Thanks a lot for watching and for all the lovely comments!! Obviously, this style of photography is so different for me and a few of you have commented saying you can see similarities to James Popsys’ style - I absolutely love his photography and have definitely been inspired by his work somewhat! Please check out his channel youtube.com/@jamespopsysphoto?si=0rMBTj6zu5UiGGyC Some of you seem to love it, and some hate it! Either way, I’m really enjoying the experiment. Let me know what you think!
Henry - this is a really good video. I love it because of three main reasons. 1) you are showing the value in questioning long held and previously untested assumptions such as “this place is boring”. 2) You are clearly demonstrating that the photographer’s eye sees art, beauty, and interest that others can not see (it’s an important point that our photography literally reshapes our brain to enhance our ability to see). 3) Intentionally or not the way in which you have documented your town is so interesting that I suspect that many photographers will want to visit for a day or three! Thank you for sharing your thoughts. Best wishes Stephen
The word "kitsch" indeed comes from German, and its origins are somewhat debated, but it generally dates back to the 19th century. In German, "kitsch" originally referred to artwork that was considered to be in bad taste, overly sentimental, or mass-produced to appeal to popular tastes rather than artistic merit.
I can't believe you live in Morecambe. I've been watching your videos for a while now, and you live in my old hometown! I grew up there in the 70's and 80's. I recently returned to see family a couple of months ago - I was in my element walking the streets at dawn, revisiting and shooting some of my old haunts. It hasn't changed much - the same shops and businesses, the same arcades, the same hotels, only looking a little worse for wear! I'm glad you see your hometown has some gems to photograph. I'm looking forward to returning sometime soon to continue my photographic exploration of my old hometown.
As always another great video, Henry. Here in Germany, ‘Kitsch’ is synonymous with ‘bad taste’. When someone fills their living room with souvenirs from their holiday destinations, such as the unspeakable snow globes with the Eiffel Tower, Statue of Liberty or the Kölner Dom (Cologne Cathedral). Or the garden full of garden gnomes. Of course, there is also the aspect of irony, so it is not always easy to judge the intention behind such decorations. Obscene garden gnomes to provoke the stuffy neighbour or something. Speaking of which, I liked ‘The Bay’ (here in Germany in the German dubbed version) and the Morecambe area and I am now amazed that a lot of the exterior shots in the series were probably actually filmed in Morecambe.
Loved the whole setup of the video Henry, from the choice of music to the way you edited the images, about twice a year I have a walk around my local town of Hexham, and each time I spot something that I have not captured before, top video
Great video - it's been great to see how you have used a slightly different style for your Morecambe shots. It's true that Morecambe does have some bad bits, but there are some great bits too; and tonnes to shoot for any photographer who is interested in landscapes or documentary or people shots. You've just made me realize that I haven't been back to Morecambe since May this year, so I am overdue a visit. The big $64,000 question is choosing what to shoot in November or December? The tourists in their overcoats, the low light across the bay or the Kitschness of the bright shop-fronts? Or do we have a modest little snack in Bruccianni's or the full (and expensive) afternoon tea at the Midland hotel? Spoilt for choice!
Good old Morecambe. Every two or three years I hop on the train from my boring town of Keighley and head to Morecambe where I'm usually inspired to take lots of photographs of all the things you saw in this video. I usually do it in the winter when it's freezing, my favourite café is nearly always closed, and the trains back home are only every three hours so you've got to be careful like with the tides or you'll be stuck and miserable, but there's something about Morecambe that keeps me going back. What I regret is not taking photos there when I was a kid in the 1970s and the kitsch was off the scale.
Thoroughly enjoyed this video, I love street photography so your video inspired me to look locally because I live in a west country seaside town. Lisa x
That’s so funny that I came across your video. We recently went on holiday near Morecambe and I took an old camera with me rather than use my phone and we walked up and down Morecombe we even went into the market where I purchased some vinyl. Great videos keep up the good work. 👍🏼
It is amazing as I was just thinking about this topic the other day. I grew up in New England in a small town. I remember thinking about the fall and dreading it because of all the leaves that needed to be raked up and the upcoming snow piles that needed to be shoveled. Now I would love to be there taking fall pictures of the mountains and all the different colors.
Nice video, thanks! Interesting choice, the washed out look. It's maybe a third of a stop too light for my tastes but still nice. However I would probably have upped the saturation (and/or vibrancy / clarity) for the more kitschy shots, but that's just me! I've subscribed so will be checking out your landscape stuff.
My local town is one of the most deprived in England - Whitehaven! I know the feeling of thinking it is boring & uninteresting & not worth bothering with but it is one of the best Georgian towns in England. It has a harbour, a marina, some fine buildings & industrial heritage but sadly, like many others so run down at the minute. But there are beaches, cliffs, a bird sanctuary, & of course the fells close by for inspiration. Just a matter of trying to see things through fresh eyes and a different perspective: macro instead of landscape for example. Love your dedication and also your trips with Ian Worth.
You missed out the best bit of pure kitch in Morecambe, Aunty Wainwrights on Euston Rd :) I have been shooting Kitch in Lancaster for years. Its a great way to reset :) great video :)
Loved the vid, staying in Morecambe for Saturday night this weekend, lots of memories from my childhood holidays there plus my wifes parents lived in Bare in their later years
I love this week's vlog Henry! Found your thoughts on street photography from your local area really interesting, having had some similar thoughts myself about my own "backyard" which I have just started to appreciate. Familiarity can be exploited to bring out some really interesting images once you put your mind to it. But I've never thought about editing style whilst taking the shots so that sounds really exciting.
