Browsing Tag

@The_Doves

Alphabet Project | L is for lavender

Thank you to everyone that joined the Alphabet Photography Project over the past week with letter K.

Although lake was up there as a result of our trip to Frensham, letter L had to be for lavender. We’ve visited farms in Hitchin and Mayfield in the past few weeks. The tough part was choosing the photograph.

How to join in

The Alphabet Photography Project runs every Wednesday. If you’d like to share a post or link up an image, a Linky is live from that day until the following Tuesday. If you include a link back to PODcast I’ll share your post for you. You can post a photo on Instagram (PODcast is here) if you’d prefer using the hashtag #alphabetphoto.

There are also PinterestFacebook and Google+ groups for the Alphabet Photography Project.

Ideas for letter L 

The #alphabetphoto theme can be interpreted in any way you choose. Your letter might be a photograph for example, an object that resembles a letter or an adjective. Have a look at the letter L hints in last week’s post. If you get really stuck, an online Scrabble dictionary is a good point of reference!

Inspiration for letter M

Here are a few ideas to get us thinking about letter M:

Maple, marble, mittens, moths, models, men, muscles, mussels, money, mangos, motorcycles, moon, machinery, make-up, macro, mountains, masks, marine, money, mood, muse, meadow, magnificent, motionless, muddy, modern, mushy, macaroon, magnolia.

There are also lots of inspirational photographs on the #alphabetphoto Pinterest board:

Follow PODcast grappling with a box of frogs’s board Photography: The Alphabet Photography Project on Pinterest.




What’s The Story? | 28th July 2014

Hello everyone, I hope you’ve all had a great week enjoying the glorious sunshine. It was the perfect weekend for POD’s Summer party (to celebrate her Christmas Day birthday) and we enjoyed a wonderful picnic too. Suffice to say I’m running a little behind with commenting so apologies if I’ve not reached you yet!

Welcome to What’s The Story? for w/c 28th July 2014.

What’s The Story? is a photograph based Linky which enables you to share the stories behind your favourite photographs. To join in all you have to do is share a photograph and the story behind it. You can write as little or much as you like and your photo/s can be from any time.

Feel free to use the What’s The Story? badge or include a link to PODcast in your post – I’m happy to share it in return. Please do take the time to comment on some of your fellow bloggers posts when you can. What’s The Story? is open every Monday through to the following Sunday.

There’s a community on Google Plus so do pop over if you haven’t already. You can find me at Charly Dove or PODcast.

Have a lovely week #whatsthestory.




The B&W Photography Project | Week #3

Really loving the Black & White Photography Project, thank you to everyone that joined in last week. And to those of you that enjoyed the Ansel Adams post – he was one awesome photographer!

Although this photograph of POD in a lavender field works well in colour, I just love it in black and white. The contrast of that stripey hat is just wonderful.

How to join in 

It’s really easy to get involved with the Black & White Photography Project. Just link up a short post, with or without words, featuring a black and white photograph. You can also link up a collection of black and white photographs if you prefer. The photograph/s can be from any time – new and old images are welcome.

If you don’t fancy linking up a post you can play on Instagram using #bwphotoproject (PODcast is here). You can also share your posts and photos in the Black & White Photography Project Facebook Group.

When? 

The Black and White Photography Project runs every Sunday. The Linky is open every week from Sunday through to Saturday. If you include a link back to PODcast I’ll happily share your post for you.

Inspiration on Pinterest 

If you’re looking for inspiration, the Black & White Photography Project board has some awesome photographs.

Follow PODcast grappling with a box of frogs’s board Photography: B&W Photography Project on Pinterest.




Alphabet Project | K is for knoll

Thank you to everyone that joined the Alphabet Photography Project over the past week with letter J.

Letter K was a bit of a challenge but in the end knoll stuck. This photograph was taken at Headley Heath in Surrey which is managed by the National Trust.  It’s a designated Site of Specific Interest with a mix of open heathland, shady woods and steep chalk grassland valleys. This is POD having an impromptu sit down after running up and down the hill with Daddy. 

How to join in

The Alphabet Photography Project runs every Wednesday. If you’d like to share a post or link up an image, a Linky is live from that day until the following Tuesday. If you include a link back to PODcast I’ll share your post for you. You can post a photo on Instagram (PODcast is here) if you’d prefer using the hashtag #alphabetphoto.

