Thursday 22 September 2011

September Blooms

A few flowers and weeds, some fruits and seeds.  This is a photographic record of the wonders of nature both cultivated and wild.  These pictures record a garden and pasture in South Yorkshire in the United Kingdom.  September can be a surprisingly colourful month full of natural blooms, or it can begin to show the undoubtable decline into the bleak rigours of winter.  When the sun shines it as if summer might never end and yet there is often a chill in the wind that promises snow and ice.  So it is time to gather in the harvest and celebrate for that which has blossomed for us this year and for that which will preserve us through the coming winter.

September is a good time to record the last blooms and ripe blossoms.  The onset of winter creates a final surge from nature and this finale creates unusual fruits.  I like to take pictures of the strange shapes that grow perfectly well alongside the supposedly standard forms.  The cold nights start to get plants to settle into their dormant phases even as they are still blossoming.  The flowers are retreating and seeds are drying out on the stem ready to begin the cycle the again.  This is a great time to see the descent of the sap energy retreating into the soil.  This retreat is no set back it is a part of the way forward for without retreat at this time there will be a lesser return when the spring calls out for the sap to rise again.

The pictures here were created with a Canon 50mm macro lens on 5D Mark II.  The lighting was a brand new experiment for me.  I used a DÖRR DAF 42 Power Zoom.  This wonderful flash gun is equipped with an in built diffuser and manually adjustable zoom and power settings.  The control over light is quite superb.  When using macro lenses I have often experimented with various light sources to create effects.  Some of the best results are subtle transformations that allow pictures to reveal themselves to the viewer without the viewer considering the efforts that have created the visual effects.  The DAF 42 has an inbuilt slave function and that is superb for off camera lighting which gives stunning results.  The DAF 42 is not feature packed like the Canon 580EX II Speedlite but it has some praise worthy points that are not available with the 580 EX II such as the diffuser screen and the slave function.  The light settings on the Canon offer much greater low light control.  The two guns offer a great combination if you want a second unit, or have more than one body that needs a connected light source.


Poppy (101)

Calendula (101)

Last apples of the year (108)

Wednesday 21 September 2011

Le Grand Etteilla ou Tarot égyptien or Grand Etteilla Egyptian Gypsies Tarot

These Tarot cards were created by Jean-Baptiste Alliette and they were first issued around 1788.  This desk is significant as it is the earliest set of Tarot created under the supervision of a single visionary and for it to be specifically designed to be read and used for magical purposes.  These cards were named after the creator Alliette who reversed his name to form the Etteilla title for the cards.  Whether you favour these designs, or find faults within them these cards are the root of much modern Tarot.  The older traditional cards offer a glance back into the origins of Tarot.  These cards show us the dawn of modern magical interpretations and guide us towards our contemporary use of Tarot so from their point of production they shine a light into the future that is still bright for viewers to this day.

Alliette claimed to have learned the symbology of Tarot from an Italian contact.  As a Print Seller he would have seen many similar designs to those featured in his Tarot cards and he may have adapted existing designs to form the illustrations in his Tarot.  He was very particular about his cards having an upright position and a reversed position.  The interpretation of his Tarot depends upon the dignity of the card whether it be upstanding or upended.  These are the first cards known to be specifically designed to for Tarot readings.  Other earlier sets of cards were possible formed from designs used for playing, or gaming cards.  In 1790 Alliette publishes Cours theorique et pratique du livre de Thot, or, Theoretical and practical course in the book of Thot in which he distinguishes between the Major and Minor Arcana.

When Antoine Court, the self styled Court de Gébelin published Le Monde primitif in 1788 he popularized the notion that Tarot was founded on ancient Egyptian mysteries.  The idea of the Egyptians passing on knowledge of occult significance to European Gypsies gave rise to many spurious histories purporting to be academic revelations.  Alliette stated that his information was acquired prior to the publishing of Court de Gébelin’s books.  The claim and counter claim of various occultists has lead to much misinformation and the falsehoods leave a web of deceit that is a barrier to those endeavouring to find the origins of Tarot.  False histories were concocted in the hope that a historic pedigree would give confidence in the Tarot system being presented.  No matter what the true histories maybe the products can stand alone and be valued as works of imagination and art.  These beautiful cards show off the skills of Alliette who included technical details and artistic visions in this Tarot deck.



