|
|
Current Newsletter
November 2009 Photographers Resource - Monthly Edition 71 |
||||||||
Industrial Heritage |
||||||||
|
||||||||
In This Issue:
This month we take a look at Industrial Heritage. Industrial Heritage is perhaps considered by some to be the less interesting parts of our heritage and there are a lot of old industrial works being allowed to fall down or being swept away. However there are also a lot of topics such as windmills, watermills, canals and historic ports that are a part of industrial heritage but perhaps viewed more favourably. |
||||||||
|
||||||||
Articles added on this topic this month include:-
Over the next 6 months or so we will be looking at trams, bridges, marine and coastal, mining, model villages, caves, as well as spa towns, and taking a further look at Roman sites and frontiers, English castles through the ages and a variety of other topics that all contain some aspects of industrial heritage. |
||||||||
|
||||||||
Video on DSLR's A number of Digital Single Lens Reflex (DSLR) cameras have followed phones and point and shoot cameras to include an ability to take a form of video. This could be useful for capturing short pieces of video for websites, of for other occasional use. How much use photographers will make of it is questionable. It does not compare with what you can produce with a video camera, in the same way as a phone camera cannot compare with a DSLR. Nikon now have several cameras that have the ability to take videos and we have looked at the controls of this, and how on the camera you control the video features, this is in Nikon Movies on a DSLR - effects of settings chosen. |
||||||||
|
||||||||
The Photographers Diary Love it or hate it, Christmas is approaching, and many normal parts of life will be disrupted. However this also brings about some events that may be of interest to you to photograph, or events that only come about at this time of year and our December photographers diary is now available listing some of these. A few people have asked why we don't keep the old photographers diaries on line after the end of the month, like we do all other articles, there is a simple answer to this, in that we have links to sites giving further details and many of these stop working just after or soon after the event has taken place, and maintaining these links is an impossible task. We don't loose the information, some of it with future dates gets added to the year ahead featured list, while all the others go into our database that we use as a starting point 9 months later to start to build the new months calendar, before searching many other sources for new events.
Illuminated Carnivals. Those folk in Somerset have spent all year putting together their floats ready for this year's county illuminated carnivals that they can take part in. Not all floats take part in all events, as some of the larger ones cannot navigate the smaller streets in some of the towns. However the largest and by far the most popular from a spectators viewpoint in Bridgewater, all the floats, baring any faults, take part in this one, with over 100 taking part most years. I have been a number of times and it is magical. The floats and costumes are impressive and if you are in the right location, preferably at the front of the crowd you will capture some super images. Other carnivals include the Lord Mayors Show in London on the 14th which starts with an RAF flaypast over the Guildhall at 11am. Followed by the process which travels past St Paul's Cathedral and ends the the Royal Courts of Justice in Aldwych. Still on the Fire theme it is now the start of the fire festival season which goes right through to February next year. The most well known of these are those that take place in Scotland during January, but for England it is Ottery St Mary in Devon who kick off the season with the Tar Barrel Rolling through the town. The Barrels are soaked with tar and lit and carried on peoples back through the streets. Rolling starts at 4.30pm with junior barrels, the size of the adult barrels grow until the final enormous one is carried as Midnight calls, a gigantic 30ft bonfire and fairground also included.
|
||||||||
|
||||||||
Summary of Articles Included In This Issue | ||||||||
Anchor Points and The European Route of Industrial Heritage Technological Developments in the Industrial Revolution |
||||||||
Lists Added This Issue | ||||||||
Locations Guides Added This Issue | ||||||||
Bedlam Furnaces, Ironbridge, Shropshire Broseley Pipeworks Shropshire Coalport China Museum, Ironbridge, Shropshire Darby Houses, Ironbridge, Shropshire Enginuity, Ironbridge, Shropshire Iron Bridge and Toll House Ironbridge, Shropshire Jackfield Tile Museum, Ironbridge, Shropshire Museum of Iron, Ironbridge, Shropshire Museum of the Gorge Ironbridge, Shropshire Tar Tunnel, Ironbridge, Shropshire |
||||||||
|
|