I’ll be posting pictures without commentary while my mental batteries take a break and hopefully recharge. Please feel free to use your imagination to fill in the blanks. 🙂
I’ll be posting pictures without commentary while my mental batteries take a break and hopefully recharge. Please feel free to use your imagination to fill in the blanks. 🙂
I’ve been finding it a bit of a struggle to come up with things to write on the blog recently, resorting more frequently to posting images only with no contextual dialogue. As I’ve now been posting for over 2,000 consecutive days, I’m loathe to break that streak (although what it would matter if I did, I do not know. The sky would hardly come crashing down…), but something will have to give, at least for a while.
So I’ve given myself permission to post nothing apart from images for a while, so I can hopefully recharge my batteries a little. I might still have things to say here and there, and this method of posting might actually free myself to write a few more longer posts without the daily pressure, but we’ll see. For now though, I will have a week or two of image-only posts. I’m hardly short of pictures to share – I’ve not even started on the shots I made during a trip to Dubrovnik at the end of May, from which I came back with almost five rolls of 35mm film, and I’ve shot several other rolls since then too (three rolls have been posted off for development today even)!
I will hopefully be back posting my usual nonsense after this summer break. Speak to you then!
Here’s a lone tree to keep you company in the meantime…
The scene in the photograph today is the rear of a building known as The Boathouse. Although it’s not apparent in the picture, it’s on the other side of the Sheffield and Tinsley Canal from where I stood to make it, the water just out of frame at the bottom.
Also not visible in the picture is a sign saying madebymartyn.co.uk. Visiting this website reveals more about the place, and more importantly, the good work that is done. It serves, I suppose, a couple of main purposes.
The first, is the production of items for sale, mostly from recycled materials. I think up-cycling is another terms that perhaps fits, as products, including jewellery, furniture, signs, lighting, and Bluetooth speakers, are produced from all manner of donated items.
The second, and I would suggest primary, purpose is to provide support to people living with terminal illness and the associated conditions, such as mental health difficulties. The sale of the items manufactured serve to fund this activity in a self-sustaining manner.
I’ve walked past this location on a number of times, albeit with the barrier of the canal between, and photographed it on more than one occasion, but it was only when I chose today’s picture that I thought I’d do some research into what was behind all the objects on the far bank and discovered the good work being done.
If you click the link included above, you can find out more and see the items available to buy.
As a photographer, it pays to be observant and to see a picture where others may overlook it. I think it’s also important to understand what the subject may represent beyond it simply being an interesting photo, and it’s something I need to do more.
This tray of dismembered doll body parts was in a shop in Bakewell. It was begging for a picture to be made (although, thankfully, not literally!).
I had to squat right down to get the shot and this resulted me rocking slightly on the balls of my feet and missing focus a little. I don’t think the soft focus hurts the picture though and maybe even adds a touch of surreality.