Le Grand Etteilla (101) Mobile Phone Pix

 
Le Grand Etteilla (117) Mobile Phone Pix


  Le Grand Etteilla (114) Mobile Phone Pix

Monday 19 September 2011

Rose Crystal Eye on the Stele of Revealing

The images presented here show the seven elements of the rose plant being prepared to make sweet the world.  Whilst producing rose incense recently for a Gnostic Mass the ingredients were arranged atop a Stele of Revealing.  The rose seeds, roots, stems, buds, leafs, flowers and fruits were placed there as a part of the preparation.  In accordance with the scene painted on the stele the seven parts of the plant were arranged over the altar depicted being used by the priest Ankh-af-na-khonsu to deliver his offerings to the gods.  The priest is also known as Ankh-ef-en-Khonsu i and Ankh-ef-en-Khonsu and he can be seen here in the leopard skin priestly regalia on the right hand side of the stele.

The lighting was set to show off the stele as if it were being displayed at noon in Cairo on the Spring Equinox.  The atmosphere required for the drying of the offerings was a shaded spot in the open air where the rose could dry out.  In all three light sources were used.  There was direct and indirect sun light with additional reflected photographic flash light.  In post processing the pictures were crafted to give the surface of the stele an appearance of gold leaf and of rich mineral pigment paints.  The original may have been created with gold and mineral paints so the images here are designed to show how the Stele of Revealing could have appeared in the past.

The Rose Crystal Eye is a crystal sphere that is used to create a new altered perspective for the viewer.  The shallow focus creates intended perceptions delicately guided by the depth of field and the sharpness of colour.    Using the crystal ball as a lens makes ephemeral images as each position of the ball, the lights and the angle of the camera gives a complete new impression.  On this shoot two lenses were used to give alternative views of the items recorded in the images.  One view is more removed or distant that the other.  When seen alongside each other the photographs form a wave of perception bringing the viewer in closer and then taking them away from the stele before repeating the wave again.  Oak panels were chosen to form the background on which the stele rested.  The flame grained oak was particularly good at catching the sun and showing that the stele had travelled from Egypt to Scotland where the oak furnishing are to be found.

The rose plant was selected for the incense as the stele was seen by Ourida or Rose Kelly in a vision.  In her role as a seer she gave directions for the stele to be found.  One of the reasons for the rose incense being prepared here is to recognise Rose Kelly’s role in bringing this stele to prominence.  The sweet perfume of the roses shown here will be used in a Gnostic Mass as an offering not unlike those that Ankh-af-na-Khonsu would have been used to.  The incense ingredients are dried and finally rolled into spheres which are burnt black.  The resulting dark orbs each look like a midnight sun which some say are sacred to Kephra.  Such a mix of symbolism is woven into the incense and so also into these pictures.  Without some of the brief explanations given in this article the pictures stand as colourful images using creative light techniques.  With the information provided here it maybe that the creation of the images can be viewed as an intricate process built around recording much information.  The images are vibrant and thought provoking even without the keys to their structure, but maybe the keys help to unlock the pictures even more for the viewer.
Rose Crystal Eye on the Stele of Revealing 29 Aug 2011 (3 of 9) Rose Crystal Eye on the Stele of Revealing 29 Aug 2011 (1 of 9) Rose Crystal Eye on the Stele of Revealing 29 Aug 2011 (9 of 9)

Sunday 28 August 2011

Breakfast Tea - a true and faithful revelation

Pondering on the nature of Breakfast Tea has led me to the following conclusion.

