Film photography · Medium Format · Photography

Around the docks at Hull

There’s a public footpath that winds it’s way through some of the western docks at Hull. in parts elevated to run along the top of one of the warehouse buildings, and the following pictures were all taken from that path. A mix of FP4+ and Tri-X as I switched rolls part way through.

A crane waiting to crane
Sand
Cargo
Warehouses and distant Humber Bridge
Further
Rickety
Skylights
More cargo
Up

Nikon F80 & Tamron 28-300mm F/3.5-6.3 Di VC PZD on Ilford FP4+ / Kodak Tri-X. Ilfotec DD-X 1+4 @ 20° 10mins / 9mins.

Taken on 9 August 2025

Film photography · Medium Format · Photography

Spurn Lightship revisited

It isn’t the first time I’ve posted pictures of the Spurn lightship on the blog – there are a couple more that I posted back in 2019 here and here.

The vessel has been moved to a new mooring now (one that makes it a little more difficult to photograph) so here are two new shots. I have a colour picture to come too at some point.

Spurn Lightship
Spurn Lightship-2

Nikon F80 & Tamron 28-300mm F/3.5-6.3 Di VC PZD on Ilford FP4+. Ilfotec DD-X 1+4 @ 20° 10mins

Taken on 9 August 2025

Film photography · Medium Format · Photography

The Deep

The Deep is an aquarium and marine research centre in Hull (or Kingston Upon Hull to give it its full title). I’ve been to Hull on a number of occasions and photographed The Deep (whose distinctive architecture was designed by Sir Terence Farrell, who died aged 87 just a couple of weeks ago), but never actually been inside. Perhaps on a future visit…

The Deep
The Deep and the docks

Nikon F80 & Tamron 28-300mm F/3.5-6.3 Di VC PZD on Ilford FP4+. Ilfotec DD-X 1+4 @ 20° 10mins

Taken on 9 August 2025

Film photography · Medium Format · Photography

Murdoch’s Connection

Murdoch’s Connection is the name given to this new bridge connecting Hull town centre with the marina area (which are separated by the busy A63 dual-carriageway). It was named after Dr Mary Murdoch, who was the city’s first female GP. Her name was chosen by school students following an essay competition to determine which of the city’s iconic figures should be honoured.

Dr Murdoch was first associated with hull when she worked as a surgeon at the Victoria Hospital for Sick Children, before later founding the Hull Women’s Suffrage Society. She died at the young age of 51 in March 1916.

Murdoch's Connection
Tracy Island

Nikon F80 & Tamron 28-300mm F/3.5-6.3 Di VC PZD on Ilford FP4+. Ilfotec DD-X 1+4 @ 20° 10mins

Taken on 9 August 2025

Film photography · Medium Format · Photography

Dereliction and disrepair

There’s something distinctive about the architecture in British seaside towns, particularly those that came to prominence in the Victorian and Edwardian periods – rows of grand villas abound.

As the traditional British seaside holiday declined (mostly due to the availability of low cost trips to continental Europe – where guaranteed hot sunny weather replaced the risk of a week in the rain, potentially trapped in a caravan, or a hostile Bed & Breakfast), so a lot of the beautiful and traditional buildings have similarly fallen into disrepair. Without the tourism, the money to run and maintain such places was lost. The building in the centre rear of today’s picture has become home to both pigeons and gulls, but with no sign of human occupancy (or window glass, for that matter). It’s a shame that these places are not in use, but I don’t think a lot of UK resorts currently attract the people who could afford to renovate such properties back to glory. Perhaps in time they will.

It’s odd to think that, if you could uproot these buildings to somewhere in central London, they would probably be worth millions.

Man's best friend

Olympus OM-10 & G.Zuiko 35mm f/2.8 on Ilford FP4+. Ilfotec DD-X 1+4 @ 20° 10mins.

Taken on 2 August 2024

Film photography · Medium Format · Photography

An incoming tide

Things seem to be picking up in my job this week. I’ve gone from being in the midst of a quiet patch to having several pieces of work fall at my feet. In part this is due to three members of our team leaving – one of whom I’ve known about for awhile, but the other two have come as a bit of a surprise – and I’ve been asked to pick up work they have been, or are currently involved with. This is a good thing – I’d much rather be busy than pushing papers around my desk (although I’ve mostly been using the quiet period to do training), but I’m a little uncertain as to what is required at this stage. I guess I’ll find out soon enough though.

On the beach

Olympus OM-10 & G.Zuiko 35mm f/2.8 on Ilford FP4+. Ilfotec DD-X 1+4 @ 20° 10mins.

