Showing posts with label Photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photography. Show all posts

Friday, 11 October 2024

The Stotfold Shuffle

A little album of scenes that presented themselves at Stotfold Working Steam Weekend last Saturday. And, as when playing an album or playlist of music, it's sometimes fun to press shuffle and see what unexpected juxtapositions and themes are thrown up. So if you want to see some cute cushions next to an old, greasy engine then you've come to the right place!


"It's all done by smoke and steam!"


"Traction"


"Cyclamen For Sale"


"The Horseman"


"Thrashing Machine Detail"


"The Guardians Of Our Steam Heritage"


"...And A New Generation"


"Steam Into Clouds"


"Precision Engineering"


"Just Cruising"


"Fordson Major Diesel"


"A Wide Selection Of Attractive Cushions"


"Concentration"


(and in black and white)


"I know it's called a Working Steam Weekend,
but all work and no tea....."


Would you like to spend a couple of minutes or so wandering around the tractors and threshing machines with Les?



I promise that we will escape from the world of steam and return to the English countryside very soon. It just so happens that there are several steam gatherings at this time of year - I think it might be deliberately arranged this way so that the heavy equipment doesn't have to be moved huge distances between venues.


Take care.


Sunday, 22 September 2024

"John's Amusements"

Maybe the word needs translation for non-British English speakers, as well as those who valiantly struggle on with English as a second tongue: 

Amusements - Games, rides, and other things that you can enjoy, for example at a fairground or at the seaside.

But it can just mean anything you find amusing, of course.


Even in English English it's rather fallen out of use in recent years, and if you see it nowadays it'll most likely be found in connection with vintage fairgrounds like this example found on one of the elderly lorries seen at the Bedfordshire Steam Rally last week.

And these are just little details spotted on a stroll around the amusements. I like to think that much can be revealed by small fragments of the scene - the kind of lettering used, the decorative elements, even just the chosen colours. Mind you, I must look a bit crazy as jam my lens up close to the target. My brother Les wanders off and pretends not to know me.



But when I've collected my raw materials I can assemble them (given sufficient time and patience) into a picture like the one above.



But what are my amusements when I'm confronted by the old tractors which I've photographed many times before?



I might try something like this. A photomontage composed of various nameplates, some more battered than others. Or I might like to compare the different tractor engines....



It only works, I think, because there are so many colours available. 



So could I make a collage from just one old traction engine?



It seems to work. Then I had another, more complex, idea as I photographed one of these....



They went to a great deal of trouble painting the wheels of the great traction engines, using many different designs. My plan was to incorporate the best of them into a single image.

Wheels within wheels!



As visually appealing as all this freshly painted metalwork is, I often find myself on the look-out for the battle-scarred veterans. Like this old stationary engine. These could be hitched up to any piece of farmyard equipment, but had to be hauled from place to place by a team of horses. Then one day it dawned on someone that it could be made to power itself. This realisation spelled the end of the stationary engine and was another nail in the coffin of the farm horse.



These are some of the interesting textures I collected.

Like the fairground amusements, you can spend far more time on these than you really intended to. Especially as I like to do everything from scratch rather than use a ready-made app. More time consuming, but more rewarding.


Take care.


Wednesday, 26 June 2024

What A Difference A Lens Makes...

 ...or does it?

A trip to Bressingham Gardens in Norfolk. Six photos taken with my close-up macro lens. Six with the widest angle lens I have. And a final half-dozen with my favourite telephoto lens.


CLOSE-UP AND PERSONAL



















THE WIDE BOY



















TAKING A LONG VIEW


















Take care.


Friday, 10 November 2023

Fair Play

In September and October, you may remember, we visited a few country fairs of various kinds. Although I try to concentrate on what's going on - or at least the bits that interest me - I also occasionally like to play around with small details of the scene. It might be a fragment of an ornate mechanical organ, a steam engine, a rusty tractor or the fairground rides. Here's a small selection....





























Take care.