Henry, I certainly enjoyed that, and the term Kitsch is very apt. I found myself in your hometown , on a dark, brooding and damp February day earlier this year. I made the decision to shoot in mono , and got some cracking images. There were some buildings there, that were just so vibrantly coloured , that I also had to shoot in colour. What’s interesting is that although we did the same walk, that we saw totally different images, and have both come away pleased. It’s started me off on a project of shooting the more traditional Victorian railway seaside towns out of season and it’s a great hunting ground. Skegness, Mablethorpe, Hunstanton, withensea, Bridlington, Scarborough, Around the Wirral and Merseyside , Barmouth, Heasham, and even Silloth. There’s plenty more and many revisits to come. Keep it up Henry, there always interesting in your weekly posts.
Kitschy greetings from Germany here. I came across your channel a couple of hours ago, watching your video in which you were wandering around that beautiful landscape testing the OM-5 for the first time, and I was amazed about everything you said, the way you said it, the way you pronounced "waterfall", and your enthusiasm for photography and light and landscapes in general. Just a pleasure to listen to while at the same time getting tons of information on how to improve my own way of taking pictures. Amazing. Then I watched this very video here. I got Morrissey's "Everyday Is Like Sunday" vibes from your hometown, and I mean that in the best way: I'd love to walk around taking it all in. I live in Berlin and I'd like to have that space, that water, that sky. And those sweet little shops. At least for a holiday. I really should consider going to the UK again. I've only been there once, in London, before Covid and Brexit. For now I want to take your pieces of advice and find interesting things to shoot wherever I go. Anyways, I just ordered your beautiful calendar and I am looking forward to watching many of your other videos. You are incredibly inspiring. Cheers!
Ok, it's never boring mate as long as you're seeing and clicking! I get excited seeing your images in this video, they are valid and completely legitimate images! Simple, graphic, a bit bleak or strange but VERY exciting. When I do what you're doing, I spend my time thoroughly excited. Man, when you click the shutter and you know/hope you've gotten a good image and then when you get back to the studio/darkroom and see and edit your images, the excitement only builds. There are many quite fine images here. Thanks and well done.
I’ve not been to Morecambe since I was a kid and I’ve just hit 52 a few weeks back, I think it’s because it’s always been considered more for the elderly if staying for a holiday, we got bored when we were there as we were with a summer play group for a few days in a caravan. If you go to Blackpool, the Caravan sites are quite far out but geared more to families or say North Wales where there’s so much more happening. Now I feel I want to have a day there, more after watching your channel Henry, I remember an earlier video, think it was during or at the end of Covid as you were shooting close to home, on the beach again and pointing towards the Lakes where you would usually be, I may even go just to get some seascapes then hit the Lakes or Yorkshire afterwards, just go on a day when the high tide is early enough. Always a pleasure watching you Henry, your energy inspires me, you remind me a lot of Mali Davis, you both love what you do with no excuses. Keep it up!!!
It's great that you're trying different types of photography. It's adding different skill sets to your arsenal. When people overlook the beauty of their hometown, this is called "place blindness" or "familiarity blindness"-a term that can be used for other things too. This occurs when people become so accustomed to their everyday surroundings that they stop noticing or appreciating the beauty and uniqueness of these places. Whereas it might have picturesque aspects that might captivate someone new to the area. Photography is great in that we can visit any place and find something beautiful. After all, beauty is subjective.
Liked what you have done here Henry. Made a nice refreshing change and felt light and cheerfull to watch, think tne music helped the jolly mood of the video. Just shows theres plenty to shoot if you look for it and even more options if you post process in different styles. Bet it made a nice change for you with it all on your doorstep but still can't beat your landscape shots with trademark clouds. Rignt, now to order that calendar
Well Henry, really enjoyed that one, it took me back many years to days when I visited Morecambe and raced karts at Heysham for a while. The street photography of the blingy northern seaside shops etc was great. I thought when you mentioned the street shots from Tenerife you were going to shoot more litter bins but thankfully not. Great vlog as always and thanks again from Ireland for taking me back 50 years. Keep them coming Terry
It’s tacky… or kitsch… until it’s gone. Then it becomes nostalgia, is missed, and are glad someone thought to document it. Loved your white washed vision. Btw, now I know where some scenes of my fave mystery series were filmed. Great tour of your seaside.
Whenever I want to photograph a building, statue etc, there's always a car in the way. But my main interest is photographing classic or custom cars, but then there's always a person in the way. One of life's little mysteries.
This was a kitschy cool fun video. It’s always nice to see you step out of your landscape comfort zone. The somewhat overexposed images & the 40mm focal length definitely has that “Popsys” feel. And I mean that in the best way. Unfortunately for me, I can’t seem to make it work the way y’all do. Finally, as much as I hate the word, “kitsch” probably is the best description for those shops. Seems like most seaside businesses lean towards that look. “Schmaltzy” (extremely or excessively sentimental music or art) can work, too, I think. Anyway, fun video. 👍🏻
🤣🤣🤣 Books Books I saw that a mile aways in your wide shot! Glad you had the same idea. I would have gone vertical and removed a lot of the distractions and kept in the bottom right of the frame the double yellow lines in an arc.
Henry, I recall asking you some time ago about showing us a bit more of your hometown of Morecambe. This video adventure has been a revealing and satisfying tour. Thank you! Where I live in eastern Pennsylvania's Lehigh Valley area, there are dozens of small towns and villages - each with unique names, particular beauty, and historic charm. You, my friend, have just inspired me to go out and capture those local gems with my camera. (Places such as Emmaus, Macungie, Jim Thorpe, Hellertown, Bangor, Trexler, Limeport, and Alburtis, to name a few). Wow! I've got my work cut out for me! I am totally excited to get started! Thank you, thank you!
