2.9.15

30 years is a long time

An album of images from 1985 plus the retakes. Also included some of the work I created then. Click on the image for the album

30 years is a long time

30.8.15

29.8.15

30 years is a long time part 5

roath park retake series #6 roath park retake series #5 roath park retake series #7 roath park retake series #8

the event



On Sunday 30th August 2015 at the Pavilion, The Pleasure Gardens, Roath Park I will list the names of wild flora in the park and make cyanotypes with Paul Hetherington. We are up for conversations about plants, plant names and light.

28.8.15

galium aparine list

Cyanotypes and Anna Atkins

by Paul Hetherington


Cyanotypes are probably the earliest form of photography.

They are created by combining two simple chemical solutions, which, when coated on paper, dried and exposed to light rich in ultraviolet, undergo a reaction which produces a deeply saturated blue pigment, sometimes known as “Prussian blue”.

If something is placed between the light source (usually the sun) and the paper, such as a photographic negative or a plant specimen, a mask is formed and an image is created on the paper.  After sufficient exposure has been given, the paper is  washed in water and the blue and white image is revealed. As it dries, the image darkens and increases in contrast.

Cyanotypes of the kind created and presented here cannot be made directly with a camera, but depend entirely on making a print by close contact between subject and the light-sensitive paper. Images so created by the use of objects (such as leaves and stems of plants) are often known as “photograms”.

Invented in about 1842 by Sir John Herschel (astronomer and generally brilliant scientist), the cyanotype process was originally intended by him to be used for copying drawings and notes, but his friends and acquaintances - notably Anna Atkins and William Fox-Talbot, but there were others -  experimented further with the process as a way to capture images of the world about them.

Anna Atkins, born in 1799, had a particular interest in botany, and created a number of books of British flora in the 1840s and 1850s using cyanotypes. She is regarded in many photographic histories as the first female photographer, and even perhaps the first “scientific photographer”.

Her books and prints survive in a number of collections and museums, and though increasingly fragile (most are at least 150 years old), they retain their intrinsic beauty and delicacy of detail. An example can be seen below.

A process that proceeds by light, and particularly by the agency of ultraviolet light, seemed very appropriate as a very direct visual complement for Maura Hazelden's explorations of plants, naming and identity, and it seems impossible to ignore the poignant echo of Anna Atkins' work when considering it.
 



1.8.15

collection = casgliad

out of doors

30 years is a long time part 4

A side project is occuring: looking at old photos from around the Rec and Roath Brook Garden's area and the streets just to the north and in some cases retaking. [the ...& some of the title of this blog]

Roath Brook Gardens - Sandringham Road and The Rec 1985 and 2015

1985 ~ 2015 roath park retake #1
1985 ~ 2015 roath park retake #2
1985 ~ 2015 roath park retake #4
1985 ~ 2015 roath park retake #3
Using a very different lens in The Rec in 1985. Copper beeches have been planted and grown a lot in 30 yeras.

30 years is a long time part 3

A side project is occuring: looking at old photos from around the Rec and Roath Brook Garden's area and the streets just to the north and in some cases retaking.
Wandering the lanes to the north of Roath Brook and Waterloo Gardens. There was a telephone box with the words "what about the sex beat baby?" written on it. I can;t find the photo - I can see it on the wall of one of the interior shots of a hot evening in June...there were a lot of spalshes around the area

A lad on his bike asked if I'd take his photo - I did.

boy and his bike
R in Cardiff
back streets
back streets

30 years is a long time part 2

A side project is occuring: looking at old photos from around the Rec and Roath Brook Garden's area and the streets just to the north and in some cases retaking.
An assortment of images from the snow in either mid January or Mid February 1985 - we climbed into Roath Mill Gardens and made a huge snowball, which we then turned into an iceberg: we pushed it into the brook.
bridge walking
roath brooks gardens snow 1985
2172 eira

30 years is a long time part 1

A side project is occuring: looking at old photos from around the Rec and Roath Brook Garden's area and the streets just to the north and in some cases retaking. [the "... & some" of the title of this blog]
First Balaclava Road, where I lived in 1985

LINK to full size of image below
balaclava road inside and out block

hot evening in June after the HND 2d Design shows were all done and dusted

balaclava road

my other garden - Roath Brook Gardens

caerdydd bridge
roath brook gardens