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NeilClasper

Tag Archives: photography

That was (a slice of) 2015

23 Wednesday Dec 2015

Posted by Neil Clasper in Antidotes

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2015, Greenwich, photography, review, swimming


Back in the north east for Christmas – as good a time as any to look back over the year and try to remember what I did in 2015.

Lot of gigs with my band; though as ever there were runs of too many then too few gigs. Highlights of the gigging year:

  • A freezing cold New Year’s Day afternoon in Greenwich Market where it seemed half of Greenwich had braved the weather to come out to watch us.
  • The Brooklyn Bowl (in the O2 Arena!).
  • Playing at The White Swan in Charlton village not longer after it re-opened and having Glenn Tilbrook of Squeeze join us for the second set. Amazing how everyone steps up when you have actual professional musicians in the band.

After an early-in-the year wobble about my proficiency as a lead guitarist I got to a point where I feel I’m at least good enough for the level I’m playing, and that realisation seems to have led to an improvement in my playing through the year. I’m never going to be Roy Lanham, but good enough is good enough.

Photography: I didn’t take as many photos as I usually do, and I feel a bit as though my photographic chops have suffered as a result. Next year I promise myself I’ll get out and take more. I am very happy with the Fuji X100t I bought earlier in the year; 2016 could well see me sell off my Nikon gear in favour of another Fuji body to go with the lenses originally bought for my X-E1. However hard I try I’m never as happy with the files from the D7100 as from the Fuji cameras. Mostly, though, I need to make the time to make photographs.

I bought more records than was probably financial sensible and played them on my new secondhand Technics turntable, to great satisfaction. Should have bought it ages ago.

Work was up and down, in the way that work often is. Completed a year of working in Canary Wharf: so far the convenience of getting between desk and home in half an hour is outweighing the many downsides of working in a bland, privatised compound. It doesn’t pay to think too hard about how convenience trumps all sorts of things we otherwise would say we value.

After a trip to Cornwall over the summer we managed a foreign holiday for the first time in years (and my daughter’s first ever trip abroad), which worked very well; lovely to get some October warmth before the British winter kicked in.

I didn’t manage to do a great deal for our local community website, The Charlton Champion, but I did manage to persuade one of our local councillors to write a piece, which – in a borough where the council leadership tightly controls its news coverage by publishing a weekly newspaper – felt like a useful achievement. Hopefully that’s a vaguely positive sign for next year. Also, a piece on late opening at Charlton Lido was shared on Facebook 200+ times: a personal record by a factor of many.

On swimming, I managed to go to Charlton lido pretty much weekly, sometimes more, enjoying year round opening. A vow to swim at least 1km every visit went by the wayside when I realised there wasn’t quite time to do that many lengths while my daughter had her swimming lesson, but who cares? I extended it to a mile a few times, and now know I can do that easily with enough, which felt like a decent achievement for someone who’s gone through most of his life to date without bothering much with exercise. Better still was the pleasure of watching my daughter learn to swim and enjoying the lido.

There was much besides, of course; some good, some not so good, and though it’s still a sad and beautiful world, I’m looking forward to 2016. Thanks for reading.

March Antidotes

31 Tuesday Mar 2015

Posted by Neil Clasper in Antidotes, Music, Photography, Reading

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Fuji X-E1, Fuji X100T, photography

End-of-winter distractions…

A new camera
Looking back through my photos from the last 2 or 3 years recently.  I was struck by two things: a complete lack of consistency in style as I tried out iPhone apps and b&w conversion techniques, and that the images from my Fuji X-E1 stood out as being far superior to any others I’ve taken in recent years. The problem with the X-E1 is that it’s a bit too big to put in a coat pocket (particularly with the 35mm f1.4 on – the best of the two lenses I have), and the auto-focus is a bit too slow to catch my daughter in action – plus, of course, the iPhone is just too convenient (though it makes decent images in the right conditions). So I bought a Fuji X100T and, so far, I’m very pleased: the images have that Fuji X series feel, I like the 23mm lens, and it’s more pocketable than the X-E1. It’s prompted a splurge of photo-making, mostly Down By The River, and made me think more about the consistency of my black and white processing. Now I just need to remember to put it in my coat pocket, and resist the convenience of the iPhone.

One thing I’ve noticed over the last couple of years is that the better the cameras get, the less I need – or feel inclined – to make significant adjustments to the files during post-processing; I’m no longer using film simulations, and the sliders don’t move so far from the middle. Maybe I should write something about how I do it sometime; at the very least it might help me remember in the future.

Music and books, etc
– Surface Tension continues to draw me in and reveal new sounds and textures.
– The Handsome Family at St Giles’ Church were amusing, dark and good company.
– I’ve loved Magnus Mills’ work since The Restraint Of Beasts, and I enjoyed A Cruel Bird Came to the Nest and Looked In very much, even if I wouldn’t (quite) put it in a Magnus Mill Top 3.

 

The Royal Iris, Woolwich

17 Monday Nov 2014

Posted by Neil Clasper in London, Photography

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

black and white, Mersey Ferry, monochrome, photography, Royal Iris, Thames

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The former Mersey Ferry MV Royal Iris, moored on the Thames next to Second Floor Studios & Arts on the Woolwich/Charlton borders. There’s a group hoping to ‘Save the Royal Iris‘ and return her to the Mersey; I wish them luck, but it’s difficult to be optimistic looking at her current state.

