Wednesday, 30 September 2015

Windmill at Scarborough

The Old Corn Mill, Mill Street, Scarborough

Wednesday 30th September 2015

Had to go to Scarborough this morning, on what turned out to be a beautiful sunny day. As I approached the town centre I was aware of the old corn mill, with its white sails contrasting against a blue sky. I grew up around this area, when the 'old mill' did not have sails or a cap and was in a very shabby condition. The mill is now Grade 2 listed and dates back to the late eighteenth or early nineteenth century and was used for grinding corn. It was rescued in 1988 and turned into a hotel; the sails and cap were replaced in 1999. Today the windmill is divided into two self catering apartments, plus bed and breakfast facilities on site, run by David Cain since January of this year visit the website for more details. It is a fine reminder of the past and also what can be done with an old industrial building.

Forces of good and evil

Part of 'Wave' Poppy Sculpture

Tuesday 29th September 2015

On the way home from Manchester we decided to call in at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park. As we approached the entrance we were in a large queue and I couldn't understand why. Then we saw the poster for the 'Wave' poppy sculpture! The sculpture itself is one of the two sculptures that were installed at the Tower of London to commemorate the centenary of the outbreak of the First World War. Here, they formed a red cascade from the top of the 'Cascade Bridge' into the Lower lake. It was a great sight, but with lots of people either stood on the bridge or taking a classic photograph of the cascade (which I took as well), I decided to adapt my own interpretation of the theme. Standing on the bridge, I isolated an edge of the display. Near to the bridge it was muddy with almost black reflections, whilst a few feet away there was greenery and light. I put the bright red poppies in the middle and so the poppies conveyed the good and the evils of war.

Reflections on Manchester

Reflections at Salford Quays

Monday 28th September 2015

Took a trip on the fantastic Metrolink Manchester tram system out to Salford Quays and Media City where the BBC have their Salford studios. It was a very hot sunny afternoon (someone told me, 'not like this in Manchester normally'), the new buildings dominated the area, many covered with glass, aluminium or equivalent. The afternoon sunshine provided some very abstract reflections from one building to another and for me there were pictures everywhere. As someone who likes abstract patterns I was in seventh heaven. I am told it is even better at night. Could not stay that long, so must make another visit.

Away from the noise

The Rochdale Canal in the heart of Todmorden

Sunday 27th September 2015

Yes, the delay in posting is once again due to a few days away. We travelled along the Calder Valley visiting the mill towns en-route to Bury. We stopped off at Todmorden and explored the town. I have driven through there a few times but never stopped. I found it a really nice place, with plenty of space and a beautiful park, unlike some of the other towns clinging to the valley sides, probably because it was at a junction of valleys. Todmorden is the home of 'community growing' under the 'Incredible Edible' banner. The volunteers plant herbs, vegetables (in raised beds) and even orchards around the town on any land that is available, including the police station and other public spaces. Local people adopt the areas and look after the crops, people can then harvest them for their own use, a great idea Visit their website. My pastoral image is in contrast to the large Sunday market and a festival, with lots of hustle and bustle, just behind the houses on the right. You may have guessed through my postings that I am drawn to canals.

Saturday, 26 September 2015

Abstract

Food processor slicing blade abstract

Saturday 26th September 2015

Busy all day and not much time for photography. Late evening photographed a food processor slicing blade, I was not very inspired by the result, so decided to play about with the image.

Friday, 25 September 2015

Wind Turbine at Kilham

Love them or hate them?

Friday 25th September 2015

Which side of the fence are you on? I sit in the middle. They are functional - well sometimes, when the wind blows. They provide an alternative to fossil fuels - that has to be good. They are a thing of beauty - they can be in the right light. Lots of them can provide much needed electricity - Lots of them can be a blot on the landscape. We could always use less electricity by turning lights off and not using our computers and mobile phones as much! 
I drove to Rudston Beacon above Kilham and photographed this wind turbine as the sun was setting. I needed a very small aperture, to give me a slow enough shutter speed to blur the blades and show movement.