Taken on 2 August 2024

Film photography · Medium Format · Photography

Stirred

When I was younger I was a prolific reader. During my late teens and early twenties I would devour novels, often getting through two or three in a week. I wouldn’t make any claims to being well read as a result of this – my preference was for horror and thrillers, and few of the titles I chose made it onto literary picks (although they did make it to the best seller lists quite often). Over time, with my job, my wife, and my children, as well as other interests competing for my time, I became slower at completing books (although I still read regularly). The internet, and more specifically, the ability to consume it on portable devices was the thing that hit my reading the hardest though. Even with the convenience of a Kindle, the amount of books I read fell through the floor. I was probably reading four books a year at most.

I’ve made efforts to rectify this recently, and my rate has increased a little, although I still need to make greater effort to favour a book over wasting time online. I almost always read in bed before I sleep but, as I’m often tired, it’s not unusual for me to read only a few pages before I nod off, so I really need to fit my reading into a time of the day when I’m more alert. Obviously, it also helps to have a book that is engaging. And that’s what I’ve had the pleasure of this week.

A few months ago, while browsing in Blackwell’s bookshop in Sheffield I spotted a book on the display table near the entrance. It had a yellow cover featuring a black and white photo of a pretty girl in a Smiths t-shirt. It was titled The Stirrings: Coming of Age in Northern Time and written by Catherine Taylor. It also had a wealth of recommendations from various reviewers on the front, but it was that evocative sub-title that caught my attention, I think.

Picking the book up, I read the precis:

This is a story about one young woman coming of age, and about the place and time that shaped her: the North of England in the 1970s and 80s.
About the scorching summer of 1976 – the last Catherine Taylor would spend with both her parents in their home in Sheffield.
About the Yorkshire Ripper, the serial killer whose haunting presence in Catherine’s childhood was matched only by the aching absence of her own father.
About a country thrown into disarray by the nuclear threat and the Miners’ Strike, just as Catherine’s adolescent body was invaded by a debilitating illness.
About 1989’s ‘Second Summer of Love’, a time of sexual awakening for Catherine, and the unforeseen consequences that followed it.
About a tragic accident, and how the insidious dangers facing women would became increasingly apparent as Catherine crossed into to adulthood.

Seeing that the book, a memoir, was not only set (at least in part) in my home city, but that it also closely shared it’s place in time with my own coming of age, I added it to my list of books I’d like to read (in this case, by taking a photo of it on the display – I do this a lot in bookshops so I don’t forget about something interesting).

Not long afterwards, in early September, I spotted the Kindle edition for sale and snapped it up. It then joined a few dozen other books that I’ve added to my Kindle library in a growing “pile of shame” of books that I’ve bough but struggle to find the time to read. I tend to pick books at random from this selection, but after finishing another book, decided to bring this one to the top of the pile. I’m glad I did.

This is the first book in a long time that I’ve finished in the space of less than a week. It’s not a long book, sure, at 223 pages, but from the very first page I was hooked, and as well as actually sitting down to read for hours at a time, I’d also read a few pages whenever I had a spare few minutes. The sense of time and place was palpable and the book is beautifully written, telling the story of Catherine’s journey from childhood to adulthood, through the ups and downs, the adventures and the tragedies (it’s truly heartbreaking in places), all described with a wonderful honesty. Because of the Sheffield connection there are places and things and memories that were part of my youth too, albeit seen through my own particular lens of experience.

I’ve read many books that I’ve enjoyed, but it’s rare that I find one that makes me feel the way this one has. It’s a beautiful work and I now feel sad that not only have I finished it, but also because I have a sense of loss for the times described, a “forever young” nostalgia for a past that can’t be revisited other than in memory. I’m glad it had the power to move me.

As this is ostensibly a photography blog, I guess I should also say that I went out and made some photographs today. This isn’t an unusual thing, although it being midweek perhaps is, but I had a day off work and decided to head out into the Peak District to shoot three sheets of 4×5 large format Kodak Ektar that have been sat in film holders for a long time. As usual, the weather forecast was an outright lie, and the mixture of sunshine and cloud was actually just cloud without sunshine. This robbed me of some glowing autumnal colours but, making the best of what I had, it did make for soft light in the woodland area I visited.

Although I did shoot one sheet of Ektar late last year (still in one of the holders I used today!) I’ve not actually processed any C41 large format film before, so I now have to find a lab that I can send it to. I hope some of the shots are worthwhile as it certainly ain’t going to be cheap – probably the best part of £30 for four sheets! Wish me luck!

Today’s picture is apropos on nothing, really, but I find it evocative and, given what I’ve written about The Stirrings, I felt it was a good fit.

On the beach-3

Olympus OM-10 & G.Zuiko 35mm f/2.8 on Ilford FP4+. Ilfotec DD-X 1+4 @ 20° 10mins.

Taken on 2 August 2024