I’m not quite sure he’s the most attentive pupil, but he’s doing his best….
Leica M9; Summicron 35; VSCO

emulsion on silver gelatin
I’m not quite sure he’s the most attentive pupil, but he’s doing his best….
Leica M9; Summicron 35; VSCO
This is mainly Porto
Leica M9; M9M; Summilux 50; Summicron 35; VSCO
Back to Jenny Brown’s point to visit Muffer……
A week in Austria – lovely place!
Leica M9; Summilux 50; Summicron 35; VSCO
….with all my love!
Dream Team! Two lads one board…..
Fujifilm X-T1
Fujinon 56mm f1.2
Lightroom & VSCO
This is Andree, football coach extraordinaire!
Merry Christmas Everybody!!
I know, I don’t post anything for months and then two in the space of two days…. well it is nearly Christmas!
….or gotcha. I’m sure you’ve noticed by now that I don’t really like to post pictures of my family on t’internet. But I thought I’d make an exception here.
Canon 5D Lensbaby Composer Pro with Edge 80 Aperture and NIKI had the pleasure of accompanying my son and his team to their first major football (that’s soccer for all of you across the pond) tournament this last weekend. We travelled across Germany to a place called Ibbenbüren where this annual event takes place. As you can see most mothers stayed at home!
Fujifilm X 100 Aperture and NIK
Took a stroll with the “Big Man” on the hunt for photo opportunities. Me with my Bronica and him with his Canon EOS 1000fn which we got from a flea market for just a few Euros.
I spent a while at the beginning of the year thinking of a new subject for another 53 weeks of blogging and came to the conclusion that I was perhaps better off leaving it open to give me a little more freedom. Well to be honest, I think I need a subject even if it’s only loosely defined and I also need the pressure of having to take a photo on a weekly basis. So starting next week this blog will once again have a subject and a time frame.
Zenza Bronica ETRS Zenzanon f1:2.8 75mm Fuji PRO 400H Epson Perfection V500I saw these two while I was with my little people at the fairground and couldn’t resist the shot …….
I thought I’d continue the Soviet theme for another week. This is more or less all that remains of the former Red Army base, which after being cleared of all munitions is now a public park.
This blog writing thing seems to be contagious. Last year the whole family took great pleasure in finding obscure benches (or banks) and this years subject is proving to be a similar challenge.
So this week’s entry is dedicated to the “big man” for his excellent suggestion.
Happy Easter!
Christmas day and all the various ceremonies have been completed, time for a wander with the family ….
f/1.4 1/125 ISO 400 @ 30mm
Some of you might have guessed that the project has not died, moreover everybody is entitled to a bit of a holiday sometime.
After driving back through Germany and the Netherlands this was the view that greeted us on the Stena ferry taking us home.
There will be more to come over the next few days to catch up.
f/16 1/60 ISO 400 @17mm
I think you may have to get used to a number of these banks being within the boundaries of the city of Potsdam, as well as being taken at the last possible moment during the week.
The more observant of you will have noticed that this was taken on a Sunday, hence it was taken on the first day of the new week. This is correct, unless you live in Germany, where the first day of the week is a Monday. Although I always mutter that this custom is incorrect and probably goes against some international (most probably European Union) law, it certainly worked to my advantage this week.
To those readers used to my rants on this subject and the mixing up of commas and full stops in the German numerical system I have this to say:
“Was interessiert mich mein Geschwätz von gestern.” Konrad Adenauer (First German Chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany)
This roughly translates as:
“Who cares what twaddle I have spoken in the past” A rather novel admittance for a politician I think.
That does not go to say that I will in future condone either of the above errors.
The image was taken on my Sunday “Bread-Roll-Run” with the kids, whilst their mother idled, well deserved I might add, in her warm and cosy bed.
We’ve had mild weather with rain over the past few days, which has brought the remnants of the New Year’s celebrations to the surface as well as preserving patches of dirty snow.
A picture fitting for the time of year I think.
“It takes a lot of imagination to be a good photographer. You need less imagination to be a painter, because you can invent things. But in photography everything is so ordinary; it takes a lot of looking before you learn to see the extraordinary.” – David Bailey – In “Face,” (London), Dec 1984.
It is with this in mind that we set off on our 53 week photographic journey. There are few things more ordinary than a bank, so in the hope that not all the images presented are just ordinary, let’s get started.
It was one of the those wonderful Winter afternoons that you get when the easterly winds blow across the North German plains making the air dry, crisp and very cold. We were out with the kids to see how the wild bison, horses and reindeer fared in the conditions. As the winter sun started to set I came across this makeshift bench.
It was my first bank of the year.