Testing: Tree, East Greenwich Pleasaunce

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Trying out my new Fuji X-E1.

Being currently without any sort of proper computer, I’ve not managed to either update the firmware, or have a look at a RAW file, but here are some initial impressions anyway:
1. It’s very nicely made
2. The straight-out-of-the-camera Jpegs seem very good: goo contrast, white balance, and so on.
3. The lens seems very good indeed: no barrel distortion to be seen, nice colours, fast, and capable of pretty extreme shallow focus (though that’s not a style I’m usually interested in)
4. The auto-focus is slooooow. Hopefully the firmware update should improve this, when I get a chance.
5. The lens cap is really, really cheap, and a bit shoddy. Needs replacing before it falls off and gets lost.

Looking forward to getting further into it.

From The Archive Friday: Tubby Isaac’s

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Tubby Isaac’s, originally uploaded by neilclasper.

Closing today, according to Spitalfields Life. For the last ten plus years I’ve walked past Tubby Isaac’s jellied eel stall at lunchtimes, on my to and from work, and been able to see it from the windows of my office for much of that time too. I’ll miss it; that faded, squat icon of the East End and the Aldgate gyratory system.
What I’ve not done much of during those ten plus years, though, is buy jellied eels, so I feel I can’t grumble too much at its passing.

Whitechapel: abandoned mattress, Barratt Homes tower block

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Away from the much-discussed, filmed and photographed high-rise developments in the City and south bank – the Shards, Cheese graters, Walkie-Talkies, etc – a whole host of even-less inspired towers are rising on the eastern periphery. This Barratt Homes effort in Whitechapel looks particularly dismal, with its clumpy form and cheap-as-chips cladding.

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Photobook: ‘Working Men: Club and Coal’ by Homer Sykes

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Just arrived in the post from Cafe Royal Books, Working Men: Club and Coal is a simply-presented A5 booklet featuring the work of Homer Sykes. It’s nicely printed, and cheap – £5! – but doesn’t have any text to explain when and where the series was shot. This seems a bit of a shame, though doing some research on the web to work it out has led me towards some interesting photography that I’d no seen before. Maybe it’s not a bad thing to be made to do some of the work yourself.

The images themselves are excellent: black & white, unposed shots from collieries and workingmen’s clubs, depicting a part of British that’s a part of many people’s past, or maybe part of an inherited memory, but now looks like ancient history.

Freedom Press, Whitechapel

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In something of a flashback to the 1930s, the anarchist bookshop tucked away off Whitechapel High Street was firebombed a little while ago. Viewed from the (quite decent) cafe in the Whitechapel Gallery earlier this week, it doesn’t look like it’s reopened yet.

 

(PS, if you’re in the vicinity, the Karl Blossfeldt exhibition at the Whitechapel Gallery is excellent: the intersection of nature photography, surrealism, and architecture. Or, some nice close-ups of plants).