35mm · Film photography · Photography

Was it worth the walk?

When we visited Blanes during our holiday to Lloret de Mar, we caught a bus to get there. During the journey, as we were leaving the centre of Lloret, I noticed from the bus window a restaurant which was closed up and had a lot of hazard warning tape across the entrance. I’m not sure what had happened to the restaurant for this to be the case, but I made a mental note of it, thinking I might walk there another day and take a photograph.

And I did.

I’m not sure it was worth the walk though. It’s an ok picture for what it is, but I had hoped the hazard tape might have been more prominent. Instead it kinda fades into the background a little and you have to look for it. Still, it was exercise if nothing else.

Hazard tape

Olympus Trip 35 & Kodak Pro Image 100. Lab developed. Home scanned and converted with Negative Lab Pro.

Taken on 5 June 2025

35mm · Film photography · Photography

I finally photographed this derelict farm building

I’ve seen this building on numerous occasions when driving through the area and on this day I finally found myself well placed (and equipped) to photograph it.

It might look like it’s out on the open plains somewhere remote, but is right on the edge of Whitwell and it’s only the gentle curve of the land that allows this illusion of space.

I took a number of pictures of the building (and the tree to the right of frame – which featured in yesterday’s post) using different focal lengths and am happy with all of them. I did have another shot which is zoomed out a little further than the third shot below which I think I liked best of all, but I managed to beat the lens’ vibration compensation and introduce some camera shake. A shame.

One thing I didn’t notice until I processed the scans is that there is a solitary figure sat on the corner of the wall of the structure. You can make them out better if you click on the images and view them larger in Flickr. They were some distance away, so I wonder if they noticed they were being (unknowingly) photographed?

Out on the plains
Derelict
Beneath a cirrus sky

Nikon F80, Tamron 28-300mm F/3.5-6.3 Di VC PZD & Agfa APX 100. Rodinal 1+100 (+2ml) semi-stand 1 hour @ 20°

Taken on 8 March 2025

4x5 Large Format · Film photography · Photography

Same old scene

Another of the four sheets of film I shot with the Chamonix at the weekend. It’s a location that I’ve featured on the blog a number of times, and seemed a reasonable place to fire off a sheet while testing out the camera.

I’d love to get closer to the old building, but it sits in the middle of crops and the footpath just skirts the edge of the field. I could risk it, I suppose, but I’d not feel comfortable trying to explain that in any way that wouldn’t look self-serving in the event I got found out. I’m h ppy the footpath is there though.

That old farm again

Chamonix 045N-1. Fujinon NW 135mm f/5.6 & Ilford HP5+. Ilfotec DD-X 1+9 15 mins 45 secs@ 20°

Taken 3 June 2023.

Film photography · Medium Format · Photography

Abandoned farmhouse

This abandoned farmhouse is an interesting subject to photograph, but you need to pick the right time of day, and I don’t think I did that here. At this time of year the sun is low in the sky and there is a wooded area beside the field where the structure stands (off to the right of the photo). As a result, the building had only limited direct light falling on it. Later in the afternoon when the sun will cast light directly onto the walled side of the building would be better, or even perhaps earlier in the day and photograph it form the other side.

I rarely have the luxury of picking what time I get to photograph such things unfortunately, and even then I’m at the mercy of the weather, so sometimes it’s a case of taking whatever I can get and making the most of it.

Abandoned in a field

Yashicamat 124G with close-up lens #1 & Ilford Delta 400 . Ilfotec DD-X 1+4 8mins @ 20°

Taken on 20 January 2023.

Film photography · Medium Format · Photography

The remains of the Farfield Inn

Another victim in the declining pub trade in the UK, the Farfield Inn stands at the western end of Neepsend Lane at the bottom of Hillfoot Road, not far from the busy route that is Penistone Road. There used to be pigeon lofts on the steep hillside along this stretch but those, like the Farfield Inn, have fallen into dereliction, their skeletal remains vaguely apparent in the brush that has grown to take their place.

