Friday, 23 January 2009

Snowdon Summit Station


A cafe? You can no longer call this a cafe. The new summit station on Snowdon is wonderful. It’s not open yet mind you, but with squinted eyes you can just about steal a view of the interior – it’s all Welsh slate, oak and stainless steel. Here’s to great architecture! More infomation here

A year pass to the local zoo is a rather fine Christmas present indeed - thank you!

Y Lliwedd from Llyn Llydaw


A quickly grabbed shot while jogging off Snowdon, this time from the Miners track at Llyn Llydaw, looking up toward a third of the Snowdon horseshoe range - Y Lliwedd.

Snowdon Horseshoe






These detail shot taken on the Snowdon horseshoe route. A day of big bold colours. Oh, how we love high pressure weather systems in winter.

Glyder Fawr, Glyder Fach, Trefan (paradise fell run #2)








More hastily grabbed shots taken with shakey hands on what really was a bit of special day to be running in the hills. Why can't all winters in the UK be like this one.

Wild Ponies on Conway Mountain (paradise fell run #1)








Wild Ponies on Conwy Mountain. These hastily grabbed photographs were taken with a point-and-shoot camera on a perfect fell run. The typcially boggy ground was frozen to a fast-paced concrete, a golden sunset lit mountains and best of all; a few hours freedom from the central-heated excesses of the festive season.

Llanberis Slate Quarry - Storm over Snowdon


This simple looking image is the result of lots of hard work – it’s crafted from a bunch of images joined up together – the original picture is now massive would fill a wall without looking at all nasty. I really like it a lot. This might be because of the effort involved in building it and the knowledge this has so much potential to print really big. I am hoping I just like it because its full of drama and reminds me of classical biblical paintings – only time and some expensive printing will tell...

Llanberis Slate Quarry








I had only walked through the slate quarry at Llanberis once a few years back. That was a purposeful group march to access the peaks above the quarry. I remember feeling then that the ghosts of the past seemed to linger in the abandoned workers buildings and made a point to get back there with more time. Years later, on the edge of a storm and alone, this visit felt like wandering through a wonderful and abandoned gothic film set.

Limefield Park - First Light








Golden light, clear air, frosty ground, pretty dogs, pure cheese.

Frosty Snowdonia








These shots of Trefan and Snowdon were taken in the cold spell over Christmas/New Year.



I seem to be getting a bit hooked on taking pictures with nothing in them. hum.

Puffin Island from Penmaenmawr


This shot of Anglesey’s Puffin Island was inspired by the cover of a rather good Iain Banks novel 'Complicity'.

Saturday, 6 December 2008

Snowdon from Moel Famau



A quickly grabbed shot of the post-sunset glow over Snowdon from the summit of our local peak Moel Famau this evening. Mt Snowdon is made up of the three peaks on the left of the horizon.

Thursday, 4 December 2008

Moel Famau country park






We are lucky enough to have this country park on our doorstep. It's nothing spectacular when held up against nearby Snowdonia national park, but serves as a great local bolt-hole for a fix of fresh air. Once in a while it all falls into place - with the sun, snow and the last of the autumn colour it starts to feel like somewhere far more remote.

The bottom image is a panorama, moulded from seven portrait shots. The quality of the original image is astounding, but you will have to take my word for it looking at this postage stamp version!

Click images to view larger...

Wednesday, 3 December 2008

Zen pebbles


Some very frosty pebbles in the back yard.

The reclusive squirrel...


Supermodel




More 'playing' with new zoomy lens. I must justify its not insubstantial price tag by using it for something a little more involved than doggy photos at some point (sorry Hamish).

For anyone local reading this, if you haven’t been to Thurstaston Common nature reserve on the Wirral, it’s well worth a visit.

Friday, 28 November 2008

Man Ceiriog


This ruggedly handsome chap kindly let me take his portrait as part of a seasonal series I am work on. He was pulling a large cart of wood up a steep lane when he kindly stopped for me. He looked great – straight out of Lord of the Rings I thought. I just need to get three other local folk to agree to seasonal environmental portraits for Winter, Spring and Summer and that’s my Four Seasons of the Ceiriog Valley exhibition entry sorted. It all sounds so straightforward in words. Oh, and I really need to find this chap again and ask him to sign a model release form. Easy.

Doggy style?










