15 July 2012

Throwing Tomatoes

Had so much fun in studio today, this little set up was very easy, but required quick reflexes!


14 July 2012

Millicent

Intrigued with the camera

Lounging about

Keeping my nose warm

Messy face after a beach walk

18 May 2012

Broadstairs

Broadstairs Beachfront

I took this shot of Broadstairs beach today on my phone using retrocamera as I think it adds to the old English seaside feel.  Broadstairs is a lovely Victorian town, which was popular with smugglers in the eighteenth century.  There are many tunnels and caves in the white, chalky cliffs where tobacco, alcohol and tea was stored due to the very high duty imposed.    Charles Dickens visited Broadstairs regularly and wrote David Copperfield here.  It is a beautiful little place that makes you want to buy an ice cream and ride on the merry-go-round.

5 May 2012

Sweeps Festival, Rochester

Today I went to Rochester – a great little town – to watch the Sweeps Festival.  This spring festival recreates the fun and laughter enjoyed by chimney sweeps on their traditional holiday – 1 May (Mayday), and began 400 years ago.  It was the only day of the year they could leave the sooty chimneys behind and have some fun and laughter drinking ale and being merry.  The Jack in the Green used to awaken at dawn on Blue Bell Hill in Chatham and lead the Morris Dancers through the city.  Today the festivities celebrate the arrival of spring with street dancing, folk music, drinking ale and cake stands and stalls.   Don’t let the green trees fool you though, it was 6 degrees!


Chimney Sweepers with sooty faces and feathers!


Street performers

Traditional dancing

Playing accordion and banjo

Performers with Jack in the Green behind

Performers with a beak mask made of wicker

These guys played fantastic music, had
 a really earthy, thunderous beat

Scary!  

The Morris Dancers' fool

Sweeps with Jack in the Green (yes, there's a
 person in there!)

Beautiful bread stall

Amazing cakes


And a few shots of historic Rochester.  Rochester is where Charles Dickens spent the later years of his life, and many of the buildings feature in his novels, notably The Pickwick Papers, and Great Expectations.  Each year there is a Dickens Festival in the town centre.


The High Street

The High Street

Rochester Castle (dates back to
 Norman times)


Rochester Cathedral is a Norman church and dates back to 604.  The bishopric is the second oldest in England after Canterbury.
Rochester Cathedral

Down in the crypt

The crypt

BBQ near the old city gate

30 April 2012

Fields

Sheppey Fields

I love driving around England and seeing beautiful fields.  It was really hazy when I took this, but the warmest day since I've been here (17 degrees!)  I love the yellow rape fields in the distance, and the trees too.  It feels like The Darling Buds of May.

17 April 2012

Dolci

These beautiful cakes were really enjoying themselves showing off to the passers by in L'Eto Caffe on Wardour Street in Soho.  So many pedestrians stopped to stare and point.  Their colours were exquisite, and they were all so fresh and delicately arranged.  Every now and then a waiter in a crisp, white apron would remove a tray and place a new selection in its place, or select a particularly proud cake for a customer to accompany their freshly roasted demitasse of espresso.

Beautiful cakes.  Copyright Rebecca Appleby

14 April 2012

Camden Town

Spent Friday the 13th in Camden Town.  Just as arty and alternative as ever - great food market, and especially enjoyed the Chicken Paella from Azafran for lunch.  You can buy anything with a Union Jack on it here.





The food markets



Yummy chicken paella

LPs, LPs, so many LPs

Union Jack jumper?

Or perhaps Union Jack leggings?

All photos copyright Rebecca Appleby

12 April 2012

My Tiffany's

In the film Breakfast at Tiffany’s, Holly Golightly spoke about having the mean reds.  These were days that were worse than just having the “blues”.  As she explained to Paul, “the blues are because you're getting fat or because it's been raining too long. You're just sad, that's all. The mean reds are horrible. Suddenly you're afraid and you don't know what you're afraid of...”

When Holly had the mean reds she went to Tiffany’s, because she said the quietness and proud look of the place calmed her down.  “Nothing very bad could ever happen to you there”, she said.  It was her safe place. 

Well, when in London one of my “Tiffany’s” has to be the National Gallery, and today, with a couple of hours to spare, I meandered down Charing Cross Road to Trafalgar Square and climbed the stone steps up to the Gallery.  I already knew what I wanted to see.  Amongst the hundreds of important paintings housed in the building are two so similar and so dissimilar, but which I adore and find so much comfort in.

