Up And Down Blake Street

This is one of my photographs from the time we were living in Sheffield in the early 1980s. Blake Street is reputedly the third steepest street in England, and the handrail was an essential part of navigating up and down the street on wintry days. The handrail was still in place the last time I … Continue reading Up And Down Blake Street

The Walkley Hoard

Some years ago I bought a batch of of negatives for a few pounds. The photographs must have been taken during the 1940s and 50s, and many featured views of the Walkley area of Sheffield, so collectively I call them the Walkley Hoard. This is a print from one of the medium format negatives - … Continue reading The Walkley Hoard

A Passage To Halifax

It's goodbye to the fens and the farms, the sea and the sand, and a return to more familiar landscape of mills and moors, chimneys and chapels. Here's one I took earlier - about sixty years earlier, in fact. It was taken looking towards Halifax from Haley Hill, from a spot that I suspect no … Continue reading A Passage To Halifax

East Angles

The last of my photos from my short break in East Anglia. Now it is home to the hills of Yorkshire.

Epoch Upon Epoch

Elm Hill must be one of the most photographed streets in England. Look around and you see buildings that have been unchanged in many ways for 600 years. But look down and you see history on another level, epoch upon epoch, geological time set down in the carriageway of history.

Seaweed And Salt

Seaweed, sea salt, big skies. A detectorist sweeps the sands for lost treasure and beer bottle tops. A wind surfer bobs south, riding the waves. The wind blows. Seaweed and salt.

The Small Detail

On our travels and surrounded by big and beautiful vistas. Sometimes, however, it is the small detail that captures your attention: the odd angle, the disconnected phrase.

In Wilf’s Footsteps

"I am pleased to say we are getting on very well. We spent Friday night at Ipswich and last night here. Hope you are well. Kind regards, Wilfred" 119 years later, the message could nearly be the same. Kind regards, Alan

Mrs Foggin’s Bust

This is a scan of one of the Victorian prints I bought - for pence rather than pounds - when I was in Newcastle recently. On the back is a label headed "The Great Britain Art Co" with a name, Mrs R J Foggin, and a set of instructions for reprinting: "As copy, not so … Continue reading Mrs Foggin’s Bust