I could look at this photo all afternoon...

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vernon

Harder than Ronnie Pickering
Location
Meanwood, Leeds
Wow, he must like trains nearly as much as my dad does. In fact so many family holidays incorporated at least two steam railway visits our holiday snaps look like a poor homage to the above.

He had a lot of clout with the railway companies and they would supply the locomotives, rolling stock and alter schedules to accommodate his demands for each photo shoot. Shots would take days to set up with elaborate lighting rigs, cabling etc - remember this was pre digital control.
 

vernon

Harder than Ronnie Pickering
Location
Meanwood, Leeds
Vern, Silver Cross is very much alive and kicking despite a bit of a hiccup with the West Midlands manufacturer of those posh prams last year. However cash has been found and all is back on track, I believe. Their HQ is near Skipton, in a restored barn just a couple of hundred yards from the roundabout where the road from Nelson and Colne joins the A59. Some of the biggest customers for the old-style prams nowadays are travellers, who enjoy the bling and usually pay cash.

The photo in the OP is good and I wouldn't question the skill of the photographer but with careful cropping almost any fortuitous street snap can be made to look as if it was composed. With a few unconventional elements of composition and unexplained events captured, a street snap even acquires a mystique and becomes modern and edgy.

Is it not possible for you to make a posting without taking a sneering sideswipe at folk who fail to fit in with your tightly defined boundaries of acceptability?

I could be wrong, the highlighted phrase might be an expression of admiration or envy.
 

Globalti

Legendary Member
It wasn't intended as sneering; I have a fairly good knowledge of the nursery goods retail scene in NW England and it's well known that it's the cash buyers who are keeping the factory afloat that manufactures those lovely but impractical prams. The same factory also makes the toy version, which is equally popular as a gift. I wish I had the cash to be able to support businesses that manufacture delightful old products that no longer have a mass market. If they weren't so damned heavy I would happily buy a Brookes saddle because some models, especially the Swift, look gorgeous.
 
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Archie_tect

De Skieven Architek... aka Penfold + Horace
Location
Northumberland
Is it not possible for you to make a posting without taking a sneering sideswipe at folk who fail to fit in with your tightly defined boundaries of acceptability?

I could be wrong, the highlighted phrase might be an expression of admiration or envy.
It's not a sideswipe Vern, it's what happens. Don't get so riled up about stuff.

Looking at the photo, struck me how old all the adults look- wonder where it was taken.
 
OP
OP
swee'pea99

swee'pea99

Squire
It's not a sideswipe Vern, it's what happens. Don't get so riled up about stuff.

Looking at the photo, struck me how old all the adults look- wonder where it was taken.
'oop north, probably. Or the east end. Everyone over the age of 30 looked like that in them days. Past 30 you were basically done & waiting for the reaper.
 

Fnaar

Smutmaster General
Location
Thumberland
Just had a quick google of Hardy's stuff... he also took this TdF one "Mountain Stage"

GET0102_websource.jpg
 

Fnaar

Smutmaster General
Location
Thumberland
Just came across this in a book I was reading last night and was bowled over.

View attachment 40216

It's by an old Picture Post era photographer called Bert Hardy...a sort of English Cartier-Bresson...and I've never seen this particular one before, though I used to be a big fan and have a book of his 'best'.

It may not have the inyerface showiness of some of the famous 'great images', but the composition strikes me as little short of miraculous.
This page gives it as 1950s Jarrow: (Hibernian Road... had a quick look at google maps, looks like industrial units now, if the right place)

page%20153%20009.jpg
 

Andrew_Culture

Internet Marketing bod
He had a lot of clout with the railway companies and they would supply the locomotives, rolling stock and alter schedules to accommodate his demands for each photo shoot. Shots would take days to set up with elaborate lighting rigs, cabling etc - remember this was pre digital control.

Excellent, thanks for sharing.
 

Beebo

Firm and Fruity
Location
Hexleybeef
Looking at the photo, struck me how old all the adults look.
I was flicking through some photos the other day from when I was born. My granny would have been in her mid 50's at the time, but she looked much older, people wore old style clothes and had grey hair and walked around slowly waiting to die.
Nowadays a typical mid 50's woman dyes her hair blonde, wears modern fashions and goes to the gym.
I bet those two ladies are both under 40!
 

Mad Doug Biker

Banned from every bar in the Galaxy
Location
Craggy Island
'oop north, probably. Or the east end. Everyone over the age of 30 looked like that in them days. Past 30 you were basically done & waiting for the reaper.

Its what I said in a previous thread about old programs on the TV like 'Are you being served?' - They all looked far older than they actually were!
 

Julia9054

Legendary Member
Location
Knaresborough
'oop north, probably. Or the east end. Everyone over the age of 30 looked like that in them days. Past 30 you were basically done & waiting for the reaper.
A few years ago we had a 1940's themed day at school. Staff and students all dressed up. I borrowed the correct style of dress, hat and fox fur from the local am dram society. Fondly imagined I'd look like some gorgeous young thing from a BBC period drama. Instead, I just looked like my own grandmother! Terrifying!
 

hoopdriver

Guru
Location
East Sussex
Just came across this in a book I was reading last night and was bowled over.

View attachment 40216

It's by an old Picture Post era photographer called Bert Hardy...a sort of English Cartier-Bresson...and I've never seen this particular one before, though I used to be a big fan and have a book of his 'best'.

It may not have the inyerface showiness of some of the famous 'great images', but the composition strikes me as little short of miraculous.
Very absorbing and, as you say, a miracle of composition
 
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