I live in a town of 315 people. Everything is closed and people are in their houses by 5pm, and no one is out and about on weekends. Your town is far from boring comparatively. I do, however appreciate the mentality that there is always something to photograph even in areas with not so much going on.
Morecambe is lovely. So long as you avoid looking east 👀 The overexposed look doesn't do it for me. But each to their own. I commute along the prom every day, and no two days are the same. Even the wild windy grey days have a beauty to them. Heysham head is interesting. And the bright murals are lovely.
Thanks for an interesting video. From Australia, your hometown has lots of character. I enjoy the processing. Light and airy.Black and white grunge would work too.
Seaside Kitsch?? Funny that you should do a video of your home town as I have in the past thought of doing projects based on my home city, but never executed. One, which to be honest I have missed now, and I am so annoyed with myself, was to photograph, the city of my childhood, as I remembered it. Sadly, a lot of those areas no longer exist, and I only have myself to blame for missing the opportunity, what a lovely photobook that would have made. My latest idea though, and I will do this one, is to shoot my home city, but in the rain, in both daylight and at night. I just thought that it might be interesting, and in the wet should create added interest with reflections and more drama. when will I start this, most likely in the autumn! Have a great weekend.
I have a similar home location but on a much smaller scale and I’m finding improvisation is the key, I tried minimalistic and I seem to have exhausted my options so maybe a change in post processing would help although I love vibrant colours so that’s going to be hard to change. My other option which I’ve been considering for quite a while is buying the dedicated Pentax Monochrome DSLR as I love working with strong contrast.
As a streetphotographer, I'd love to visit your hometown! Seems to be tons of photos to be had. Beauty shots by the way and loving that softer color tone on the images 😊
I love this video - lived in Morecambe for a short time 50 years ago, and hated it! Recently, I appreciate the town and really like that you've captured the vibe!
Spot on Henry, Kitsch is a German noun meaning “trash, rubbish; slapdash, pretentious, sentimental, or tacky. A very versatile word. I love the Midland Hotel. One of the best examples of the 1930's architectural style and a great place to stay in!
Lovely video. Tbh you should use your in-camera settings to your advantage when doing these kinds of shoots, especially with the "James Popsys"-style. Even though these settings only affect the LCD and JPEG they will help you see what you imagine right away, on the LCD. I've actually started shooting RAW+JPEG (on my OM-5) for my travel photos but I keep the same settings on even when I plan to post process, when doing more "serious" photography. The settings I'm talking about is Gradation, Highlight / Shadow control and I also go with Custom WB at 5400k to get the WB consistant throughout the whole day. Let me know if you'd like to give it a shot.
Apparently we all live in Boringtown ... 😀 My town is a lot like yours, 'cept no sea, no mountains, no coast, no tourists (as far as I can tell) ... LOL
Look at you, getting your street photography on! I'm lucky. Spent the past 18 years in Alameda, California, a city with a small town feel with views of San Francisco Bay and its birds on one side and the bustling Port of Oakland on the other, interesting 19th century homes, a decommissioned Naval Air Station that is finally being redeveloped and plenty to shoot if you walk out the door and look around, even if it's just what's currently blooming in your neighbors' gardens. In the throes of final pack out for a move to a small community south of here in the Santa Cruz Mountains where I will be surrounded by forests of coastal redwoods and a 25 minute drive to the Pacific Ocean, so I can't wait to get settled into the new place and explore with camera in hand. I'm going through photography withdrawal here! Thanks, as always for the adventure.
Sometimes i go around my hometown { well, once a week ) But to be different i set a shutter speed of 1/13 th. Mostly overexposed. I have some great keeper pictures. They are different.
The 'washed out' look works. A lot of your processing here reminded me of James Popsys' preferred style too. You have a photographers eye mate, so when you engage it you'll see photos. It's just very different from landscapes and I've enjoyed all you street/urban vids. If you don't mind Henry, let me have a bit of a rave here: We all enjoy looking at historic photos of our towns and cities. No one dislikes them whether B&W, Sepia, or colour. The only reason a lot of those exist is because photography was new, and the people setting up studios photographed everything for the joy of it. No one is documenting our lifestyles in these small towns and cities these days they way they inadvertently did, and it's a shame. The future will thank anyone who leaves behind a record of all the 'boring and kitch' parts of England. I regularly do this in my street photography, and sometimes just to document new buildings, or juxtapositions between old and new. I will eventually hand all these to the state library for their archives for future generations and I hope others will do the same. End of rave 🙂
The colours from your video camera, are much more appealing , than the washed out edit to me. But it is interesting, and inspiring to go and shoot the very familiar. Thank you!
Great video Henry. I always take my camera on my daily 7 mile dog walk. It takes me across a common, along a canal tow path and over marshland full of wildlife. Always something different to shoot. Calendar ordered. 😊
I need more like buttons ❤🎉 always look forward to Friday lunch times when I sit back and watch the latest vid, and what an absolute treat this week Henry 😊 I spent so much time in Morecambe as a child and lived there briefly 24 years ago, and I can see nothing has changed 😂 you really did a fabulous job finding all those beautiful images, and I think the final images really capture the "kitch" you also mentioned, and the feeling of Morecambe on a rare lovely sunny day in summer 🌞 thank you for keeping pushing your boundaries and experimenting, and for taking us with you ❤very inspiring ❤ now I'm craving fish and chips with a cuppa 😂
I stopped off in Morecombe for a few hours on my way up to the Lake District. I didn't see you, but kept my eye out for the 'local celebrity' :) The best fun I had was taking photos of people trying to do the Eric Morecombe pose next to the statue whilst having their photograph taken. So many people stopped and attempted it, some with more success than others. I did get one of my favourite photos of all time that day of a lady that nailed it. Such a fun way to pass time.
