Grays.Life

What I've Been Learning Along the Way

  • Advertising
  • Baking
  • Books
  • Health
  • Inspiration
  • Photography
  • About
You are here: Home / Archives for BW

Tiger Bay, Cardiff

December 6, 2020 By James G. 1 Comment

Hasselblad 501c | 80mm Zeiss Lens | Ilford Delta ISO 100 | Exposure f22 @ 60 Seconds | © James Gray

In the 1900s Welsh coal was known throughout the world, it was considered the best of the best. Ships from all over the world would come to Cardiff to fill their holds with the stuff. Roll forward a hundred years, more or less, and things have moved on. The area is in ruins, and the coal is gone, and the ships retired. All that is left is the murky mud flats visible twice a day at low tide, and the old wooden remains of what used to be the quays that the ships loaded up alongside.

To regenerate the area in the 1990s, the UK Government pumped money to transform from the industrial past into a vibrant future based on shopping, tourism, restaurants and bars. One part of this major plan that has seen Cardiff rise in the ranks to become one of the top cities to live and work in the UK was the building of a barrage across the mouth of the River Taff to form Cardiff Bay.

At the same time, I was doing a City & Guilds photography course on Black and White Landscape.
I wanted to take pictures before the flooding of the mudflats for posterity. I wanted to contrast the old with the new. A new hotel by the Rocco Forte Hotel group was in the process of building Cardiff’s first 5-star hotel, and the mudflats were in the foreground, making a great composition. I took the photograph of the Norwegian Church at the same time, and a few others that I’ve still yet to scan and upload…but I will, in time.

I took this with a Hasselblad camera mounted on a tripod for a long exposure of around one minute at f16/f22. I wanted to set the aperture right down to get as many star lights as possible, and luckily the lights on the hotel construction provided just that.

The clouds provide just the right amount of movement, and there’s plenty of drama in the foreground, and the two cranes were in perfect position.

It was always one of my favourite pictures and looking back on it; it still is..!

Norwegian Church, Cardiff Bay

November 15, 2020 By James G. 2 Comments

Hasselblad 501c | 80mm Zeiss Lens | Ilford Delta ISO 100 | Exposure f22 @ 60 Seconds | © James Gray

Taken in 1997/8 a few years after the Norwegian church had been moved in order to save it from almost certain destruction. Shut in the 1970s, the church was in a poor state of repair, but efforts by Roald Dahl, who was born in Cardiff and baptised in this church, helped to ultimately save it. It was put in a prominent position overlooking the planned Cardiff Bay development that was taking place around the same time.

Several cities across the UK were getting the same redevelopment treatment, including London Docklands. Cardiff was no different. The Cardiff Bay Area had suffered industrial decline for a number of years and the area was almost completely derelict. The boost that followed was very welcomed indeed. It has since transformed Cardiff and put us on the map, again.

The Norwegian church was built to serve the large number of sailors that came through the port of Cardiff in the port’s heyday. Scandinavian sailors were one of the largest groups that came through. At one point, Cardiff was the largest port in the world.

That’s the history of the church, but for me, it was a good looking building, since it had just been painted, there were three new trees in the front and I managed to catch some starlights from the lamposts at the side. I put my camera onto a tripod so I could take a long exposure, and from memory this would have been about 30 seconds to 1 minute. To brighten up the front area, I ran around firing a flash several times. This was originally taken on Ilford Delta 100 film, and I remember with great pleasure developing this image in a darkroom and printing enlargements.

The area around it has changed slightly and it has been extended. I like to think that I captured it at its best.

Sony A7R | FE 28mm f2 Lens | ISO 100 | Exposure f2.0 @ 1/640 | © James Gray
Norwegian Church in the Background
Sony A7R | FE 28mm f2 Lens | ISO 100 | Exposure f11 @ 1/125 | © James Gray
Norwegian Church 20 Years On | How the Trees Have Grown…
Sony A7R | FE 28mm f2 Lens | ISO 100 | Exposure f16 @ 1/125 | © James Gray
Norwegian Flag Flying Proudly | Cardiff Bay

Street Photography in Palma

November 2, 2020 By James G. Leave a Comment

Fuji X-E1 | XF35mm f1.4 | Exposure f2.8 @ 1/150 second | © James Gray

In the quiet backstreets of Palma on the island of Majorca in the Mediterranean, lie plenty of opportunities for street photographers. While on holiday a few years back, I came across a pensioner out walking her dog in the heat of the midday sun. Fortunately though, there are plenty of shadowed streets that offer some protection, including this one. This street was just off the old cathedral square and probably dates back to medieval times, and is full of streets that go this way and that. Most of the windows were shuttered in the Spanish style, and some had window boxes filled with plants and colourful flowers.

Since picking up a camera in my teens, the subject I photographed most was landscape, but I think street photography was probably a distant second. There’s something about photographing in the city. For a start, the city is always changing, buildings get built or knocked down and made way for something new.

Henri Cartier-Bresson, Robert Capa and Lee Friedlander are photographers I studied when I did a City and Guild course many years ago. You always come across their photographs in magazines and books because they are original, timeless and their styles have been copied endlessly. But, they still help inspire me to pick up the camera and have a go.

Link to contact sheets: https://www.theguardian.com/artanddesign/2015/sep/02/contact-sheets-magnum-photography-magic-chaos

Cruzcampo

May 2, 2020 By James G.

Fuji X-E1 | XF35mm f1.4 Lens | ISO 200 | Exposure f1.4 @ 1/105 | © James Gray

A favourite image, probably because it was taken in a bar in the heat of the day and the cool beer looked more inviting than ever…Taken in a bar in the small town of Sóller on the west coast of Mallorca.

Café Milano

April 25, 2020 By James G.

Fuji X-Pro1 | XF18mm f2R Lens | Exposure f8 @ 2 seconds | ISO 200 | © James Gray

The main square in Aveiro, the Venice of Portugal, is where Café Milano is, a great ice cream parlour that had ices with flavours that are out of this world! Taken on holiday, while the kids were eating ice creams.

« Previous Page

Recent Posts

  • An Italian Side Street
  • It’s a Hill. Get Over It.
  • Reflections
  • Light Trails Through Cardiff Bay
  • Morrisons Petrol Station, Cardiff Bay

Tags

black and white bread Bronica SQA BW captureOne cardiff bay cold water cycling Ed Ruscha fitness football Fuji X-E1 Fuji X-Pro1 Great Ads gymaholic Hasselblad 501c Lamborghini landscape light trails long exposure motivation nike people Petrol Stations puddings running Sony A7R sourdough sport street tools travel

About Me

Marketer. Born, bred in Cardiff. Worked abroad long enough to develop serious taste for Danish pastries/proper bread. Married w/2 kids & dog. Loves F1, photo, outdoors.

Archives

  • February 2021
  • January 2021
  • December 2020
  • November 2020
  • October 2020
  • May 2020
  • April 2020
  • January 2020
  • Pinterest
  • YouTube

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Copyright © 2021 · James Gray