I did a few snaps of a friends dog, with the intention of printing one of them onto a stylish wall canvas for her Christmas present. Now I have seen them, I can’t decide which one of these will look least 'greeting-card cheesy' when it comes back from the printers on a rather large canvas...

Monday, 24 November 2008

Chester Zoo








Chester Zoo. It’s 10 minutes away from my house on a push bike, yet I hadn’t been there since I was a wee bairn, on a school trip from St. Wilfrid's High School in Blackburn. I remember holding hands with a girl I had a crush on during the coach trip back from the zoo. Twelve years old I was and I didn't dare utter a word to her again after that. School trip fond memories. The smells of the souvenir Zoo pencil's and leather bookmarks, eating our packed lunches on the sun-baked lawns, the punch of humidity as we entered in the steamy crocodile's lair.

Although I am blown away by the wildlife photography of Martin Bailey and Nick Brandt, it’s not something I really feel drawn towards in any way, but an enforced stint indoors, a poorly landscape lens, oh yer, and the timely arrival of a bling new zoom lens I have been saving my pocket money up for months to buy, made a visit to the animals seem a very appealing lunch break. I should have gone back a lot sooner – it’s a fantastic resource to have on the doorstep and seeing the levels the zoo are going to in conserving endangered species is remarkable. Sod it, in fact I am going to buy a season pass.

Tuesday, 11 November 2008

Sigur Rós, Empress Ballroom, Blackpool






Sigur Rós, Empress Ballroom, Blackpool

Thursday, 6 November 2008

An Autumn Day in North Wales










The top image here is the Fairy Glen, near Betws-y-Coed, North Wales. This is probably one of the most photographed locations in North Wales, but despite this, I will certainly be paying my 50p to go back down there again, perhaps near midday when the sun is shining directly down the steep gorge and lighting up the autumn leaves...

Wednesday, 5 November 2008

Snowdonia



Tuesday, 4 November 2008

Snowdonia on a Snowy Saturday




The snow-clad mountain lurching behind the tree at the top of this set of images is Tryfan, a mountain that has touched most of the outdoor-orientated folks I know in one way or another. I remember it for terrifying icy winter scrambles, oh, and watching my partner being helicopter-lifted from a decent route. A couple of friends will definitely remember the top of the mountain as the place they became engaged to be married. Another chap we know probably treats it with great respect after dislocating his shoulder on the way down. Once you have walked, scrambled or climbed the north ridge route of this hill, it distils the contradictory mix of outright respect and just plain rocky fun into everyone who passes that way.

Wednesday, 29 October 2008

The Sinister Snowman





The brief sunshine through the freezing cold today reminded me of one of my favourite poems by Wallace Stevens:

One must have a mind of winter
To regard the frost and the boughs
Of the pine-trees crusted with snow;

And have been cold a long time
To behold the junipers shagged with ice,
The spruces rough in the distant glitter

Of the January sun; and not to think
Of any misery in the sound of the wind,
In the sound of a few leaves,

Which is the sound of the land
Full of the same wind
That is blowing in the same bare place
For the listener, who listens in the snow,
And, nothing himself, beholds
Nothing that is not there and the nothing that is.


Tuesday, 28 October 2008

Hamish






It snowed today. Actually it really snowed today. It snows occasionally around here during winter, but not until around December or January. I think there was a wee little man that enjoyed the early snow even more than I did...

Saturday, 25 October 2008

Abstract Crete























It’s kinda hard to look beyond the sun-lounger beaches, terminally half-complete villas and sleepy tavernas of the Greek island of Crete for photographic inspiration. After a few days of wondering if I would take any photographs while on the island, I dropped any preconceived ideas and just enjoyed the little details...

Friday, 24 October 2008

Samaria Gorge, Crete










What’s your perfect walk? Downhill all the way? Natural spring water breaks every mile? Hot sunshine? Little stone sculptures lining the trails. A cold beer and a dip in the sea followed by a brisk, coast-hugging ferry journey back to the car? You would probably like the Samaria gorge walk then.

Thursday, 23 October 2008






The Norwegian dudes...

Wednesday, 22 October 2008

Hello Sunshine




I was playing with that wonderful overexposed style on these shots – the eternal optimism look. These two folks walked off into the bright sunset to have better than average careers, several attractive children and lived very happily ever after.

Standing In The Shower... thinking...


Try getting your nine year old buddy to stay still under a cold outdoor shower, open his eyes for the camera, oh, and hold his breath all the while...