Hi Henry, the word kitsch is also used in Dutch. We even have a programme called 'Between Art and Kitsch' (literally translated); a programme where people can visit experts with all kinds of objects - paintings, porcelain, coins, very old things, anything - to find out how old it is, whether there's a story behind it, whether it's worth anything and whether it's art or kitsch. So here the word is used more for the latter, is it really art or is it kitsch. Then the word seems negative, but there are quite a few people who love kitsch. And anyway, it is subjective 🙃. Thanks for another fun video!
Henry, we were taking a break in Grange Over Sands a couple of years back, the guy in the cottage next door heard us talking about visiting Morecambe for the day and told us not to bother (bit of a dump according to him). I don't agree at all, it was a great place, sure it has its grubby bits, but every town has. The people were lovely, loads of photo opportunities, I got some great shots from inside the wonderful super cluttered bookshop, I asked first of course. Eric Morecambe, Tyson Fury, Graham Hicks and Henry Turner.....great little town!
Thank you for this video Henry. You've inspired me to go out in my area, which I'd stopped doing awhile ago because it was boring and I'd photographed everything. Well done!
Hi Henry really enjoyed the video loved seeing the local area and I know what you mean about struggling to see good good compositions in your local area, I think it's time you revisited the idea about a exhibition of images from the local area that I think you talked about putting on before lockdown, keep up the good work.
I need to get out and do this! And nice to see a sunny day in Morecambe it’s been a bit rubbish today! Not far from my house up near the battery. Great vid Henry 👍
Really enjoyed that thanks. I view my home town exactly the same (Southport). I will look at it differently and give it a go. Loved the post process results as well. Can you share the settings for the washed out look at some stage. Might even pop up the coast and give old Morecambe a go👍. There is so much on that coast if you apply what you have done here.
The ice cream van. I would have liked it better with the staggered shadow of the light pole as a double shadow feature excluding the light pole as seen @ 19:05 in your video and likely as a vertical again including the arc of the retaining wall and pavers in the foreground.
this video is bringing back some memories for me! I actually spent a large chunk of my childhood not too far from here, and we came to morecambe quite often. The last time I was there was maybe 10 years ago, so It's so cool to see places I recognise from my time there :D My family were recently talking about it after my Grandma died and we found a picture we took of her with the Eric Morecambe statue.
The minute you said Tacky I said Kitch and it's something I love - Vegas (at least before it became reasonably formulaic in the last 10 years) was the ultimate in kitch. My wife and I drove route 66 this year and the "kitch" elements were among the things I wanted to photograph more than anything. Wholeheartedly agree with the beauty in it! Great video, thank you for sharing your approach to photographing something outside of what many would consider you to be known for!
I love your Kodachrome look to your shots like a 1970's holiday snap, on a Kodak instamatic. The place looks like North Shields about 1998, before money was thrown at the place, a bleak desert populated by sparse shiny things, like a funfair set up on a salt flat, with the rides separated by a quarter of a mile. I can think of many places in the UK like this, The Idler published a book called 'The Idler Book of Crap Towns.' My home town of Hull was number one, beating the truly awful Gateshead to the title, I think it won on smell personally. My pick is Grimsby and the co-joined twin of Cleethorpes, possibly followed by sunny Loftus on the Yorkshire coast.
Just goes to show, you don't need to travel very far or wait until you're on holiday to get out and take photos. I can talk! I don't even do it myself! But thanks Henry for the inspiration; totally different to what you normally do, and yes, very much like Roman Fox and James Popsys.
My wife, myself and our 2 dogs love Morecambe, Don't dis Morecambe, its lovely in the sunshine, and the light can be lovely. Having said that, I've been down there today in the pouring rain, took a monochrome only camera but the rain was so heavy I didn't bother getting it out of the bag! Will try again tomorrow.. P.S. Seen Tyson many a time out running on the prom, he's always been a gent and said hello!
I didn’t mind your shots in this video, Henry, but found the whites a little muddied. Have you tried a ¼ black mist filter for the middle of day shots? I find I’m using one a lot on my OM5. Seems to bring out the highlights, yet subdue them at the same time. Great for contrasty shots. I seem to be stuck to my local area these days, and find more intimate nature shots of more interest than landscapes. The word, Kitsch, is German.
Hello Henry! Well done you! Something I've mentioned before and as well posted to Thomas Heaton, among others I can't remember, Nigel Danson and Ian Worth and Gavin Hardcastle perhaps, is this: After 50 years doing this I always go back to an exercise my father always did when he'd move from wide open spaces (landscapes let's say) to an urban setting, especially one's home town that as you say we're so familiar with that we take it for granted, give yourself a task of photographing in a limited area. This forces you to look in a more focused and intimate way, smaller and seeking graphic motifs. Some of your photographs in this video are quite fine, and some would be better if you moved in closer and focused on the graphic. Nonetheless, what you're doing is something I always do when I come in from wide open spaces or if I need a kick in the ASS, I'll begin looking for tiny little moments and compositions and that always refocuses my seeing. Bravo Mr. Turner, you're the real deal and I gladdens my heart to see you exploring the discipline in this way. A very normal exercise but not at all insignificant in how it focuses the eye. 🙏
Struggling in my hometown as well, as the centre is very small, and over the years I have probably done every building at all angles., I can think of. But I try to have a camera , even if its just my phone, in my hand every time I venture down there. Becaouse some times it gets very photogenic if the light or the clouds are right.
