Quite some time ago I wrote a series of posts regarding an essay I was working on called The River. I actually completed the essay a while ago but apart from showing it a Blackburn Camera Club, I omitted to do anything else with it. I think I just got caught up with getting shows ready and starting new bodies of work.
Anyway, I've finally got round to posting the final AV presentation on YouTube and each of the stills are on my flickr page. There is more to this story but that will come in the very near future.
Showing posts with label wildlife. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wildlife. Show all posts
Wednesday, 26 November 2014
The River - I can't believe I have written about this!!!
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Monday, 17 March 2014
Being Multi-disciplined
Most photographers have a passion for one particular area or genre of photography, others try a bit of everything and as a result of this master any.
I like trying new things. I like trying new techniques but I quickly find that I'm bored and return to my two favourite disciplines, nature (in this I include landscape and wildlife) and documentary. I just guess it is where I am comfortable, where I am home.
Monday, 4 March 2013
A turn in The River is not always a happy one!
During the last couple of months I have made numerous trips to the river that is the subject of the project. These have been really enjoyable trips mainly because not only is the river very appealing but for the most eastern of its course it is in a beautiful location.
I was becoming aware that I was focusing too much attention on this one stretch of river and for the project to be a success then it was time to consider other locations. Therefore, I paid a visit to a short stretch that runs through the Waterside area of Colne.
The first thing that I noticed was a contrast and I thought it was one that would really spoil the project. The amount of rubbish and waste that was thrown in the river was unbelievable. I was honestly shocked.
I really don't know why I should have been. I have spent most of life working around or studying rivers. I have seen the best and the worse and generally, Lancashire rivers have vastly improved from when I was a kid and even more greatly improved in the last ten years.
After a lot of thought I realised why it had shocked me. It wasn't the fact that there was litter and rubbish in the river, it was the fact that actually I was only around a mile and half away from the stretch that I had been working on. Two miles from where two becks meet to form the river and roughly three miles from its source high up on the moorlands. It was the fact that in that really short span of river, humans had left a massive mark on it and not one that is positive.
I think the three images here sort of bring home the impact. There were taken in less than one hundred yards of each other.
So the question is this; armed with this knowledge how do I make this work in a project that was supposed to be uplifting?
I found this a really difficult question to answer and I came to the following conclusion. This has to be told as it is.

Well, if I don't tell it as it is then the whole project will be a lie. True, I could just focus on the pretty bits but anyone wanting to visit the location after seeing my work would be seriously disappointed. With this in mind there will be a short section devoted to this particular stretch and it will show the river as it is.
In fairness, it wasn't all doom and gloom. I came across James P. Sullivan from Monsters Inc which made me smile. The something amazed me. Bobbing about this stretch of river looking for food was a Dipper. Despite being in the centre of a busy town, despite the rubbish it was here; it was pretty close to me and I still didn't bag me a Dipper!
As for the pretty stretch of river, I am going to return there. I have to. I want some wildlife to come in to this project and there is plenty there and plenty of places I can get close enough to film and photograph. In addition I will continue to travel further west to where the river meets Pendle Water and I will continue further east to the source of the river, and to follow the becks that feed it.
I just hope that as I travel further west the conditions improve and that I have seen the worse that the River has to offer.
Labels:
Art Photography,
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record photography,
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Wednesday, 8 February 2012
Nice surprises
One thing I love about being a photographer is the nice little surprises. These surprises come in different forms. Sometimes its when you process an image that you thought wasn't very good suddenly becomes stunning or sometimes its just those little moments of beauty that are generally missed. One I had last week.
I was out walking and looked in to a field because something didn't look quite right. Led there was a fox. The little fella hung around for ages. In fact, I got my tripod out and sat the camera on it and he quite happily let me take photographs of him for about 30 minutes or so!

The image (left) was taken at one of my favourite places, Castercliffe Hill Fort. The three hawthorns reminded me of three witches and so that has become the title of the image! Quite apt really! This year is the 400th anniversary of the Pendle Witch Trail.
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Thursday, 2 February 2012
Getting out!
Finally, I manage to get out!
Yesterday afternoon was so nice that I headed for Boulsworth Hill and bagged another couple of shots for the Remnants series. It was bitterly cold, with snow on the ground and not easy walking but very much worth it. As an added bonus I saw a pair of Short-Eared Owls hunting. Hadn't seen any for years!
This afternoon, I'm heading out again! This time to Blacko to shoot the tower, Malkin Tower Farm and something else of interest I've spotted. Will post all the images when I've finished processing!
Yesterday afternoon was so nice that I headed for Boulsworth Hill and bagged another couple of shots for the Remnants series. It was bitterly cold, with snow on the ground and not easy walking but very much worth it. As an added bonus I saw a pair of Short-Eared Owls hunting. Hadn't seen any for years!
This afternoon, I'm heading out again! This time to Blacko to shoot the tower, Malkin Tower Farm and something else of interest I've spotted. Will post all the images when I've finished processing!
Labels:
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Lancashire,
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Lee Johnson Photography,
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Remnants,
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Stone,
wildlife
Saturday, 28 January 2012
Busy, busy, busy!

In the next few months some interpretation boards are going to be installed in Borough of Pendle's parks containing an array of my images including landscapes and wildlife shots. Will post more nearer the time.
This week sees the start of competition season at Blackburn & District Camera Club. I have four images entered in the digital projection section. Will post results sometime next week.
This week I accepted a job for a rather unusual but interesting assignment. I'm keeping it a bit close to my chest at the moment but I will reveal all in the coming weeks.
Labels:
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birds,
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