There are also Pinterest, Facebook and Google+ groups for the Alphabet Photography Project.

Ideas for letter K 

The #alphabetphoto theme can be interpreted in any way you choose. The letter K might be a photograph of a key for example, an object that resembles the letter K or a photograph of the letter K using props. It could also be an adjective. Have a look at the letter hints in last week’s post. If you get really stuck, an online Scrabble dictionary is a good point of reference!

Inspiration for letter L 

Here are a few ideas to get us thinking about letter L:

Llamas, love, logs, leaves, landscapes, lightning, laughter, light, lazy, landscapes, learning, light, lightning, long, labour, laburnum, ladybird, lasagne, ladylike, lattitude, laugh, lashes, lavish, licorice, lifetime, lifeboat, location, lookout, lantern, lock, lemons, lollipop, lotion, lambs, later, lamb, leek, less, lion, long.

There are also lots of inspirational photographs on the #alphabetphoto Pinterest board:
Follow PODcast grappling with a box of frogs’s board Photography: The Alphabet Photography Project on Pinterest.




Exploring Mayfield Lavender

Lavender fields are wonderful, even before you get there you can visualise those bright hues. Perhaps it’s because you dream about capturing your three year old jumping in the air above a sea of purple. Or running with balloons gently blowing in the breeze behind her. Okay so I made the last bit up but you get the picture!

Mayfield Lavender is a 25 acre family run farm located in Banstead, Surrey. There’s a lovely story around how it came about. Owner Brendan Maye believed consumers needed to witness the beauty of lavender to accept it as a relevant fragrance. He was MD at the fine fragrance division of Wella UK at that point. 

PODcast IMG_2046

He came up with a proposal to buy a farm and revive the lavender growing under the Yardley brand. Although this was rejected by his parent company, two years later he got the go-ahead although was stopped from actually buying a farm. The plan fell apart later when the Yardley brand was sold. But unperturbed Brendan decided to acquire the project himself.

PODcast IMG_1769

While he continued his day job, his wife Lorna came to the rescue learning how to harvest lavender among other things. Brendan and Lorna now work together at Mayfield Lavender. They are proud the field sits on the same spot where lavender was grown in the 18th and 19th century.

PODcast IMG_1990
Mayfield Lavender has an annual lavender festival in July which includes everything from bug hunts, tractor rides and massages to photography classes, Morris Dancing and the clincher – a hog roast! We couldn’t make it this year but we decided to visit Mayfield for the first time the following day.

PODcast IMG_1809

It was a glorious day, the sun shone, the sky was blue and littered with cotton wool like clouds. We hoped POD would sleep en route but it wasn’t to be. What a sight greeted us when we arrived though – there was purple as far as the eye could see. A field of total awesomeness.

We took a short walk but food was in order before we ventured further. There’s an array of options available at Mayfield including drinks and treats infused with lavender. We opted for freshly made sarnies and POD had a lolly afterwards. There’s also a great gift shop at Mayfield where you can purchase lavender.

PODcast IMG_1773

Refueled we set off to explore ever hopeful of capturing POD having fun in the lavender. It wasn’t going to be easy as you can see from this don’t take a photograph of me face.

PODcast IMG_1939

But she perk up and before long was pointing at the bees and “butt-flies”.

PODcast IMG_1884

The pathways were nice and wide so there was plenty of room for everyone. The lavender rows were perfectly pruned, they even included areas where you could ‘swap lanes’ if you needed to. POD wasn’t her usual perky self but she had her moments.

PODcast IMG_2008

Like the moment she took herself off on her own adventure amid the sweet smelling lavender. She may not be facing camera but she didn’t know I was behind her either. Nor that I’d been running like a buffoon to capture her in that sea of purple!

PODcast IMG_1870 edit

Linking up with #whatsthestory here on PODcast and #CountryKids at Coombe Mill.

 photo 93142f35-6d39-479f-b3de-d94dbca68162_zps58499252.jpg
Country Kids from Coombe Mill Family Farm Holidays Cornwall

What’s The Story? | 21st July 2014

Crack open the party poppers people, What’s The Story? is a year old!!! Hard to believe this idea for a Linky launched in July last year accompanied by a thrill seeking story entitled The Need for Speed. There have been so many amazing posts since and such incredible variety too. Thank you to everyone that’s joined in over the past 12 months and made it what it is.