Any tea to be consumed by me that has been ‘stirred in’ with a ‘marmalade spoon’ is Breakfast Tea.


Reference terms

‘Marmalade spoon’ - a spoon that having been used to convey the conserve still bears the sumptuous mulled fruits of vintage marmalade.

‘Stirred in’ - this is the act of correctly administering the precise unmeasured amount of tartness that is about to be lovingly incorporated into your breakfast beverage.


The above conclusion is either a fantastic folly, or a great relief, or depending on your views of cutlery and conserve deposits it could be an outlandish observance.  If you define a Breakfast Tea by the fact that the preparers of the infusion have labelled it as such then my conclusion is a fantastic folly.  To my mind the perfect breakfast often involves tea and toast with vintage marmalade making an unsurpassable contribution.   Marmalade in colour, aroma and texture only tantalises the senses but on consumption it enlivens the palette and thrills the mind with rich imaginings.  So by using the crowned emperor of the breakfast court to consecrate my tea I feel that the authority vested in matured oranges with thick cut rind raises my beverage even as it may lower it.  The addition of what can viewed as mealtime detritus only fit for the sink to my mind lifts and lowers the Breakfast Tea above and below all other cups of the day.

Beyond the fantastic folly of my idea that any tea can be a Breakfast Tea I believe that there is a notion of a great relief delivered to anyone who has searched in vain for Breakfast Tea.  If you cannot see beyond the folly of stirring in marmalade then you will not be able to accept the potential stress reduction I am about to detail.  If you accept that a spoon used for marmalade extraction can be the vehicle of transformation to your ordinary tea then you have no need to further question the ingredients and concept of Breakfast Tea.  The idea of a certain tea for a certain time and meal is rather peculiar, but once a fashionable label has been accepted what more is there to do than to brandish that label in order to ensure that all who know and respect the label are aware that you are to be found enjoying the huddled throng gathered in the shade of that label.

For many the use of besmirched cutlery is out of the question.  Even if the besmirchee is the user of the cutlery then there are prescribed rules for use of the item in question.  At this moment in time I choose not to enter into the questionable states of what offices a butter knife may be put to.  Although particular items of cutlery have stated uses and preferred practices I will not discuss those.  The mention of teaspoon here is not to indicate that this spoon is only for use with tea preparation and consumption but here it indicates the size of the spoon.   The said teaspoon once used for conveying conserve is for many not able to serve another separate function until it is cleaned away from and then returned to the table.  My boorish use of the marmalade spoon is therefore to many an outlandish observance.  My parting statement is to claim that sometimes there is a need to challenge convention and to make new traditions so I claim that my fantastic folly not only brings great relief, but that at my table at least it is not an outlandish observance, but it is a newly adopted rite of proper breakfasting.


Breakfast Tea - a true and faithful revelation (101)

Breakfast Tea - a true and faithful revelation (104)

Breakfast Tea - a true and faithful revelation (108)

Thursday 25 August 2011

seBADoh at Cabaret Voltaire 24 August 2011

seBADoh in Edinburgh with a lo-fi true sound thrilled the audience like a combination of Nirvana and Led Zepplin giving great power and presence.  This skilled line up brought brilliance to fast and slow tracks.  They prove that all you need are instruments, vocals and talent to make great music.  A few pedals on a range of guitars played by Lou Barlow and Jason Loewenstein and excellent beats from by Bob D’Amico on drums are more than enough to rock the room until time is called all too early after a frantic set has been delivered to a satisfied crowd.