Thursday, 24 September 2015

Hovingham Hall

Hovingham Hall Bridge

Thursday 24th September 2015

I was determined that today, I would not leave it until the eleventh hour to hurriedly take a picture! I had to go to Thirsk returning at tea-time via Coxwold and Yearsley. As I approached Hovingham, I saw the low sun striking this delightful eighteenth century ornamental bridge in Hovingham Park. I had to take a photograph. Hovingham Hall and the Estate has been in the Worsley family for hundreds of years and was home to Katherine Worsley - The Duchess of Kent. I wanted the bridge as the centre of attention, but I also wanted to show the course of the stream, so I offset the bridge to the left and kept the shadow from trees in the right foreground to balance the picture.

Wednesday, 23 September 2015

Fire

Flaming coal

Wednesday 23rd September 2015

Out doing my Cleveland Way maintenance today at Sutton Bank. Did not take a photograph, even though I was reminded during the early part of the day. It was not until gone eleven o'clock this evening that I suddenly remembered I hadn't taken a photograph. The only things in the room were, the T.V., the cat and the electric fire. The electric fire won!

Tuesday, 22 September 2015

Hessle Windmill

Hessle Whiting Mill

Tuesday 22nd September 2015

On a warm and sunny afternoon, I found myself in Hessle with some time to kill. I parked on Hessle Foreshore at the Humber Bridge and had a wander. I have photographed the bridge a number of times from both banks; whether it was the strong sunlight or my mood - I was not inspired. I have yet to walk and/or cycle across and I think there will be some interesting images for the future. Back to today; having walked under the bridge, I came to the Hessle windmill. It was bathed in glorious sunshine which was reflecting from the black building, actually making it shine. Each time I have visited in the past, it has always struck me as a very dark dismal building, hidden in the trees. Today, it lit up and the shadows from the trees showed it was not that black after all. It was used for grinding chalk and was built about 1806 and worked under sail until 1925 when it had the sails removed. It was then driven by electric power until the mill closed in the 1960's.

Scarborough South Bay

South Bay at night

Monday 21st September 2015

This evening I was in Scarborough with members of Driffield Photographic Society, photographing Scarborough at night. There was so much choice, from Peasholm Park to the bright lights of the amusements. It was a very still evening with little wind, so I chose classic views with long exposures. My photograph is a panoramic shot of South Bay and the Grand Hotel from the Esplanade.

Sunday, 20 September 2015

Surfing

Going for a dip

Sunday 20th September 2015

Decorating all day today, but had to go through to Scarborough mid morning to that well known DIY store. Took a drive around the Marine Drive and to my surprise there must have been over one hundred surfers in the water in the North Bay! I parked and went to watch. They were bobbing around, clinging onto their boards offshore, probably waiting for the 'big wave' (which never came whilst I was there). Lots of people in the water, but not much action. I then saw this gentleman have a go on a wave, he was going okay, but as the wave broke, he took a tumble.

Saturday, 19 September 2015

Clematis seed head

Clematis Tangutica

Saturday 19th September 2015

You can tell autumn is fast approaching, by the recent cold nights and some of the leaves on trees beginning to turn. One thing that reminds me of autumn in our garden is the Clematis Tangutica, which is a climber and has yellow bell like flowers. At this time of year it produces seed heads like the one above. This for me heralds the autumn. It is great to see this climbing plant covered in seed heads, but sad to think I will have to wait until next June to see the yellow flowers again. I photographed this with a macro lens on a large aperture to blur the background and soften the image slightly, sunlight was from the left.

Friday, 18 September 2015

Smoke

Smoke effect

Friday 18th September 2015

Enough of the landscape images, now I am back home a chance to try something different. Most photographers have experimented with matches and firing a flash gun into the smoke. I hadn't until tonight. I decided I would have a go. Against a black background, I fired a flashgun at right angles to the camera and by blowing the smoke, created different effects. Now I have tried it, I might do some more.

The Malvern Hills

Worcestershire Beacon (left) highest of the Malvern Hills from North Hill

Thursday 17th September 2015

What a change in the weather, blue sky and fluffy clouds! Having spent the night in Great Malvern, we could not resist a walk onto the hills that loom above the town. We chose to walk up North Hill, the second highest of the Malvern Hills at 1303 feet (397 metres), the highest being Worcestershire Beacon at 1395 feet (425 metres). It was a reasonably clear day with good panoramic views all round. My image is of Worcestershire Beacon (left) and Sugarloaf Hill taken from North Hill with the Welsh mountains in the distance.