I get your point and I love your images. I don't know that I'd have seen any or all of them to be honest. But let me tell you about OUR boring town. We have two traffic lights and the only water we're near is the kids splash pad in the "town square" on the main street. Our tallest building is two stories and the only architectural interest is a restaurant with a glass arc over the entrance. Oddly enough, our local photography club left us with a summer theme challenge, and I finally landed on "Welcome to Stellarton." I'm trying for 15 - 20 images to show, but WOW - what a boring town we have! 🙂
Hi Henry this is one of my all time favourite videos, I live in Seaham Harbour and much like you I have walked around bored stupid even though I love it. We have good parts, bad parts and bloody awful parts. I know I am not seeing things in my home coastal town as my mates come very regular for photos.
It's kinda like time travel in a way, you have all those Victorian, Edwardian and art deco buildings, and they have modern 20th century architecture stuffed in them or retrofitted which is slowly falling apart, the best example is where army surplus shop is the is missing and the shop are board it up but see the beauty of the thing.
have a look at Craig Roberts (E6) photography, He deliberately shoots the boring stuff and gets some really unusual images yet vvery interesting moreso than the usual . Good to see you doing something different. That 12-40 is a great lens
Henry, enjoyed every second of this video. It's not always the grand landscape is it? I'm not sure if you really know how good you are at this style. I would love a collaboration with James Popsys somewhere. Can you tee that up maybe? You have a photo book right here, with these images. Can't praise you enough.
Thanks a lot for watching and for all the lovely comments!! Obviously, this style of photography is so different for me and a few of you have commented saying you can see similarities to James Popsys’ style - I absolutely love his photography and have definitely been inspired by his work somewhat!
Please check out his channel youtube.com/@jamespopsysphoto?si=0rMBTj6zu5UiGGyC
Some of you seem to love it, and some hate it! Either way, I’m really enjoying the experiment. Let me know what you think!
Love it.
@@davidskinner274thanks mate!!
Love it!!!😊
I love the look of these photos, they have a really nostalgic feeling to them and make Morecambe look quite exotic.
Thanks mate!!
We live in Morecambe and think it's a great place........... SO we'll be looking out for you 👊👊 see you soon
Ah, Morecambe, my old stomping ground. I remember when they were refurbishing the Midland Hotel. I will always have some love for Morecambe.
Henry - this is a really good video. I love it because of three main reasons. 1) you are showing the value in questioning long held and previously untested assumptions such as “this place is boring”. 2) You are clearly demonstrating that the photographer’s eye sees art, beauty, and interest that others can not see (it’s an important point that our photography literally reshapes our brain to enhance our ability to see). 3) Intentionally or not the way in which you have documented your town is so interesting that I suspect that many photographers will want to visit for a day or three! Thank you for sharing your thoughts. Best wishes Stephen
What a great video! I stayed in Morecambe once for around a month, and I only saw Tyson once in his car! Do you often see him running down the Bay?
Yes I do!
@@HenryTurnerphoto Ah that's awesome man! How did I not see him lol. Does he normally go in the mornings? Maybe that's why
The word "kitsch" indeed comes from German, and its origins are somewhat debated, but it generally dates back to the 19th century. In German, "kitsch" originally referred to artwork that was considered to be in bad taste, overly sentimental, or mass-produced to appeal to popular tastes rather than artistic merit.
Appreciate that mate!
Your editing here reminds me of James Popsys and Roman Fox. Great stuff!
I can't believe you live in Morecambe. I've been watching your videos for a while now, and you live in my old hometown! I grew up there in the 70's and 80's. I recently returned to see family a couple of months ago - I was in my element walking the streets at dawn, revisiting and shooting some of my old haunts. It hasn't changed much - the same shops and businesses, the same arcades, the same hotels, only looking a little worse for wear! I'm glad you see your hometown has some gems to photograph. I'm looking forward to returning sometime soon to continue my photographic exploration of my old hometown.
Thank you for teaching me how to see. I completely love the post editing style. Again, teaching me to edit consistently throughout a shoot. 👍
As always another great video, Henry. Here in Germany, ‘Kitsch’ is synonymous with ‘bad taste’. When someone fills their living room with souvenirs from their holiday destinations, such as the unspeakable snow globes with the Eiffel Tower, Statue of Liberty or the Kölner Dom (Cologne Cathedral). Or the garden full of garden gnomes. Of course, there is also the aspect of irony, so it is not always easy to judge the intention behind such decorations. Obscene garden gnomes to provoke the stuffy neighbour or something.
Speaking of which, I liked ‘The Bay’ (here in Germany in the German dubbed version) and the Morecambe area and I am now amazed that a lot of the exterior shots in the series were probably actually filmed in Morecambe.
Was in Morecombe in June, I love the place. Took lots of photos along the front.
Loved the whole setup of the video Henry, from the choice of music to the way you edited the images, about twice a year I have a walk around my local town of Hexham, and each time I spot something that I have not captured before, top video
Many thanks!
Great video - it's been great to see how you have used a slightly different style for your Morecambe shots.
It's true that Morecambe does have some bad bits, but there are some great bits too; and tonnes to shoot for any photographer who is interested in landscapes or documentary or people shots.
You've just made me realize that I haven't been back to Morecambe since May this year, so I am overdue a visit.
The big $64,000 question is choosing what to shoot in November or December? The tourists in their overcoats, the low light across the bay or the Kitschness of the bright shop-fronts? Or do we have a modest little snack in Bruccianni's or the full (and expensive) afternoon tea at the Midland hotel? Spoilt for choice!