“Fancy a nice pint?”
Would once have been said by those
Who visited here

Abandoned hostelries
Abandoned hostelries

Zeiss Mess-Ikonta 524/16 & Ilford HP5+. Ilfotec DD-X 1+4 9mins @ 20°.

Taken on 9 May 2021

35mm · Film photography · Photography

Bennett’s fishing tackle shop

A number of decades ago, back when I was young, I was interested in fishing. As a teenager still at school and blessed with only limited funds, most of the fishing tackle I owned was either passed down from my dad (including a dated, even at the time, cane fishing rod that snapped in half while making a cast one day, much to the amusement of my friends!), or acquired as presents at birthday or Christmas time.

I did have enough money to buy the other necessities of the pastime though: line; floats; lead shot (long since banned!); hooks; perhaps the occasional bigger-ticket item like a keep-net or something; and, of course, bait, usually in the form of a tub of wriggling maggots, often in a variety of dyed shades to make them more attractive to the fish (the ones at all the places I went must have been colour-blind though…).

At the time, years before online shopping and even the World Wide Web itself would be a thing, there were a considerable number of fishing tackle shops in the city. Some were dedicated to the pastime, others were a sideline, such as the barber’s that I visited as a child where you could have your hair cut and then buy a pike lure or something (while pretending not to look at the girlie mags that were amongst the fishing periodicals on a small table between the seats where you sat and waited your turn).

The largest tackle shop in Sheffield (and the country, so it was claimed) was Bennetts. The shop had been opened back in the 1950s by Harry and Peter Bennet, renowned match anglers and railwaymen who used to organise angling tournaments for thousands of local fishermen.

In later years the store moved to larger premises on Stanley Street just off The Wicker on the edge of the city centre, and it was here that I would drool longingly over the extensive range of tackle that I had no possibility of acquiring, before buying a considerably more affordable packet of hooks or a swim-feeder or something along those lines.

As my teens came to pass so, mostly, did my interest in angling, and I probably didn’t set foot in Bennett’s (or any other tackle shop) after that, although my dad continued to fish on occasional trips with his friends that had been organised by the pubs and clubs he frequents, so I would get the odd fishing story every now and then (usually about how he’d caught nothing!),

In 2010 Bennet’s closed for good, partly as a result of the 2008 financial crash and subsequent recession, but also as result of the extensive flooding that hit parts of Sheffield in 2007, submerging the store in feet of water.

The main entrance to the shop on Stanley Street has been repurposed now, but the smaller entrance on The Wicker remains, gradually fading away and falling into disrepair.

I wish I had a photo of the shop in it’s heyday, but I’m still glad for the one presented below. It still serves as a memory and I suspect it won’t be there for ever.

Bennetts

Olympus OM-2n, Zuiko Auto-S 50mm f/1.8 & Fujichrome Velvia 100.

Taken on 2 August 2020

35mm · Film photography · Photography

An abandoned church

This is the entrance to the former Christ Church Central building in Sheffield city centre. The building is no longer used by the church – it appears they’ve moved just across the road to what looks like a bigger location.

I’ve never been in either building but used to work nearby when I was younger and also found it interesting how the church resided in a low-rise building mostly indistinguishable from the other small industrial units that surrounded it.

Now it looks like a group of weeds are awaiting the doors to be opened.

Weeds waiting

Canon Sure Shot Supreme & Agfa APX100. Ilfotec DD-X 1+4 10.5 mins @ 20°.

Taken on 23 July 2020

35mm · Film photography · Photography

Woollen Signs

A couple of photos of the old Woollen Signs building in Sheffield. The company was bought out about twelve years ago and the site was permanently closed, having been in business since 1883. Some employees went on to form a new Woollens business trading on their expertise in traditional sign writing.

Woollen Signs (wider)

Woollen Signs

Canon Sure Shot Telemax & Kodak Colorplus.

Taken on 28 June 2020