Thursday 28 May 2015

East Lancs Railway 1940s Weekend





East Lancs Railway's 1940s Weekend twice over the Bank Holiday weekend. On Saturday I parked at Heywood not realising that not all trains travel to Heywood. Parking was easy enough but there was a long wait at the station with little going on. It was quiet. The whole day was quiet compared to some events but then some events are over-subscribed making taking pictures difficult. I also didn't realise the train stayed so long at Bury Station before travelling on to Ramsbottom. But then its always nice to sit on a train watching the world go by out the window.

The trains ran every hour; long trains with all sorts of carriages, somewhat shabby but charming nonetheless. It may be because of restrictions at Ramsbottom Station where there is a level crossing in the very town centre. With trains every hour you're stuck for an hour when you get off and in some cases you don't want to be. And more frequent means more turnover of people to keep things moving around.

Bury Station proved, once the light improved, to be fine for picture taking. The light through the roof making for some very nice pictures of the re-enactors. Never sure if that is the right word but fancy dress is also wrong; vintage dress describes it better.

I did travel to Rawtenstall but didn't linger. Being a German station there is little there to attract me as a photographer. Neither does the re-enactment. I don't get it. And I don't want to photograph German soldiers especially not SS (not that there were any with the organisers prohibiting certain uniforms. And re-enactments are too noisy.





Ramsbottom had a nice little French theme going on, with a mime and his son. And vehicles in the town centre next to the church. All blighted, of course, by the proximity of the incessant town centre traffic. It wasn't too bad but there was little atmosphere. These things, 1940s Weekends, are best done away from 21st Century traffic, preferring green grass or vintage buildings.

The pictures came up nicely despite problems with flash and auto-focus. Always learning. I've discovered why some of my photos weren't as sharp as they should be - my misuse, or mis-understanding, of the auto-focus and AI Servo. I've also discovered why some recent flash shots were completely blown out - mis-use of High Speed Flash. But then over-exposing is so easy to correct in Lightroom. Underexposing is, of course a different matter.

The full gallery is on Facebook here and on my Twenty Trees website here.



Highlight Sharpening

I've rediscovered sharpening as part of my workflow. After making change to crop, exposure, contrast in Lightroom I use Photoshop to finish off when necessary.

I sharpen as follows:

Convert to Lab
Duplicate Layer
Select new Layer only and Lightness Channel
Filter - Unsharp Mask

I use an Amount of 40-100 and a Radius of 2-5. Preview is a good tool allowing you immediately see the effect of changes. I never use Threshold. When done I sometimes use Layer Opacity to tone down the Sharpening. I also someone apply a Layer Mask to prevent sharpening the skin, and to apply it in varying amounts to eyes and hair.

I tend to leave the image in Lab since it's required for conversion to black and white (see earlier post).

After sharpening I often flatten the image then duplicate the Layer twice more using the Soft Light and Multiply blending modes to bring he image up. 

And I usually add an Levels Adjustments Layer.

Wednesday 6 May 2015

Richard III

All this talk of Richard III and his incongruous re-interment reminds me that the succession of Henry VII is the widest genealogical succession since William the Bastard some 400 or so years before, and since. Henry VII was the 'third cousin once removed' of Richard III.

The third cousin was Henry's mother Margaret Beaufort, great grand daughter of John of Gaunt, Edward III's son.

Richard III was also a great great grand child of Edward III. Richard III and Lady Margaret Beaufort are third cousins. They shared a great great grand dad, Edward III.

Once removed because Henry VII is Margaret Beaufort's son.

When Henry VII married his fourth cousin, Elizabeth of York, daughter of Edward VI, Richard III's brother, also then Henry VII's third cousin once removed, the royal bloodline became more concentrate.

Henry VIII's children, Mary, Elizabeth, Edward are a genealogical cul-de-sac.

It was Henry VIII's elder sister, Margaret Tudor, who continued the line; the Stuarts. James VI&I succeeded Elizabeth I, and thereafter Charles I, II, etc.

Having said all of that I note the succession of James VI&I was equivalent since he, in effect, succeeded from Henry VII, his great great grand dad, just like Henry VII succeeded from Edward III.

The story is complicated somewhat by James V of Scotland marrying Henry Stewart Darnley whose grand mother was also Margaret Tudor. James VI and I was the great great grand son of Henry VII twice over so a twice less tenuous claim than Henry VII.