Tuesday, 21 October 2008

Lost Cat








I stopped on a meditative wander around the midday sleepy backstreets of a Cretan village to take a few shots of the cats living wild on the edge of a building site and noticed I wasn't the only observant one...

Friday, 10 October 2008

Helvellyn, Lake District






Sorry Heather, not the most flattering angle, but fun...

Monday, 22 September 2008

TomBoy






I have a feeling this little man is going to be beating me up the hills on his own bike before long...

Monday, 15 September 2008

Northcote Manor, Lancashire










I have never eaten in a Michelin-starred restaurant before. I kinda imaged you would need to buy chips on the way home after eating all those insubstantial little towers of food from oversized white plates. My other-half, bless her, bought me the best surprise birthday present – lunch in the Northcote Manor. When you get past the fact you could feed a smallish family for a whole week for the price of lunch here, it’s actually very good value. They are known for celebrating British cuisine, but perhaps more accurately they are able to capture the essential flavours of home-grown British produce and then turn the flavour amplifier up to eleven. It’s just so refreshing to eat somewhere where you know that you couldn’t have sourced or cooked a single ingredient on the plate as well as they do. Best of all though, you actually don’t need chips on the way home.

Click images to view larger.

Portrait of an Old Cow

La Machine, Liverpool












Not every day you get to see a 50 foot high spider trampling through the streets of Liverpool.

Thursday, 4 September 2008

Half Light














A dear old friend, Finola, told me about Ironbridge a long while back now. It slipped my mind to ever go there, but by chance, I found myself there on this last rainy and overcast weekend. While looking around at the tourist cafes and gastropubs, I wondered what the attraction of the place was. But on the route out of town, I followed the one tourist sign that had been drawing me in afternoon, the [Museum of Steel Sculpture]. The museum was firmly closed, but the gardens and woodlands where these eighty outdoor steel sculptures live among meadows and woodlands was not only open, but in the persist drizzle, totally devoid of visitors. A wonderful place. Thanks Fi.


Thursday, 28 August 2008

Explosions In The Sky


I had it in mind that used tastefully, High Dynamic Range Imaging could be quite effective for adding drama to architectural shots. This shot is perhaps a little bit overcooked on the HDR treatment for the subtle 'larger than life but believable' feeling I was after.


Porth Clais, St David's, Pembrokeshire

Wednesday, 27 August 2008

Forgotten






This crumbling Welsh cottage was only accessible by climbing through ivy and a partly collapsed doorway. Well worth the liberal covering of dust I left with.

Tuesday, 26 August 2008

From Here You Can Almost See The Sea


Surf Kayaking at Newgale beach, Pembrokeshire.

This simple composition was partly inspired by the wonderfully abstract work of [Patrice Schreyer] who is taking a break from the rat race with an extended photographic exploration of Iceland.

Click image to view larger

Saturday, 23 August 2008

Widescreen






These panoriamic shots are all taken in the Ceiriog valley, North Wales.

Click image to enlarge

Friday, 22 August 2008

Fisherman's Blues


I would need to search deeper into my psyche than I care to tread this lunchtime, looking for an answer to where this idea came from, and more alarmingly why I carried it through. I should write something meaningful about depleting fish stocks or UK fish quotas. All I really know is that the fishmongers is definitely not going to route through their bins for fish heads for a 3rd time. This shot was taken in the barn below.

Click image to enlarge

Thursday, 21 August 2008

Summertime rolls...






These shots were taken in the rather wonderful Ceiriog Valley, North Wales.

Click image to enlarge

Wednesday, 20 August 2008

Photoshoot


This is really an outtake, taken between posed shots duing a semi-formal portrait session for a friend Cath, but I think this is the cute shot.

Wednesday, 13 August 2008

Iceland #10 - Panoramas






Each of these shots is made up of 5 images, giving an almost 180 degree panorama image. It works quite well for these epic volcanic and glacial landscapes of Iceland's Skaftafell National Park.

A friend told me that the flat-top mountain in the middle image is actually the result of a volcano erupting under a glacier!

These are most definitely the last of the Iceland series.

Click images to view larger

Tuesday, 12 August 2008

Iceland #9 - Rock




Iceland rock detail. Click images to view larger

Monday, 11 August 2008

Iceland #8 - Black & White










Iceland Black & White studies. Click images to view larger