Welcome to What’s The Story? for 21st July 2014 – the anniversary edition!

If you’re new to What’s The Story? it’s a photograph based Linky which enables you to share the stories behind your photographs. To join in all you have to do is share a photograph and the story behind it. You can write as little or much as you like and your photo/s can be from any time.

Feel free to use the What’s The Story? badge or include a link to PODcast in your post – I’m happy to share it in return. Please do take the time to comment on some of your fellow bloggers posts when you can. What’s The Story? is open every Monday through to the following Sunday.

There’s a community on Google Plus so do pop over if you haven’t already. You can find me at Charly Dove or PODcast.

Have a lovely week #whatsthestory.




Project 365: Week #29

It’s been a week of pirates, fairy potions and lavender. Combined with capturing the best of London while walking to or from the office.

Welcome to Project 365: Week #29.

Day 195

This is POD after flowers for her fairy potion! It was an interesting mix of petals, grass and leaves plus a little red colouring. Astounding how tall she looks here.

PODcast Sun

After the fairies had been fed it was time for some pirate fun. POD is making a strange face here but at least she’s looking at the camera (first time for everything!).

PODcast Sun 2

Day 196

Having recently visited Hitchin Lavender Farm, Monday saw us venture to Mayfield Lavender in Surrey. POD refused to stand in the lavender initially but we got there in the end.

PODcast Mon
Day 197

You don’t see any grasshoppers for months then two come along in the same day! This little fella was so difficult to photograph given the position he was in but great macro practice.

PODcast Tues
Day 198

Standing under the London Eye before work was just the best. Other than a few joggers there was hardly a soul on the Southbank, such a contrast to when I walked past last week.

PODcast Wed

PODcast IMG_2139
Day 199

Walking to Waterloo from Farringdon is far more preferable than the tube especially when it’s been so warm. These phone boxes are located just off Bow Street not far from the Royal Opera House.

PODcast Thurs
Day 200

I spotted this pretty bicycle outside the Holborn Dining Room not far from Chancery Lane.

PODcast Friday
Day 201

POD has a Summer party next weekend (her birthday is on Christmas Day) so we’ve been in the garden tidying. We’re hopeful the weather will hold out so we can have a BBQ.

PODcast Sat

TheBoyandMe's 365 Linky

Inspirational photographers | Ansel Adams

The legendary creative genius Ansel Adams was well known for his black and white photographs. Although he did shoot in colour, he felt it could be distracting to the viewer and claimed a far greater sense of ‘colour’ could be achieved through a well-executed monochrome image.

Ansel Adams is widely recognised for the innovation he brought to photography which included the development of the Zone System with Fred Archer – a photographic technique for determining optimal film exposure and development. He founded the photography Group f/64 with Willard Van Dyke and Edward Weston and has produced many of the most influential technical manuals on photography ever written. He will also be remembered for having a camera platform mounted on his car to get a better angle over his expansive backgrounds.

Ansel Adams collage 1

He was born in 1902 to distinctly upper-class parents Charles Hitchcock Adams and Olive Bray. They lived in San Francisco where they had a splendid view of the Golden Gate. The family fortune collapsed in 1907 and within five years the family’s standard of living dropped sharply. Adams had problems at school and from the age of 12 was home educated by an Aunt and his father. 

When he was 12 he taught himself to play the piano. It was Adams’ primary occupation for the decade that followed and, by 1920, his intended profession. Although he ultimately gave up music for photography, the piano brought substance, discipline, and structure which profoundly informed his visual artistry.

Adams first visited Yosemite National Park in 1916 with his family. His father gave him his first camera, a Kodak Brownie box camera, during that stay. He returned to Yosemite on his own the following year and every Summer thereafter. In the Winter he learnt darkroom techniques, read photography magazines, attended camera club meetings and exhibitions. 