Monmouth Bridge

Monmouth Bridge and tower over the river Monnow

Wednesday 16th September 2015

I have driven through Monmouth a number of times, but on the bypass. I was delighted to have some time to visit and photograph the only surviving medieval fortified river bridge in the country, complete with tower on the bridge. It was built about 1300 and was part of the protection of the town by the building of town walls and gates. There would have been a portcullis in front of the gate on the bridge and its main use was to collect tolls. I think it is wonderful that it has survived, considering it was still taking traffic across until 2004 when it was pedestrianised. I thought this was the best angle to include all the bridge features, sadly, the blue gable end wall of the house cannot be hidden!

Waterfall Country

Sgwd yr Eira  (Fall of snow) waterfall. Brecon Beacons National Park

Tuesday 15th September 2015

With an overnight stop in Llanelli and having dried out from yesterday, we decided to get wet again, with a walk in 'Waterfall Country'. We drove into Brecon Beacons National Park near to Ystradfellte for the start of a five mile walk taking in four fantastic waterfalls. With full waterproofs on and with it still raining, we set off. After yesterdays very heavy rain, we knew it was the right thing to do! The falls were very impressive, most having huge drops and I got some great photographs; but it was this waterfall (Sgwd yr Eira) that proved the most challenging to photograph. The public footpath actually goes under the waterfall, which has a drop of about thirty feet. I wanted to go behind, but the path was well and truly closed today (we were going back the way we came in). As well as the rain, the wind was whipping up the spray from the falls. I was tight up against a rock wall, with water pouring down my back from mini waterfalls above me. My brolly was up, my camera was on a tripod as I wanted a long exposure shot, but the lens would have been covered in water. It had to be a relatively quick shot. I settled on 1/10th of a second, then dried the camera!


Newgale Sands

Newgale lives up to its name

Monday 14th September 2015

Drove from Oswestry to Aberystwyth then followed the Welsh coast south, stopping off at various places. I knew we would run into heavy rain and gale force winds before the end of the day and it happened at St. David's. We parked to go and look at the Cathedral, only to decide we would get soaked walking the short distance - we moved on. Following the coast road we came to Newgale. Here there was a massive shingle wall between the road and the beach, to protect residents from coastal flooding, there was a surf shop and the car park was almost full. Thinking the sea would be full of surfers, I parked the car in their car park and climbed the shingle wall to have a look. No surfers (they were in the cafe), just two individuals with umbrellas on an otherwise deserted beach; that would be my shot. With camera under my coat, I decided on the composition, before quickly taking the lens cap off and taking the shot. Returning to the car (soaked), my wife said, "Was it worth it"? I thought it was.

Thursday, 17 September 2015

Canal Junction


Canals meet at Lower Frankton

Sunday 13th September 2015

A lack of recent posts is due to the fact I was away for a few days. Still taking my image a day, but unable to upload them until I got home.
Sunday and I was east of Oswestry in Shropshire, at a place called Lower Frankton, where two canals meet - a junction. The Montgomery canal in the foreground was 35 miles long and ran from Newtown in Powys. It was abandoned in 1936, but restoration work began in 1969 and is continuing. The locks at Lower Frankton have been restored and it is hoped to have the full 35 miles restored. The canal running right to left in the image is the Shropshire Union canal and is very well used. I find canals very peaceful and with a speed limit of 'walking pace', no one is in a rush to go anywhere. The still water on the canals make for good reflections.



Saturday, 12 September 2015

Star Turn

Nestle Pure Life water bottle!

Saturday 12th September 2015

I pulled out a plastic bottle of water from the shrink wrap package by the bottle neck. Turning it upside down I noticed this star shape on the bottom. The centre was actually concave, with the 'star' providing the stability for the bottle when stood on a flat surface. It being full of water, light was being refracted. In a darkened room, I lit the bottle with one light from one side which brought out the blue colour on the label. I liked the image, but decided to posterize it, to give it a different effect.

Friday, 11 September 2015

Japanese Anemone

Late flowering Japanese Anemone

Friday 11th September 2015

If there is one flower in the garden that cheers me up as autumn approaches, it is the Japanese Anemone. It flowers from August to late October and comes in different shades of pink, also white as above. The plant grows to about a metre high and has a profusion of flowers on long stems that sway in the breeze. It is a perennial, that some people regard as a weed as it can become a little invasive. Autumn is near and our garden is full of colour. I picked out a flower and photographed it using a shallow depth of field to blur the background.