Band website  http://sebadoh.com/


seBADoh at Cabaret Voltaire 24 Aug 2011 (102)

seBADoh at Cabaret Voltaire 24 Aug 2011 (108)

seBADoh at Cabaret Voltaire 24 Aug 2011 (107)

Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 17 August 2011

The evening was setting in heralding the night to come.  With clouds shrouding the setting sun the prevailing light altered as if a tidal flow of illumination was travelling the length and breadth of the High Street.  Bobbing along on the fast changing flow of light I surfaced and dived in and out of shadows and the alleyways.  Feeding my perspective with flash I filled my frame with something of everything available and took one particular shot of near nothingness.  All too soon it was time to escort my assistant home and so we turned our backs on the lengthening shadows in Edinburgh as we headed into the setting sun descending in the West.  We were glad that the sun was bringing down a curtain on the Edinburgh Festival Fringe as we needing to find a fitting rest so that we could rise again ready to do it all once more only this time harder, longer, stronger, faster and yet slower with consummate ease and a frantic frenetic pleasure.


Pictures on Flickr

Film on YouTube


Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 17 August 2011 (116)

Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 17 August 2011 (122)

Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 17 August 2011 (142)

Wednesday 24 August 2011

Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 14 August 2011

The rain came and went again and then the sun shone on and on and on.  The colours brightened and burned in the warm light as Edinburgh enjoyed a beautiful August Sunday with fantastic fringe fancies of all shapes and sizes running amok in a somewhat marshalled chaos.  Suddenly after the rain the whole High Street became a sun trap in which the crowds and performers could bathe in golden star light before they began to get ready for the evening’s stage bound limelight.  After the crowds of the afternoon the centre of Edinburgh slowly breathes out and opens up again releasing performers and spectators to scurry away to venues and to find refreshments.  The quiet of the evening leads to the still of the night.  The silent shadows passed unnoticed by the last late leavers of the festival are filled with a potent promise that the return of the light will bring out again the pretty displays that attract all of the avid festival fans to fill the streets again.

Pictures on Flickr

Film on YouTube


Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 14 August 2011  (108)

Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 14 August 2011  (109)

Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 14 August 2011  (116)

Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 12 August 2011

The changeable light of August in Edinburgh brings great challenges to the photographer.  The conditions suggest certain technical settings and seem to guide you away from others.  Within the limitations are more possibilities than it may at first appear.  One huge advantage to the fickle forms of light is that there is often more space and time to take pictures on the Royal Mile.  Those that brave the less advantageous weather conditions are often more inclined to help make a photograph into a picture.  With the use of perspective and after gaining an angle you might still have time to balance the composition and set up your lighting before you click and flash and then take up a second position for an alternate elevation and then click and flash again.  Sometimes the difficulties in the creative process produce the challenges that make the finished work more stratifying. 

Pictures on Flickr

Film on YouTube


Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 12 August 2011 (106)

Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 12 August 2011 (103)

Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 12 August 2011 (123)

Tuesday 23 August 2011

Nob Stewart on the Town

One of my best days in Edinburgh this year was spent out and about, in and around town with Nob Stewart at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe 2011.  There was a gloomy sky, but the loud tartan on Nob shone out nearly as bright as his character and that seemed to dispel the August gloom.  With a hint of mayhem and touch of merry madness Nob flyered the festival crowds promoting his one man comedy show.  It would be fair to point out that he is not a Rod Stewart tribute act or a standard style frilly fringe show.  To find out more see his own web productions.  My time spent with Nob Stewart was a right royal hoot on the Mile and the Mound.


Nob Stewart
Belushi’s, Market Street Venue 245
6pm  6th-27th August 2011 (except 8th,15th & 22nd)


Pictures on Flickr

Film on YouTube


Nob Stewart on the Town (101)

Nob Stewart on the Town (111)

Nob Stewart on the Town (113)

Cirk La Putyka - Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 2011

It is just possible that I was favourably influenced by Cirk La Putyka handing me their flyer stuck on to a can of Budvar Budweiser but even so there circus skills are superb.  With wild dress and wacky antics they are set to thrill.  Whatever you thought impossible to the human body you will have to think over once you have seen Cirk La Putyka.  Strange is too tame and yet the performers are welcoming as well as startling.  If as you slept you just happened across a fantastic chocolate factory with hints of a nightmare before Christmas then you maybe you are awake, if so remember to applaud and don’t blink for fear you’ll miss a moment.

