The Story

I knew little about the conference at The Conway Hall in London called 'The Story' until @Sizemore invited me to check it out with him today.. More info on The Story 2011 here: http://TheStory.org.uk

It was great to catch up with so many people I connect with online but don't get to see ant the normal conferences I attend.

The topics and visuals experianced and discussed covered a variety or subjects, from mass SMS based automated story telling, sculpture, photography, Zombie LARP and Father Ted. 

It was a low-fi affair, packed with Inspireing brainfood delivered by a great bunch of speakers showing that you don't need a lorry load of sponsors to deliver a throughly engaging conference. Perhaps it helped that the event was in London with a loyal density of story lovers on hand.

Either way I'll certainly be putting my name down for next year and looking for similar events wherever they may crop up.

 

I'm @Documentally on Twitter
Filed under  //   photo   photography   the story  

Draycott Brewery - Beers Made in Buckden

Today I got to meet Jon Draycott. Half of the husband and wife team behind the Draycott Brewery based in Buckden, Cambridgeshire.

Not just a top bloke, from a spare room in his house he creates some top real ale in a micro-micro brewery he built himself.

 

As well as recording the chat you can hear embedded on this page, I got to taste his fine ale.

He makes three beers at the moment with a fourth to be launched shortly. Buckden Bronze Bitter, Buckden Black Porter and Buckden Pale Ale.

All great beers, all "quaffable.." If you find yourself in and around Cambridgeshire go grab yourself a case. He has a great 'authentic' little business and is obviously really passionate about what he does.

 

I endevour to support local suppliers of great produce whereever I find them and am so pleased to have found such a gem.

You will find his website at DraycottBrewery.co.uk

Listen!

If you would like to discover your own local fresh food and drink, check out www.Lovefre.sh

 

I'm @Documentally on Twitter
Filed under  //   beer   draycott   local   photography  

Films of Colour at The Cowshed in Milton Keynes


A few photos I took last night of the band @FilmsOfColour as they played at a small festival called Hushabye Mountain at The Cowshed ran by @DaveCowshed.

Certainly a band you will be hearing a lot more of in the coming months.

(Kit used: Nikon D3 with a few f2.8 lenses)

I'm @Documentally on Twitter
Filed under  //   music   photography   photos   review  

Triumph Live at Mallory Park

Here are a few iPhone snaps taken while walking around Triumph Live including a silhouette shot of the new as yet un-shown Triumph Adventure set to take on the BMW GS series. Of course Triumph would have to let other manufactures make panniers and other after market bits to even come close to competing. Will that ever happen? Not unless Triumph relax a bit and let people get passionate and creative with their kit.

And below are my thoughts of the day.

Listen!

 

I'm @Documentally on Twitter
Filed under  //   audioboo   bikes   bonneville   brand   custom   gallery   hipstamatic   mallory park   motorbike   photography   racetrack   racing   scrambler   show   trident   triumph  

SoulBoy All Nighter

Photos and audio captured by @Documentally at Kings Hall in Stoke-On-Trent at the SoulBoy premiere and all night party.

 

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Follow the SoulBoy Twitter list for stay connected to those involved with the film, fans of the film and those passionate about Northern Soul.

Please comment below if you are missing from the list.

I'm @Documentally on Twitter
Filed under  //   audioboo   club   dance   film   hipstamatic   music   northern soul   party   photography   soulboy   stoke-on-trent   wigan  

David Camerwrong

Youtube-camerwrong

Thanks to @Sizemore for pointing me out in this video mash-up.

Here is the photo i was taking at the time..

..and here is the video.. Don't blink.. you'll miss me. :)

I'm @Documentally on Twitter
Filed under  //   Documentally   conservatives   david cameron   open university   photography   politics  

Sleeper Reader

I often see guys crashed out on the London Underground. Not being a Londoner myself the scene always fascinates me. I wonder if the person parties hard, works hard, or both.

I imagine a few sleep past their stops and some have nowhere to get off at.

I'm @Documentally on Twitter
Filed under  //   gh1   london   lumix   panasonic   photo   photography   ptoto   sleeper   tired   underground  

The Dog Loves Snow

Dog running in the snow

This photo was taken today. It's rare I take my Nikon D3 out on a dog walk. I'd love the D3s as it shoots video as well as stills. I can but dream.

There are more photos in my Flickr stream

@Dogmentally is on twitter but doesn't tweet.

I'm @Documentally on Twitter
Filed under  //   cold   collie   d3   dog   dogumentally   nature   nikon   photo   photography   snow   weather   white   winter  

The Right Way To Do A Photography Competition

Once under duress I posted the following photo into Amateur Photographer magazine and won the competition entitled (Underground). Then the year before last, I posted a photo taken on my N95 (through my sunglasses) into a french competition and won a laptop.. I never received the laptop but still thought I would quit while I was ahead and have never felt inspired enough to enter any more competitions. I never trusted them as the terms and conditions always seem a little suspect.

