Posts Tagged ‘Aperture’

Closed Door

31Aug10

I have been at this blog for about eight months now and bar a day here of there missed while I have been travelling I have pretty much managed a picture a day.  Rather reluctantly, but definitely, I have decided that I need to draw this to an end for now.  It has been very […]


Colours

30Aug10

Pals is a very attractive Catalan hill town that has preserved most of its architecture at the expense of giving itself over to the tourist trade – a sad but understandable bargain.  There are lots os shops and boutiques vying for the visitors’ attention selling artisanal food (excellent, but pricey) and crafts through to more […]


Sunday Lunch

29Aug10

Walking into a village in Catalonia around lunch time in summer sometimes seems like re-enacting a Clint Eastwood film: the streets are completely empty … The attractive Catalonian village of Monells has a thirteenth century square which these days is set out for that attractive southern European habit of having family Sunday lunches.  Not being […]


Dolmens

28Aug10

Deep in the cork oak forests of Catalonia we ran across a series of Neolithic grave stones.  Dolmens are found across Europe and their characteristic ‘pi’ shape belie the fact that once they would have been covered with earth to form barrows.  The chamber below would have been a grave.  These stones are almost 5,000 […]


After a long day (started at 2.30 a.m. when some clown set off the fire alarm in our hotel) we have travelled by plane, train and automobile (in that order) from London to the Catalan coast for a walking holiday.  After a such a day there was little energy left to do more than find […]


Summer’s End

26Aug10

The end of summer is in sight – at least so far as the weather is concerned, it seem s more like autumn than summer.  The flowers seem to think so as well.  These Shasta Daisies are reminders of how ephemeral all life is.  I find these fading flowers rather moving. Both these shots were […]


Mission Church

24Aug10

Back to Blist’s Hill Victorian Town.  This is the 19th century Mission Church in the township – a far cry from the traditional stone-built churches that are associated with the UK.  This was more a large hut made from ‘wriggly tin’.  Indeed to me it looks as though it could have come from somewhere on […]


Ironbridge

23Aug10

The world’s first iron bridge was constructed in … Ironbridge!  Although now a pleasantly rural area in a deep valley with the River Severn running through it, it was a hive of industry and the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution in the eighteenth century, thanks in part to the raw materials of the area. Since […]


Forge Welding

22Aug10

Another from Blist’s Hill Victorian Town – a live demonstration of forge welding.  I thought that flash might be distracting for the smith and with fire and hot metal around I didn’t want to chance it; so, this is an available light shot. The dynamic range of this shot was considerable and I needed to […]


My wife went down to the quilting show in the NEC; so, I took the opportunity to visit Blists Hill Victorian Town, the site of the BBC’s ‘Victorian Pharmacy’. Fascinating, and the pharmacy looked just as it did on the television, although without the interesting experiments in manufacturing gunpowder and fireworks, or drilling teeth, that […]