Just got back and am very sadly back to work. Following a 3 year break from the Whitby Goth festival I went with Marina and stayed with friends and had great fun.

Whitby is a famous place historically. It features prominently in Bram Stokers Dracula, saw a synod in 664 AD and is the place where Captain Cook’s ship the Bark Endeavour was launched. Picturesque with an awesome ruined abbey it makes a great place for a subculture riven with vanity.

Below are some photos… If you happen to be anyone in them and are not happy, email me and I will remove them.

I could blather on about fashion trends for ever and it is always fun looking at the latest styles and comparing them to the past. A few years ago at Whitby, the whole Cybergoth thing kicked off and loads of people sported plastic dreads and an endless array of over the top goggles which provided less protection that a £2 pair of glasses from a petrol station but looked like something the Terminator would be intimidated by. Now Cyber has settled down to become part of the general background goth radiation. In its place has sprung the Steampunk. Steampunk is a parody on the word cyberpunk and most importantly, both were pioneered by William Gibson and Bruce Sterling (I’m certain others are in there too but i’m just not esoteric enough to know, so sorry). Think of a Victorian world which developed Babbage’s Analytical Difference Engine and brought about information processing a century (thereabouts) early. However everything is mechanical with cogs, gears and punched cards in place of transistors and silicon. Steampunk embraces this style and is basically Victorian with extra brass nobs. The Anime film Steamboy offers a nice insight into this type of world for those wanting an easy explanation.

lens_smith

Whitby 2009 saw Steampunk as the next cybergoth fad. Huge groups of people all had the same goggles covered in brass cogs, remontoires and fiddly bits. They looked great and someone is making a fortune. Once again though, it is fun to stare at the victims of the trend (even though I quite fancied a pair myself).

A good friend of mine enjoys film making in a deliberately B movie fashion. Frequently using only a handheld basic digital camera and IMovie with all pretensions thrown down the loo. He makes some very funny material which has that tongue in cheek humour which make films like Evil Dead so great and paradoxically so satisfying (just much much shorter).

A few Saturdays ago we wandered off to an old WW2 airfield here:-

RAF Broadwell

Carterton ROC Post

And spent the morning doing a 5 minute short film about me being murdered for not paying two assailants an owed debt of £1.50p. Throughout I wore a burlap sack over my head and was screamed at and hit with crow bar. We had great fun! Especially when cars drove past and concerned faces peered from windows.

A YouTube link will appear in due course but whilst we were getting ready I took some deliberately high ISO shots of Mark, Darren and Alex wandering off up the old airfield surface. I was indulging my love for the post apocalyptic feel here ~ Welcome to the time of the after ~ . I will be working on more deliberate high ISO’s in due course which I adore. For now, it was good to take a photo which is technically lazy and requiring no skill whatsoever yet which said everything I could possibly want.

A few days after I brought my D80 a band named the Last Dance played at my freinds club night in Oxford. Despite knowing nothing whatsoever, he asked if would take some photos.

As stated in the heading I had a nice camera with a good all rounder lens (an 18 – 135 Telephoto for DX sensors).

That was however all I had and all I really knew about was how to turn it on and press the release button. Still, with visions of artistically grainy shots of dingy locations that somehow captured the snooty goth cheese and most cool alternative aesthetic which I was so keen to get my hands on I set off …

The results were not really good and I felt a total fraud, especially as my friend had said I was the ‘official photographer’. This was not aided by the many non official photographers also there with better kit, flashes, much more experience and noses to stare down. That was several months ago now and I am only just getting files processed and working through the back log.

I found a few shots which I don’t mind to much.

This guy (Glen E. Friedman) is the standard to judge against in live band photography of the dark and grainy variety.

and Another new Blog thing …

Content management systems really are the most unfriendly things going. Anything which takes you away from its purpose and demands more time spent trying to figure out the underlying mechanisms is an example of something bad. Now for geeks I am sure the argument is completely different. However for a person with interests in other areas it is just bad. I tried three heavy weight CMS’s (Content Management Systems) ~ Drupal, Joomla and PHPWebsite and light weight one called FrogCMS. Each proved a complete nightmare. So i’m going to try WordPress – I know it is a blog and not a CMS. However I am the only user and so far it is far more intuitive to use.

As usual I have no idea what to put here. My site is principally geared towards photographs, aspects of design and Urban exploration. I am linking to my Flickr account where I list all my urban photos (mainly bunkers at the moment) and my DeviantArt account which has more arty farty stuff.

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