The first is Mr and Mrs Andrews by Thomas Gainsborough (around 1750).  Now you just have to love Mr and Mrs Andrews.  Even if it’s to go up to one of the wardens in the gallery and say, “I’m looking for Mr and Mrs Andrews, where are they?”  In this painting the couple are newly married, but not yet with children.  In fact if you look closely you can see Gainsborough left Mrs Andrews’s lap unfinished, perhaps to paint in a child at a later time.  I wonder if that child ever came.  And they look so English, and so aristocratic.  Mr Andrews has just been shooting, and his dog looks up at him so faithfully.  They seem so solid, and so certain of their place, with their level gaze, and acres of land in the background.  I love the trees, the landscape and the clouds – all of which Gainsborough represented with such energy and presence, yet never seem to take over the main subject.

'Mr and Mrs Andrews' by Thomas Gainsborough

The second is The Baptism of Christ by Piero della Francesca (around 1450s).  Now, I know these can hardly be linked and of course in a way they can’t.  But look at the compositions.  Both balance towards the left-hand third by an imposing tree which in turn frames the main subjects.  But this work gives a different sense of calm and purpose.  The Italian hills in the background.  The dove above Christ which floats like one of the clouds.  The stream which ends at Christ’s feet.  This is all held in check by the geometry and perspective in the piece, of which Piero was a master.  Understanding and portraying such perspective and proportion was such a recent thing, and a key element in the works of the early Renaissance.


'The Baptism of Christ' by Piero della Francesca

I wonder if the National Gallery could start “Breakfasts” for when I wake up with the mean reds!

7 April 2012

Deal

I visited Deal today, which is a small seaside town near Ramsgate.  Bit of a mission to get there, but thankfully decided to catch the train this time which required two changes.  It is quite odd visiting seaside towns in the freezing cold!  Today's temperature is 6 deg C, and in the wind it is cripplingly cold, so cold in fact that when the train got delayed back through Ramsgate - everyone on the platform had a go at the poor station master.  Then we stood around, in true English style, discussing the wearing of woolly hats in April!


Deal waterfront - I love the Union Jack!  Copyright Rebecca Appleby




Very cold!  Copyright Rebecca Appleby




Pretty street in Deal  Copyright Rebecca Appleby



Boiled sweets in all shapes, sizes, colours and flavours  Copyright Rebecca Appleby



Beautiful fishing boats - red, white and blue!  Copyright Rebecca Appleby




More boats...  Copyright Rebecca Appleby 



Fishing nets Copyright Rebecca Appleby



When I asked the fishmonger if I could take a photo in this smelly but colourful fish shop, his response was, "It's a bloody mess now!  You should've been here at 5 o'clock!"


And the local produce Copyright Rebecca Appleby

5 April 2012

Motorways

Today I freaked out on the motorway.  Not something I enjoy doing, as I'm normally well prepared for my expeditions with maps, and memorised routes.  I had planned to take the A2 to Chatham - a road I knew well, as I'd taken this route to collect my rental car.  But, quel horreur, halfway there were signs saying 'road closed from Station Road due to gas repair work'.  I continued on in optimism (well, the signs were accompanied by pictures of heavy vehicles, so I thought my little i20 might sneak through).  Alas, not!  The man at the road closure sign helpfully told me what the signs already said, and suggested I take the M2 to Chatham which would be "a lot easier."  Ha ha.  Once I'd found the M2 (in a state of stress, as I had not memorised this route in my mind), I found myself amongst container trucks and speeding God knows what (didn't have time to see the car model - if it was a car, could've been a motorcyclist!)  Anyway, nightmare of nightmares, along comes a big roundabout (a roundabout on the M2, I thought?).  Turns out I wasn't on the M2, I was approaching the M2 from some other road, and I now had to make a decision.  On the big blue sign it read London (M2) on one side, and Channel Tunnel (M2) on the other.  I had fleeting visions of both negotiating Piccadilly Circus and sitting on a train in my i20 in under the channel.  Trying to work out which was worse, I eventually caved in, went right round the roundabout, avoided the M2, went back on the funny road home again.

4 April 2012

Sheerness-on-Sea

Sheerness-on-Sea is a little town south east of London.  Today, was sunny but the wind blistering cold on my fingers as I stood on the sea wall and took this photo.  In its hey day, it was a magical little English seaside town, full of all the quaintness of candy floss and strange fair ground rides ... and the Tantra Nightclub!



The seafront  Copyright Rebecca Appleby




Tantra Nightclub!  Copyright Rebecca Appleby