Saturday 30 January 2016

Bright clear day (4) - streets and pavements

After endless weeks that were dreary, grey and wet, there was at last a clear, bright, cold winter day, and I had no other pressing engagements. But to take the camera out in such light required some thought - there's no subtlety in such bright sunshine; I needed sharp edges, shadows and contrasts, so I decided to go to Coventry Cathedral ruins and surrounding area.

This is the last of four posts of images from that day.

I was struck by how the twigs and cracks merged into one pattern








Bright clear day (3) - stone in colour

After endless weeks that were dreary, grey and wet, there was at last a clear, bright, cold winter day, and I had no other pressing engagements. But to take the camera out in such light required some thought - there's no subtlety in such bright sunshine; I needed sharp edges, shadows and contrasts, so I decided to go to Coventry Cathedral ruins and surrounding area.

This is the third of four posts of images from that day.






Bright clear day (2) - stone in monochrome

After endless weeks that were dreary, grey and wet, there was at last a clear, bright, cold winter day, and I had no other pressing engagements. But to take the camera out in such light required some thought - there's no subtlety in such bright sunshine; I needed sharp edges, shadows and contrasts, so I decided to go to Coventry Cathedral ruins and surrounding area.

This is the second of four posts of images from that day.






Bright clear day (1) - reflections

After endless weeks that were dreary, grey and wet, there was at last a clear, bright, cold winter day, and I had no other pressing engagements. But to take the camera out in such light required some thought - there's no subtlety in such bright sunshine; I needed sharp edges, shadows and contrasts, so I decided to go to Coventry Cathedral ruins and surrounding area.

This is the first of four posts of images from that day.







Saturday 16 January 2016

Winter reflections

A rare bright, sunny, cold day - a chance for a muddy walk!







And returning home, I just caught these shadows on the wall before the last of the day's sun vanished.


Saturday 9 January 2016

Midwinter spring

It's been quite a long time since I've posted anything, because we've had weeks of day-after-day dark grey, overcast and wet (but mild) weather. There were two days between Christmas and New Year when it was just a little brighter and I went outside to photograph the confusion that the weather has occasioned in the plant life.


When T S Eliot wrote (in 'Little Gidding', 1942)

Midwinter spring is its own season
Sempiternal though sodden towards sundown

He had in mind

                                      Now the hedgerow
Is blanched for an hour with transitory blossom
Of snow, a bloom more sudden
Than that of summer

He wasn't imagining that all this would be in flower in December:


Hazel catkins fully open

Spring flowering daffodil - not an early variety

Spring flowering forsythia

Spring flowering hellebore - not the 'Christmas Rose' variety

Spring flowering polyanthus

Alpine strawberry!

And when the weather is wet and miserable, what is more comforting than a home with a sleeping cat?




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