Another great video, the post processing really suits the images.
The Midland Hotel does a lovely afternoon tea.
Calendar ordered 😀
Class, thanks so much for the support 👍🏼🙏🏻
Good old Morecambe. Every two or three years I hop on the train from my boring town of Keighley and head to Morecambe where I'm usually inspired to take lots of photographs of all the things you saw in this video. I usually do it in the winter when it's freezing, my favourite café is nearly always closed, and the trains back home are only every three hours so you've got to be careful like with the tides or you'll be stuck and miserable, but there's something about Morecambe that keeps me going back. What I regret is not taking photos there when I was a kid in the 1970s and the kitsch was off the scale.
Well done! Funky music, buzzing location and great snaps. This is my kind of photography. Shoot what you see Henry 👍
I’m off to Morecambe tomorrow for the week ( got a caravan there ) always enjoy a walk through the town and then grab a sunset at Heysham
Enjoyed your walk about. Was really hoping you would take the book shop shot straight on from the side street! Different tricks😊
Henry, looks like your photos are deliberately over exposed,! You been watching James Popsy😂
Yes, definitely deliberate in post! And love James' stuff, definitely inspired/influenced by it!
James would blow out the skies more and more contrast generally , and emphasising turqoise and oranges. So distinctive, his style 😃
Oh and random street signs 😅
Thoroughly enjoyed this video, I love street photography so your video inspired me to look locally because I live in a west country seaside town. Lisa x
That’s so funny that I came across your video. We recently went on holiday near Morecambe and I took an old camera with me rather than use my phone and we walked up and down Morecombe we even went into the market where I purchased some vinyl. Great videos keep up the good work. 👍🏼
I really can see Mr Popsys influence in these images...I love the images. Great to see a famous photographer try something different.
Many thanks!
Great content and delivery as always Henry, thank you.
Much appreciated!
Loved this video gives me James Popsys vibes
Thank you mate, love James’ work so that’s defo a compliment!
I worked in Morecambe a couple of years ago, filming for ‘The Bay’. We shot the scene at the old FrontierLand.
It is amazing as I was just thinking about this topic the other day. I grew up in New England in a small town. I remember thinking about the fall and dreading it because of all the leaves that needed to be raked up and the upcoming snow piles that needed to be shoveled. Now I would love to be there taking fall pictures of the mountains and all the different colors.
Nice video, thanks! Interesting choice, the washed out look. It's maybe a third of a stop too light for my tastes but still nice. However I would probably have upped the saturation (and/or vibrancy / clarity) for the more kitschy shots, but that's just me! I've subscribed so will be checking out your landscape stuff.
Thanks for watching!
My local town is one of the most deprived in England - Whitehaven! I know the feeling of thinking it is boring & uninteresting & not worth bothering with but it is one of the best Georgian towns in England. It has a harbour, a marina, some fine buildings & industrial heritage but sadly, like many others so run down at the minute. But there are beaches, cliffs, a bird sanctuary, & of course the fells close by for inspiration. Just a matter of trying to see things through fresh eyes and a different perspective: macro instead of landscape for example. Love your dedication and also your trips with Ian Worth.
You missed out the best bit of pure kitch in Morecambe, Aunty Wainwrights on Euston Rd :) I have been shooting Kitch in Lancaster for years. Its a great way to reset :) great video :)
Loved the vid, staying in Morecambe for Saturday night this weekend, lots of memories from my childhood holidays there plus my wifes parents lived in Bare in their later years
And again thank you Henry! I've preordered my calendar as usual. Look forward to seeing what you have to offer us.
Amazing. Thanks a lot as always mate!
I love this week's vlog Henry! Found your thoughts on street photography from your local area really interesting, having had some similar thoughts myself about my own "backyard" which I have just started to appreciate. Familiarity can be exploited to bring out some really interesting images once you put your mind to it. But I've never thought about editing style whilst taking the shots so that sounds really exciting.
Henry, I certainly enjoyed that, and the term Kitsch is very apt. I found myself in your hometown , on a dark, brooding and damp February day earlier this year. I made the decision to shoot in mono , and got some cracking images. There were some buildings there, that were just so vibrantly coloured , that I also had to shoot in colour. What’s interesting is that although we did the same walk, that we saw totally different images, and have both come away pleased. It’s started me off on a project of shooting the more traditional Victorian railway seaside towns out of season and it’s a great hunting ground. Skegness, Mablethorpe, Hunstanton, withensea, Bridlington, Scarborough, Around the Wirral and Merseyside , Barmouth, Heasham, and even Silloth. There’s plenty more and many revisits to come. Keep it up Henry, there always interesting in your weekly posts.
Kitschy greetings from Germany here. I came across your channel a couple of hours ago, watching your video in which you were wandering around that beautiful landscape testing the OM-5 for the first time, and I was amazed about everything you said, the way you said it, the way you pronounced "waterfall", and your enthusiasm for photography and light and landscapes in general. Just a pleasure to listen to while at the same time getting tons of information on how to improve my own way of taking pictures. Amazing.
Then I watched this very video here. I got Morrissey's "Everyday Is Like Sunday" vibes from your hometown, and I mean that in the best way: I'd love to walk around taking it all in. I live in Berlin and I'd like to have that space, that water, that sky. And those sweet little shops. At least for a holiday. I really should consider going to the UK again. I've only been there once, in London, before Covid and Brexit. For now I want to take your pieces of advice and find interesting things to shoot wherever I go.
Anyways, I just ordered your beautiful calendar and I am looking forward to watching many of your other videos. You are incredibly inspiring. Cheers!