For those that appreciate a Budweiser then La Putyka have the finest flyer of the festival with ring pull to start and a recyclable finish. www.budweiserbudvar.co.uk/

La Putyka www.laputyka.cz/ Circus Dance & Physical Theatre at the Zoo Southside


Pictures on Flickr

Film on YouTube

Cirk La Putyka (101)

Cirk La Putyka (111)

Cirk La Putyka (106)

Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 9 August 2011

When the sun shines out on Edinburgh all is bright and beautiful.  The myriad jewels of the many shows gently jostled for attention on the High Street today.  Strange wonderful weird and wyrd outfits were set to stunning makeup so that friendly and fiendish features faced you from all directions.  Now that the festival is in full swing the sun shine coaxes out more crowds.  There is no other way along the High Street than to meander at a daunder as you enjoy weaving as you wander.  The Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies pictured here are all ready to take to the High Street again and to blossom into the beautiful blooms of another day and make happy havoc in the fantastic fray.  The vibrancy and vitality of the entertainers and the crowds creates a truly irresistible occurrence. 

Pictures on Flickr

Film on YouTube


Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 9 August 2011 (101)

Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 9 August 2011 (119)

Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 9 August 2011 (129)

Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 7 August 2011

So there was some rain and then there was some more rain.  At least it was warm and almost humid, especially when you were enjoying the radiance created by the street performers and those advertising their shows.  There is no weather that can spoil Edinburgh so whether the sun shines, or the rain falls there is always a whole series of fantastical delights to engage with.  Some of these delights are recorded here for Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 2011.  Each year the festival attracts new and old acts and they have fresh faces to present to the city and to all those enjoying the whole experience.  At the start of the festival it is hard to believe that this level of creativity and artistic intensity can be kept up for three weeks, but once the banners go up there is never any shortage of wonderment to fill the performance spaces of Edinburgh.


Pictures on Flickr

Film on YouTube


Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 7 August 2011 (153)

Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 7 August 2011 (104)

Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 7 August 2011 (137)

Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 6 August 2011

We don’t care what the weather man says, when the Weather Man says it’ll be raining, we’re still out in the rain without complaining.  There were some short respites between the showers and the Royal Mile is always worth a visit any time and any weather.  Whether the Weather Man says it will be rainy, or fine there is always plenty to make your smile shine when the Edinburgh Festival Fringe is spilling out in the town centre.  The painted faces and superb costumes make a fantastic display which has been caught here in still pictures to make the first Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies for 2011.

Pictures on Flickr

Film on YouTube


Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 6 August 2011 (121)

Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 6 August 2011 (126)

Edinburgh Festival Fringe Fancies 6 August 2011 (144)

Sunday 17 July 2011

Knights of Royal England Jousting at Linlithgow Palace

Knights of Royal England Jousting at Linlithgow Palace July 2011 (115)Knights of Royal England Jousting at Linlithgow Palace July 2011 (101)Knights of Royal England Jousting at Linlithgow Palace July 2011 (102)Knights of Royal England Jousting at Linlithgow Palace July 2011 (103)Knights of Royal England Jousting at Linlithgow Palace July 2011 (104)Knights of Royal England Jousting at Linlithgow Palace July 2011 (105)
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Knights of Royal England Jousting at Linlithgow Palace July 2011 (119)Knights of Royal England Jousting at Linlithgow Palace July 2011 (120)Knights of Royal England Jousting at Linlithgow Palace July 2011 (121)Knights of Royal England Jousting at Linlithgow Palace July 2011 (122)Knights of Royal England Jousting at Linlithgow Palace July 2011 (123)Knights of Royal England Jousting at Linlithgow Palace July 2011 (124)

This was a magnificent event full of pomp and pageantry. The venue of the open field below Linlithgow Palace was transformed into an impressive tournament arena. The brilliant costumes made a splendid spectacle and the performers gave a great display both enlightening and entertaining.