Tunnel Vision

Interestingly though, @Kate_Day runs a weekly photo competition on her blog and this time round not only have PhotoBox agreed to sponsor a charity calender featuring 12 of last year's winners, but Kate is asking the readers to choose their favourite pics. It's great to see a crowd-sourced competition led by social media in a paper like the Telegraph. (If i am honest I only read Kate's bit anyway) The rules and format have been shaped by suggestions from readers and the terms and conditions don't grab photographers rights like so many photographic competitions normally seen in the press. It looks like this photo comp has been done right.

The profits from the calendar will go to the Telegraph Christmas Appeal which has chosen great charities this year: Telegraph Christmas Appeal

So if you fancy your chances get entering and good luck!  here is the link... Kate Day's Telegraph Photo Competition

UPDATE

The results to the competition are here: http://bit.ly/87FaPZ

I'm @Documentally on Twitter
Filed under  //   @Kate_Day   competition   leica   photography   social media   telegraph   tunnel   underground  

Graham Wiseman

I was taking photographs when I heard the news. It's hit me hard. If I type I cant cry. So I am typing.

I feel like I have lost my father. Again. Worse this time. This person I knew.

I have just answered the phone to a shaky voice telling me a good friend of mine has died.

Graham Wiseman was more than a friend though. He was a father figure, a mentor, a teacher the one guy who enabled me to do what I do.

Graham_wiseman

Of course he would deny all this. He was way to humble to take any credit for the kindness and inspiration he passed on to others.

He would do anything for anyone. He did so much for me.

Up until recently Graham owned Redding Photographic studio in Rugby Town centre. The studio had offered it's services since 1904 and Graham was proud to pick it up and carry it past it's centenary.

I had I met Graham through his step daughter. I was heading off to travel the world and he told me not to take the ridiculously compact APS camera that was in my back pack.

I ignored him and it was many countries and years later when I returned to Rugby and told Graham he was right.

I was on the dole at the time and could earn an extra tenner a week if i was on a work placement. I asked Graham if he would sign me off not really intending to actually do any work. He did and he even lied to the officials that would pop round and ask how i was doing. I was in a band. I didn't need a job.

I found myself spending more and more time in the studio though. Whenever I was in town I would pop in. I learn't photoshop before I learned how to take a photo. I had access to a dark room and learned to develop and print before I knew how to use a camera.

Me_reddings

I walked into the local newspaper and said I was a photographer. Graham had a way of installing confidence in people. I still hadn't really taken any photos I was happy with. Still someone had phoned while I was in the newspaper offices and said the photographer had just broken both of her arms and I got a job.

That night I remember the both of us reading the manual of the newspapers weighty digital SLR. One of the first. We marvelled at the technology. And I knew I was hooked.

Still not wanting me to learn the wrong way Graham gave me an old 1950's manual rangefinder telling me It would do till I could afford a Leica. He was only half Joking.

One day he handed me a massive set of keys to his studio with a heavy keyring bearing my initials in brass. I was gobsmacked. Moved. He said anytime in the evening or on Sundays his studio was mine.

It was one of the single most enabling things anyone has done for me. The trust, the faith, the generosity just made me want to be as good as I possibly could be. This was my office in town. A place to shoot photos should I want to but mainly to surround myself in the tech, the history and the art.

A few months later I was taking photos for the dailies, a few more after that I bought a Leica M6. I proudly showed Graham the first frame off my first film.

Tunnelvision

He said "You've got it." He didn't mean photography. He said I'd never stop learning and he was right. He meant I had captured the 'Decisive Moment' and he handed me a book by Henri Cartier Bresson.

Over the next few years we shared books magazines camera purchases and his studio. We rarely worked together as we shot different things but we spent many hours chatting, browsing Ebay for tech and putting the world to rights.

When I went freelance It was because Graham said he would do all he could to help. All the PR requests that came through to the studio he would pass on to me. When he went on holiday with the family I would watch the shop.

He loved his family so much. He loved everybody and everybody loved him. Genuinely funny, truly wise. He would give his last penny if he thought you needed it.

Never has the death of a friend affected me so much. When I look around, when I look at me, my life and family. Much of it is because of the start he gave me. The confidence and advice in work and life.

I did thank him once. We had a manly mutual back slap after I had got back from Iraq. He was proud and that made me so happy.

His death came quick and sudden yesterday. He died in his chair. He wasn't old. He never will be.

He was my friend.

I'm @Documentally on Twitter
Filed under  //   death   dying   friendship   graham wiseman   learning   mentor   photographer   photography   rugby town   work