@@sebzematik thanks for the comment! And thanks so much for the support with the calendar purchase!!
Ok, it's never boring mate as long as you're seeing and clicking! I get excited seeing your images in this video, they are valid and completely legitimate images! Simple, graphic, a bit bleak or strange but VERY exciting. When I do what you're doing, I spend my time thoroughly excited. Man, when you click the shutter and you know/hope you've gotten a good image and then when you get back to the studio/darkroom and see and edit your images, the excitement only builds. There are many quite fine images here. Thanks and well done.
I’ve not been to Morecambe since I was a kid and I’ve just hit 52 a few weeks back, I think it’s because it’s always been considered more for the elderly if staying for a holiday, we got bored when we were there as we were with a summer play group for a few days in a caravan. If you go to Blackpool, the Caravan sites are quite far out but geared more to families or say North Wales where there’s so much more happening.
Now I feel I want to have a day there, more after watching your channel Henry, I remember an earlier video, think it was during or at the end of Covid as you were shooting close to home, on the beach again and pointing towards the Lakes where you would usually be, I may even go just to get some seascapes then hit the Lakes or Yorkshire afterwards, just go on a day when the high tide is early enough.
Always a pleasure watching you Henry, your energy inspires me, you remind me a lot of Mali Davis, you both love what you do with no excuses.
Keep it up!!!
It's great that you're trying different types of photography. It's adding different skill sets to your arsenal. When people overlook the beauty of their hometown, this is called "place blindness" or "familiarity blindness"-a term that can be used for other things too. This occurs when people become so accustomed to their everyday surroundings that they stop noticing or appreciating the beauty and uniqueness of these places. Whereas it might have picturesque aspects that might captivate someone new to the area. Photography is great in that we can visit any place and find something beautiful. After all, beauty is subjective.
Liked what you have done here Henry.
Made a nice refreshing change and felt light and cheerfull to watch, think tne music helped the jolly mood of the video. Just shows theres plenty to shoot if you look for it and even more options if you post process in different styles.
Bet it made a nice change for you with it all on your doorstep but still can't beat your landscape shots with trademark clouds.
Rignt, now to order that calendar
Thanks mate - yes very nice to do something different! Got your order, thanks so much for the support David!
Well Henry, really enjoyed that one, it took me back many years to days when I visited Morecambe and raced karts at Heysham for a while.
The street photography of the blingy northern seaside shops etc was great. I thought when you mentioned the street shots from Tenerife you were going to shoot more litter bins but thankfully not. Great vlog as always and thanks again from Ireland for taking me back 50 years.
Keep them coming
Terry
I live in Cleveleys just north of Blackpool and our most photographed things are Marys Shell and the Troll.
It’s tacky… or kitsch… until it’s gone. Then it becomes nostalgia, is missed, and are glad someone thought to document it. Loved your white washed vision. Btw, now I know where some scenes of my fave mystery series were filmed. Great tour of your seaside.
Whenever I want to photograph a building, statue etc, there's always a car in the way. But my main interest is photographing classic or custom cars, but then there's always a person in the way.
One of life's little mysteries.
This was a kitschy cool fun video. It’s always nice to see you step out of your landscape comfort zone.
The somewhat overexposed images & the 40mm focal length definitely has that “Popsys” feel. And I mean that in the best way. Unfortunately for me, I can’t seem to make it work the way y’all do.
Finally, as much as I hate the word, “kitsch” probably is the best description for those shops. Seems like most seaside businesses lean towards that look. “Schmaltzy” (extremely or excessively sentimental music or art) can work, too, I think.
Anyway, fun video. 👍🏻
🤣🤣🤣 Books Books I saw that a mile aways in your wide shot! Glad you had the same idea. I would have gone vertical and removed a lot of the distractions and kept in the bottom right of the frame the double yellow lines in an arc.
Henry, I recall asking you some time ago about showing us a bit more of your hometown of Morecambe. This video adventure has been a revealing and satisfying tour. Thank you!
Where I live in eastern Pennsylvania's Lehigh Valley area, there are dozens of small towns and villages - each with unique names, particular beauty, and historic charm.
You, my friend, have just inspired me to go out and capture those local gems with my camera. (Places such as Emmaus, Macungie, Jim Thorpe, Hellertown, Bangor, Trexler, Limeport, and Alburtis, to name a few). Wow! I've got my work cut out for me!
I am totally excited to get started! Thank you, thank you!
That’s brilliant, so glad I have managed to inspire some people with this shoot!
I live in a town of 315 people. Everything is closed and people are in their houses by 5pm, and no one is out and about on weekends. Your town is far from boring comparatively. I do, however appreciate the mentality that there is always something to photograph even in areas with not so much going on.
Morecambe is lovely. So long as you avoid looking east 👀
The overexposed look doesn't do it for me. But each to their own.
I commute along the prom every day, and no two days are the same. Even the wild windy grey days have a beauty to them. Heysham head is interesting. And the bright murals are lovely.
Thanks for an interesting video. From Australia, your hometown has lots of character. I enjoy the processing. Light and airy.Black and white grunge would work too.
Seaside Kitsch?? Funny that you should do a video of your home town as I have in the past thought of doing projects based on my home city, but never executed. One, which to be honest I have missed now, and I am so annoyed with myself, was to photograph, the city of my childhood, as I remembered it. Sadly, a lot of those areas no longer exist, and I only have myself to blame for missing the opportunity, what a lovely photobook that would have made.
My latest idea though, and I will do this one, is to shoot my home city, but in the rain, in both daylight and at night. I just thought that it might be interesting, and in the wet should create added interest with reflections and more drama. when will I start this, most likely in the autumn!