A Walk Over Blackheath

05 Friday Jul 2013

Posted by Neil Clasper in London, Photography

≈ 3 Comments

Tags

Blackheath, Fuji X-E1, kites, london, photography, Psychogeography, trees, wildflowers

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I’m often ambivalent about the charms of Blackheath; a place desperately convincing itself that it really is an idyllic rural village set by the city, but often as traffic-jammed, noisy, and estate agent-plagued as any other part of London. Last night, though, I walked over the heath from the village back to Charlton, taking a detour to watch the kite-boarders and have a look at the wildflowers along the bunds of Prince Charles Road; it was warm, the sunset brewing up to spectacular, just about possible to ignore the traffic along  the A2, and – on foot – take in the variety of plant life barely-perceptible from the bus.

Maybe I’ll put my campaign to have the whole heath re-forested on hold a little bit longer.

Photos all shot on the Fuji X-E1 and processed in the far-from satisfactory Windows Picture Manager. Home insurance payout can’t come soon enough.

On requiring a whole new camera system

18 Saturday May 2013

Posted by Neil Clasper in Photography

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burglary, Camera system, fuji, Nikon, photography

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We were burgled this week. Luckily we didn’t lose too much, and nothing of significant sentimental value was stolen. What did go, though, was my whole Nikon camera system: D80 body, Speedlight flash, and 4 very decent lenses.

So, assuming the insurance coughs up a respectable amount, I’ll be needing to buy a new camera system, and I really don’t know what to go for. If the body had gone on its own, I’d have simply bought the latest equivalent from the Nikon range (whatever that is – I’ve really not kept up with new camera developments in the 7 years since I bought mine). As it is, it’s the lenses I’m feeling the loss of most keenly; assembled over a few years of buying and selling, they were a useful mixture, and all good quality.

I could, I suppose, just go out and replace them like-for-like (assuming the insurance…etc, etc), but I’m also wondering, given that the SLR’s not been used as much in the last couple of years (not enough hands free, too much other stuff to carry, etc, while out with 2 year old daughter), if that’s a wise move. I should at least try to understand Micro Four-Thirds, APS-C, Sony NEX, etc…

In the background of my thoughts is that I have a Sony RX100 which, while it does the job of fitting in my coat pocket, and being undoubtedly better than any other compact I’ve tried, just doesn’t produce the kind of images I’m used to from the SLR. The sensor is a very decent size; it’s pretty fast when wide open; there’s very little shutter lag, and so on… but, the lens just isn’t that good; too much work required in post-processing to bring the colours to life, and far too much barrel distortion.

The question is: is anything other than a new SLR going to give me the image quality I’m used to? Is the Fuji X system as good as the reviews suggest? Doubt I can afford the X Pro 1, but the X-E1 might be possible, maybe with the 35mm f1.4 lens (though people say positive things about the kit zoom too). Or will this leave me with the worst of both worlds: too big for a jacket pocket, not-quite-good-enough image quality?

Secondly, if I do go for another DSLR, is a second hand body from further up the range (D300?) better than a brand new low-to-mid range version (ie the latest equivalent of my D80)?

All help, advice, suggestions, etc, grateful received.

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All gone…

Seen in Deal

17 Friday May 2013

Posted by Neil Clasper in Photography

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Tags

Deal, England, Kent, photography, seaside

A few days in Deal, Kent.

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The concrete pier.

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A look back from the pier.

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Vintage East Kent bus on the seafront.

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A windy afternoon on the beach.

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This sinister character’s been following me round Kent. First spotted on Whitstable Harbour in April.

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Some classic two colour print and illustration work from HMSO, circa 1962.

Aldgate, awaiting Spring

12 Tuesday Feb 2013

Posted by Neil Clasper in London, Photography

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E1, East End, iPhone, london, Middlesex Street, Petticoat Lane, photography, textiles

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A day when even the African textile shops struggled to cheer the place up.

More photography from Aldgate and around here.

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Bow & arrow and portable urinals, off Brick Lane

23 Wednesday Jan 2013

Tags

East London, london, photography, Truman's Yard

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Posted by Neil Clasper | Filed under London, Photography

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Pilgrim’s Progress, Aldgate

22 Tuesday Jan 2013

Posted by Neil Clasper in London, Photography

≈ 2 Comments

Tags

Aldgate, london, London Festival of Architecture, photography, Pilgrim's Progess



Pligrim’s Progress, Aldgate, originally uploaded by neilclasper.

This appeared in Aldgate shortly before the Olympics, but it’s proved remarkably difficult to photograph satisfactorily; too much stuff in the way: pedestrians, cars, buses, lorries, roadworks, temporary traffic lights, street furniture, and so on. Yesterday the streets were quiet and the sun emerged for a short while just as I left work.

More photography from Aldgate and around here.

Towards the light…

19 Saturday Jan 2013

Posted by Neil Clasper in London, Photography

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Aldgate, london, photography, square format, subway, underpass

…of the Aldgate roundabout.

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This corner of London has been much improved for pedestrians in recent years; railings removed, pedestrian crossings installed, and generally made less complex to navigate by the fact that you can go in most directions at ground level. But not quite every direction.

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