Showing posts with label ireland. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ireland. Show all posts

Tuesday, 29 May 2012

Meadow Love!

Being a hippie in my youth, I can't help but conjure images of floaty skirts, spinning through golden meadows in dizzying colour, when we get weather like this, of course these days I just blame it on sun stroke!  Still, such idealism and beauty prompted the stopping off for this pic just outside Killyleagh, Northern Ireland. 

Tuesday, 10 April 2012

Titanic Light Show Belfast 07/04/2012


Almost exactly one hundred years after the tragedy of the RMS Titanic, Belfast has evolved a great deal and now embraces the peoples of the world in remembrance, celebration of the ingenuity of the time and mourning for one of the globe’s most prolific and heartbreaking of disasters.



30,000 people, foreign and local, gathered along the newly refurbished River Lagan docks by the original Titanic slipway at Harland and Wolff.  The bustling city was thronged by excited families all clamouring for that elusive parking space and queuing for the shuttle buses departing for Chichester Street in anticipation of the hyped Digital Light Show which was to be projected onto the new, strange, angular and chrome, Titanic Building, a free event organised by Belfast City Council.



Thousands walked in high spirits across the pedestrian bridge flagged by the ‘big fish’ monument and the ‘Thanksgiving Beacon’ (fondly termed – the Lady of the Lagoon).  The sense of community and kinship was palpable in the twilight of the evening.



Bright yellow and blue wrist bands marked the lucky attendees who managed to score tickets as they gathered, dwarfed by the stature of the iconic build – all triangular ship’s bows in architecture, and surrounded by period clad stilt performers, fire dancers and the continental market. 



A hush passed over the awaiting masses as the tall lights were dimmed, a beautiful accompaniment of classical strings stroked the night and spotlights swept over the metallic surface of the edifice like roving lamps of wartime.  In the perfect spheres of light silhouettes portraying the history of Belfast’s docks began to weave a story, the towering cranes, Samson and Goliath, followed by the turrets and roundels of the City Hall and the broad, three pointed, wing span of wind towers which are being shipped out in present day.





The display turned industrial with cogs, iron rods and pistons until the large bow of a luxury, cruise ship arose in vivid imagery from the sight of its birth.  The chosen graphics were simple and raw but universally understood, the disparate age of steel, hard labour, sweat and toil enlivened again as pyrotechnics of red hissing steam complimented the intense images of blazing furnaces turning the very modern building into a monster of a bleaching machine.  An impressive firework display accompanied the music and colours and the crowds applauded as silence settled.




The following display was less well received, many leaving early to beat the crowds retreat as psychedelic ‘magic eye’ creations undulated to more popular beats and the production became more about fancy geometry, spirals, twists and whirls than an historic story arch.  Bigger and louder fireworks lit the heavens and the effect was somewhere between a brainwashing scene from a 60s television series and a self-congratulation of technical wizardry. 




Still the many onlookers were buoyant to be present at such an iconic occasion and behaved peacefully and with respect and awe as they shuffled on mass back over the lagan to the neon lights and high rises of Belfast’s recent revitalisation.






This was just one of many events and memorials to that ground breaking ship and when one combines this anniversary with the London Olympics, the resurgence of tourism and global notice that Belfast is receiving in the form of the MTV awards last year and the Police and Fire Games of next year, it is clear that the city is surging forward into brighter and better times ahead.







Thursday, 13 October 2011

Belfast Underground Graffiti

Another Photo walk in Belfast and this one is definitely getting blamed for the expensive bottle of Cough Mixture that I'm currently chugging down.  Seasons are certainly changing but that matters little underground where I took a little diversion down one of Belfast's pedestrain subways and snapped a few of the fab graffiti sketches down there.  I find the 'Emerald Isle' green car the most amusing! 

Again check out my other photos at http://www.elwoodprints.com/ and Photo Articles and Contests at http://snaphappy.moonfruit.com/














Monday, 10 October 2011

Belfast By Night

For new shots from a rather chilly stroll along the Lagan.  The 'art' captured is a replica of the Titanic and stands next to the boardwalk, behind the Odyssey and at the start of 'The Titanic Quarter', other buildings can be seem such as the Obel Tower with it's picture frame windows, the lighted dome of the Victoria Centre and of course the P&O ferry!  I tried out my new 'star' filter that night but found it overwhelming when there is so many points of light.  Anyway, I hope you enjoy these...

As usual, these can be bought on my website http://www.elwoodprints.com and please help promote my photographic community project - http://snaphappy.moonfruit.com











Tollymore Forest Park

Expanding and growing as a Photographer, or at least trying to, I decided to do some long daylight exposures and RAW file manipulation so nothing like a relaxing stroll in the beautiful, multi-hued forage of a forest with it's very own bubbling brook - well river (a few years ago during torrential rain the banks flooded and broke many of the ornate bridges!).  Of course living in Northern Ireland this didn't go quite to plan as it rained and blew a gale!  Unfortunately this meant that a lot of the photographs were unsalvagable due to motion blur from the rustling trees.  I also found that I had to buy a convertion programme to work on my raw files and that shooting in raw removed a lot of the colour saturation and contrast but this is after all a learning curve.  So without further ado feast your eyes on Tollymore set int he heart of the Mourne Mountains!


My official website is: http://www.elwoodprints.com were you can view many more examples of my work and order prints online.  I also write for and support: http://snaphappy.moonfruit.com a photographic community and contest site with many free articles and courses on photography.









Thursday, 21 July 2011

Malin Head Donegal

Malin Head Donegal is the most Northern Point of Ireland and is mentioned in the shipping forecast.  It provides fantastic vistas over much of the landscape and country.  The ocean battering against the rugged headland is tumultuous and amazing to behold.  Here are a few shots from up at the old Tower, Malin town itself and the 'wee house of malin' which is supposed to have special properties and people visit the shrine and place coins in the ancient stonework.


My Website:~ http://www.elwoodprints.com/ or Where you can email me for a specific print or buy online

Supporter of Snap Happy Photographic Community and Competition Site http://snaphappy.moonfruit.com/


Wednesday, 20 July 2011

Irish Pub

Hey all,

Another pic from our Donegal trip, I think this charismatic pub was in Clonmony?  Does that sound right?  Anyway the most depressing thing about Donegal was the number of 'Ghost Estates' we saw.  Developers picking a plot of land and building a whole new town there but no one has the money to invest so it was just beautiful but empty houses!  One thing I loved but don't have a picture of are the Irish phone boxes!  I know I'm weird but I'm a Doctor Who fan!  Anyway this is 'The High Stool' in Donegal and I just had to share!

Website:~ http://www.elwoodprints.com/ and Supporter of http://snaphappy.moonfruit.com/ Photographic community and contest site

Derilect House at Old Military Quarters Dunree Inishowen Donegal


One bright, sunny day, a rarity in Ireland, my best mate and I finally took a trip to Donegal, it was a bank holiday but we left REALLY *groan* early and hardly meet a single car.  Donegal is like the wilds of some foreign, countryside realm, beautiful vistas and turquoise waters.  We stopped at Dunree Fort and did some of the walks and then peered through broken, delapidated windows at the old residences, wondering what stories they ruddy walls held in secret?
We were disappointed that you couldn't actually get to the Lighthouse, private property, and envied the little cottage that it back unto!  Here are a few more pics from there, the OLD public conveniences! and  the amazing cliff top views.



Website:~ http://www.elwoodprints.com/ and Supports http://snaphappy.moonfruit.com/ Photographic Community and Contest site