for my camera. On this occasion I had a couple of frames of film left in my pinhole camera so it seemed like a good place to use them up.

The light is always changing in St John’s - no two days look quite the same.

Photos taken September 2022

Life on the rails

I often take a camera with me when I’m travelling for work, but one day back in September I picked a pinhole camera to document my travels. I was heading down to the south coast for a rehearsal, with a longish wait at Havant station for my final train of the morning, so I perched my camera on a bench and captured my foot as a train whizzed through on the opposite platform.

The train departing from platform 2….

Doing some work on the train home…

Photos taken 26 September 2022

Friday evening at the Barrington

Following our day at the Festival of the Unexceptional I had some photos left on one of my film cameras so I took it with me to the Friday evening car meet at the pub in Barrington. The RETO ultra wide and slim camera is very simple - a plastic body with a 21mm plastic lens, although you’d never know its minimal budget from the sharpness of the photos!

It was a beautiful summer’s evening and the light became even more glorious as the sun gradually dropped in the sky.

Photos taken August 2022

Truly unexceptional

Every summer the antidote to most car shows takes place. Most classic car owners want their vehicle to stand out because it’s exceptional in some way - the best preserved or most beautiful. At the Festival of the Unexceptional the opposite is true - to be eligible your car must be the sort of model which was once familiar but is now rare because no one’s really cared about saving them.

We’ve been threatening to attend for years, but things have never quite worked out until this summer. The centre attraction is the Concours d’Ordinaire - the creme de la creme of ordinaryness. The competition was won this year by a Vauxhall Astra 1.3 which was so ordinary we walked straight past it! There were lots of other fascinating cars to see in the Concours, mostly beautifully restored examples of the sort of cars we grew up with. There was even an Alfa Romeo Giulietta, very similar to the one my Dad had when I was at school!

For those who’d come in cars which either weren’t eligible for the Concourse (we couldn’t have entered Morris as he’s now too old) but were still pretty unexceptional, there was a huge parking area where your pride and joy could be admired. This is where I took most of my photos.

Another car from my childhood driving into the display area - an Austin 1800.

Details from a Citroen DS - definitely too exceptional!

I went minimalist for my photography, taking two small film cameras - a Rollei 35S and a cheap and cheerful RETO plastic camera. This slowed me down and I rather enjoyed the experience of shooting retro cars with retro cameras.

A brace of Bond Bugs!

An Alfa Romeo Sud - a great little car, but most of them have long since rusted into oblivion.

Photos taken 30 July 2022

Museum life

I never tire of photographing the British Museum, especially the Great Court. Today I went for a different approach, using my pinhole camera. The security guard at the entrance was intrigued by my little wooden box, but he eventually decided accept my explanation as to what it was!

I decided not to risk a full size tripod, but instead too my little table top one. This limited my options a little, but also meant I could try some unusual angles!

Click on any of the photos to see them enlarged.

The joy of long exposure photography - you’d never know a hoard of children walked up the stairs in front of these mosaics while my shutter was open!

I took another approach for this photo, propping my camera on a small beanbag beside these carved heads.

The classic view of the Great Court. All I had for support was a handrail so I clamped my camera to it with the beanbag for cushioning and, to my amazement, it worked!

On the steps outside the Museum.

With a few frames of film left I went off exploring to find more scenes to photograph and ended up at Daunt Books in Marylebone High Street for this view from their beautiful gallery.

Finally, some fun on the Elizabeth Line on my way back to the station!

Photos taken 1 December 2022