A candid street shot taken in Broadgate, London EC1 in 2007 COLOUR PORTFOLIO IN THE MOMENT – PHOTOJOURNALISM URBAN DECOR ARCHITECTURAL MOTHER NATURE SUBLIME GRIME PORTRAITURE
The vaulted ceilings of Tintern Abbey in South Wales are no longer there, but the glorious skeleton remains. As you travel down Tintern Valley, when you come around the bend and spy the Abbey, it takes your breath away and you can see why Wordsworth had so much to say about it.
Swan captured in Barnes in London. See T-shirt too -
This is a classic view of the Snowdon massif in Snowdonia, North Wales. Often referred to as the Horseshoe owing to the curved arc of the the four main peaks. I shot this in low light with Llyn Mymbyr (Mymbyr Lake) in the foreground. Scanned at 4000 dpi from black and white film on a Nikon Coolscan V ED.
On a damp and misty April morning in the beautiful Tywi Valley in South Wales, these trees appeared out of the mist. I toned the image for effect. Scanned at 4000 dpi from black and white film on a Nikon Coolscan V ED.
found this one in the car park of our office building… Wallpaper in different sizes
More dogs, horses and pets here
More dogs, horses and pets here
Urban candid street photography taken in London 2008
One of the first street shots I ever took back in 1964 in the East End of London. This was before Playstations, and probably the only ‘toy’ these kids shared between them was a skipping rope. Old bomb sites still held a fascination though as a form of amusement and exploration, as can be seen here. It was taken using a Yashica Mat 120 film twin lens reflex camera that took me six months to save up for. I used Tri-X B/W film and printed on a hard grade of paper to get the punchy contrast, a characteristic of all my early B/W work. This image was photographed digitally from the original print in my portfolio. © 1964 John Hooton Photography
One of the ‘old girls’ showing off at the Biggin Hill air show in 2007. Technical Details: Camera: Nikon D200 / Lens: Nikkor 18-200mm f/3.5 / Focal Length: 200mm / ISO: 200 / Exposure: 1/500 sec at f/5.6 / Post Processing: Photoshop CS3 © 2007 John Hooton Photography
Adobe Illustrator and Wacom Winning design in the Redbubble London Calling t-shirt challenge. Cruel Britannia II – Big Ben Cruel Britannia III – the Duelist
What time is it? Companion piece to Cruel Britannia Cruel Britannia III – the Duelist
Companion piece to Cruel Britannia and Cruel Britannia II – Big Ben
Lanyon Quoit is a dolmen from prehistoric times. Likely it was a grave, but it’s definite that it had some ritual significance to the people who built it. Built by peoples long gone but hardly forgotten. We still marvel at these standing stones today. It’s significantly altered from its original form. It was knocked down by a storm and rebuilt by locals in the early 1800’s. It’s much shorter than its previous form and is one leg short of the four it originally had. Cornwall, United Kingdom
A workmate made the observation that my Cruel Britannia shirt had a touch of the iPod ad about it. Never to let an opportunity to take the piste, we have the following variant.
Another in the Masters series. / This is the centre part of a long panoramic watercolour. By Thomas Bush Hardy, 1895. I’ve moved some of the boats to be closer together, as my version is a small painting, 10×7 inches, on rough Bockingford tinted cream paper, 140lb. I will be painting the full length seascape in the future.
My version of a Thomas Bush Hardy (1842-97). From an 1895 watercolour of Ramsgate Harbour. A panoramic shaped painting, 23” x 10”. / Hand-made, 140lb rough paper. / For sale! Over 20 hours work. Multiple layers of semi-transparent and opaque watercolour, and white zinc gouache for highlights. Viewing in larger size is necessary.
The colours
This shot was taken on my visit to London in March 2009. It was a overcast day which made for better photos. i waited for the cars to spin round far enough for me to take this shot and to get a symmetrical composition. i have great feedback from this photo and i hope you all will enjoy it as much as i enjoyed taking it. Thanks for looking, / Chris
“Epona” was the Celtic white horse goddess. She was thought of as a woman who could shape-shift into a white mare, and would sometimes vanish into the sea… Many white horses have been “inscribed” into the green hills of Albion. This horse also evokes the legendary unicorn. “Solved” by Emily Bandru !! Congratulations Emily!!!
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