Another stunning Queensberry album delivered to happy clients!

Queensberry album collections make up around 80% of my booked weddings and with good reason, as you’ll see here. They really do stand heads and shoulders above any other album manufacturer for quality and wow factor. If you’re looking to showcase all your stunning wedding photographs in an elegant and timeless way, these are definitely the albums for you!

Kate and Charlie were married at Gosfield Park in Essex in July and chose a Pagemount matted album in ‘Gunmetal’, which is a Buckram cover material - a lovely contemporary material (and a little bit sparkly, too!)

I delivered it to my beaming clients on Monday evening and now they have their album to cherish forever, I thought I’d share some images of it with you. It arrived on these shores from New Zealand just last week and this is what it looked like…

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The joy of film - part two

Having just added a Contax G2 to my Bronica ETRSi medium format film camera, I ran a couple of rolls of film through both and took some shots out in our garden. (See Part 1 of this post here)

They’re nothing special - some images of our cats (Sapphire, Wellington and Rupert - in the order they appear), the shed, the general untidiness that passes for our garden these days - but it’s great fun waiting for the negatives to arrive after finishing a roll and I love seeing the softness to the images  - film is also more forgiving than digital so even if you unintentionally make a mistake with the exposure, it’s still useable (unbeknown to me, the battery died halfway through the roll in the Bronica, meaning it took all the shots at 500/sec - on digital they would have been massively underexposed but with film? See for yourselves…)

I’m not shooting weddings on film (yet) but if you like the look of these images and would like to have your eshoot on film, please contact me. You don’t have to be a wedding client  - you may simply like a shoot with your partner just for the experience - get in touch!

First up, some shots taken with the beautifully made Conatx G2 rangefinder 35mm with Carl Zeiss lenses (best in the world) on Kodak Portra 400…

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The joy of film - part one

I have my Dad (an excellent amateur photographer) to thank for making me much of the photographer I am now. I’ve recently found some old prints from film cameras I’ve owned over the years and would love to share some with you - just for a change!

When I was a teenager living at home in north London, my Dad was the person who (during the summer holidays - he worked for a newspaper in Fleet Street doing shifts), would take me to different places around London where I could merrily take pictures with the camera he’d given me - a 35mm Canon Sureshot. He knew a lot about the city and its history and as well as photography, I’ve picked up my love of London and its history from him as well. During one of these trips, we came upon Butler’s Wharf, part of the old London docks on the south side of Tower Bridge (I loved dereliction then and I still do - don’t know why!) I was in my element and began snapping away at the crumbling warehouses with their ancient walkways, long since useful to anyone. But Dad would stop me occasionally and ask me things like, “Why are you taking that shot?”, “Why don’t you get down low to make it look more dynamic?” and “What about getting some foreground interest in that shot - it’ll look much better”. Because of Dad, my snaps became much (I think) more interesting and it made me think about viewing scenes from different angles before taking the shot - not just shooting the first thing I saw. Every shot used to cost money with film - not like digital where you can hammer out 50 shots and choose the best one - for free.

A few years later and Butler’s Wharf is a magnificent regenerated development so the old buildings I loved when derelict, I still love now because they’ve been saved for years to come - the history is still present within them. Dad passed away in 1996, but a lot of times when I’m at work shooting weddings and engagements I can hear him, guiding me, “do you think there may be a better angle to take that shot?”

So here are some old images of Butler’s Wharf from around 1983 and the figure you see in some of these images is Danny, my Dad, who said, “I’ll stand in some of your shots so people get a sense of scale from the buildings” - I’d never thought of that, either!

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