Ansel Adams collage 2

Ansel Adams produced his first photograph in 1921 with his first portfolio, Parmelian Prints of the High Sierras, created in 1927. It included his famous image Monolith, the Face of Half Dome, taken with his Korona view camera using glass plates and a dark red filter. It was a success and with the support of businessman Albert Bender he received commercial assignments as a result. His creative energies and abilities as a photographer blossomed, and he began to have the confidence to pursue his dreams.

Between 1929 and 1942, Adams’s work matured and he became more established. He expanded his work to include detailed close-ups and large forms such as mountains. He also put on his first solo museum exhibition featuring 60 prints. 

Adams formed Group f/64 in 1932 which supported pure or straight photography – f/64 being a small aperture setting that provides great depth of field. A year later he opened his own art and photography gallery. He began to publish essays in photography magazines and wrote his first instructional book – Making a Photograph. During the summers, he often participated in Sierra Club High Trips outings as a paid photographer for the group. 

Ansel Adams collage 3

In 1941 Ansel put together A Pageant of Photography which is the largest photography show in the West to date attended by millions of visitors. He also taught photography by giving workshops and began his first serious stint of teaching. 

Moonrise, Hernandez, New Mexico, is one of Ansel Adam’s most famous photographs. Over nearly 40 years, he re-interpreted this image providing him with financial independence from commercial projects. The value of these prints exceeded $25m. 

Adams co-founded Aperture magazine in 1952 which was intended as a serious journal of photography showcasing its best practitioners and newest innovations. 

Ansel Adams collage 4

Ansel Adam’s photographs became the symbol of wild America. He created a sense of the magnificent in nature often creating an image more powerful than the actual thing.

Alphabet Project | J is for jellyfish

Thank you to everyone that joined the Alphabet Photography Project over the past week with their letter I.

This week my letter J is for Jellyfish. Although the fresh water variety terrify me, behind glass they’re absolutely fascinating. We saw these Compass Jellyfish at SEA LIFE Great Yarmouth recently. We stood for ages watching them.

How to join in 

The Alphabet Photography Project runs every Wednesday. If you’d like to share a post or link up an image, a Linky is live from that day until the following Tuesday. If you include a link back to PODcast I’ll share your post for you. You can post a photo on Instagram (PODcast is here) if you’d prefer using the hashtag #alphabetphoto.

There are also PinterestFacebook and Google+ groups for the Alphabet Photography Project.

Ideas for letter J 

The #alphabetphoto theme can be interpreted in any way you choose. The letter J might be a photograph of jam for example, an object that resembles the letter J or a photograph of the letter J using props. It could also be an adjective. Have a look at the letter hints in last week’s post. If you get really stuck, an online dictionary is a good point of reference!

Inspiration for letter K 

Here are a few ideas to get us thinking about letter K:

Kaleidoscope, kick, kitchen, kedgeree, kite, knight, kayak, khaki, keys, keyhole, kerplunk, kindling, kiss, kiwi, kingdom, kindness, knitting, knitwear, knock, karaoke, kernel, kestrel, knee, kimono, kind, kipper, knives, kilos, kiosk, knack, knock, kilt, koot, kingfisher, kale, kid, kangaroo, kookaburra, koala, knobbly.

There are also lots of inspirational photographs on the #alphabetphoto Pinterest board:

Follow PODcast grappling with a box of frogs’s board Photography: The Alphabet Photography Project on Pinterest.




What’s The Story? | 14th July 2014

Hello everyone, welcome to What’s The Story? for w/c 14th July 2014.

It’s hard to believe next week #whatsthestory will be a year old! I’m shaking my head as I write, it’s just flown by! Thank you to all of you that joined in last week and apologies for commenting later than usual.

If you’re new to What’s The Story? it’s a photograph based Linky which enables you to share the stories behind your photographs. To join in all you have to do is share a photograph and the story behind it. You can write as little or much as you like and your photo/s can be from any time.

Feel free to use the What’s The Story? badge or include a link to PODcast in your post – I’m happy to share it in return. Please do take the time to comment on some of your fellow bloggers posts when you can. What’s The Story? is open every Monday through to the following Sunday.

There’s a community on Google Plus so do pop over if you haven’t already. You can find me at Charly Dove or PODcast.

Have a lovely week #whatsthestory.