Have a great weekend.
Great video, not the norm. Conveys life and reality 👍😊
Glad you enjoyed it mate!
Great video Henry love the different aspect of the photography 😍
I have a similar home location but on a much smaller scale and I’m finding improvisation is the key, I tried minimalistic and I seem to have exhausted my options so maybe a change in post processing would help although I love vibrant colours so that’s going to be hard to change. My other option which I’ve been considering for quite a while is buying the dedicated Pentax Monochrome DSLR as I love working with strong contrast.
top video Henry
As a streetphotographer, I'd love to visit your hometown! Seems to be tons of photos to be had. Beauty shots by the way and loving that softer color tone on the images 😊
I love this video - lived in Morecambe for a short time 50 years ago, and hated it! Recently, I appreciate the town and really like that you've captured the vibe!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Now that was a BRILLIANT day out! Thanks for taking us along. Calendar ordered.
Legend mate thank you so much! 👍🏻
Spot on Henry, Kitsch is a German noun meaning “trash, rubbish; slapdash, pretentious, sentimental, or tacky. A very versatile word. I love the Midland Hotel. One of the best examples of the 1930's architectural style and a great place to stay in!
I go to Morecambe all the time with my camera. It will be interesting once the Eden project is built.. These shots remind me of James Popsys'.
Oh nice one mate. Yes that would be class, would prob be photogenic too tbf!
Lovely video. Tbh you should use your in-camera settings to your advantage when doing these kinds of shoots, especially with the "James Popsys"-style. Even though these settings only affect the LCD and JPEG they will help you see what you imagine right away, on the LCD. I've actually started shooting RAW+JPEG (on my OM-5) for my travel photos but I keep the same settings on even when I plan to post process, when doing more "serious" photography.
The settings I'm talking about is Gradation, Highlight / Shadow control and I also go with Custom WB at 5400k to get the WB consistant throughout the whole day. Let me know if you'd like to give it a shot.
Have a james popsys look to these photos
Apparently we all live in Boringtown ... 😀 My town is a lot like yours, 'cept no sea, no mountains, no coast, no tourists (as far as I can tell) ... LOL
Look at you, getting your street photography on! I'm lucky. Spent the past 18 years in Alameda, California, a city with a small town feel with views of San Francisco Bay and its birds on one side and the bustling Port of Oakland on the other, interesting 19th century homes, a decommissioned Naval Air Station that is finally being redeveloped and plenty to shoot if you walk out the door and look around, even if it's just what's currently blooming in your neighbors' gardens.
In the throes of final pack out for a move to a small community south of here in the Santa Cruz Mountains where I will be surrounded by forests of coastal redwoods and a 25 minute drive to the Pacific Ocean, so I can't wait to get settled into the new place and explore with camera in hand. I'm going through photography withdrawal here!
Thanks, as always for the adventure.
Sometimes i go around my hometown { well, once a week ) But to be different i set a shutter speed of 1/13 th. Mostly overexposed. I have some great keeper pictures. They are different.
The 'washed out' look works. A lot of your processing here reminded me of James Popsys' preferred style too.
You have a photographers eye mate, so when you engage it you'll see photos. It's just very different from landscapes and I've enjoyed all you street/urban vids.
If you don't mind Henry, let me have a bit of a rave here: We all enjoy looking at historic photos of our towns and cities. No one dislikes them whether B&W, Sepia, or colour. The only reason a lot of those exist is because photography was new, and the people setting up studios photographed everything for the joy of it.
No one is documenting our lifestyles in these small towns and cities these days they way they inadvertently did, and it's a shame. The future will thank anyone who leaves behind a record of all the 'boring and kitch' parts of England.
I regularly do this in my street photography, and sometimes just to document new buildings, or juxtapositions between old and new. I will eventually hand all these to the state library for their archives for future generations and I hope others will do the same.
End of rave 🙂
The colours from your video camera, are much more appealing , than the washed out edit to me. But it is interesting, and inspiring to go and shoot the very familiar. Thank you!
Great video Henry. I always take my camera on my daily 7 mile dog walk. It takes me across a common, along a canal tow path and over marshland full of wildlife. Always something different to shoot. Calendar ordered. 😊
Yeah definitely always something different mate - and thanks so much, I appreciate that!!
Get a Lewis's Coffee Snapped 😊
I need more like buttons ❤🎉 always look forward to Friday lunch times when I sit back and watch the latest vid, and what an absolute treat this week Henry 😊 I spent so much time in Morecambe as a child and lived there briefly 24 years ago, and I can see nothing has changed 😂 you really did a fabulous job finding all those beautiful images, and I think the final images really capture the "kitch" you also mentioned, and the feeling of Morecambe on a rare lovely sunny day in summer 🌞 thank you for keeping pushing your boundaries and experimenting, and for taking us with you ❤very inspiring ❤ now I'm craving fish and chips with a cuppa 😂
That's class, thanks you so much for the lovely comment :D
I stopped off in Morecombe for a few hours on my way up to the Lake District. I didn't see you, but kept my eye out for the 'local celebrity' :) The best fun I had was taking photos of people trying to do the Eric Morecombe pose next to the statue whilst having their photograph taken. So many people stopped and attempted it, some with more success than others. I did get one of my favourite photos of all time that day of a lady that nailed it. Such a fun way to pass time.
Hi Henry, the word kitsch is also used in Dutch. We even have a programme called 'Between Art and Kitsch' (literally translated); a programme where people can visit experts with all kinds of objects - paintings, porcelain, coins, very old things, anything - to find out how old it is, whether there's a story behind it, whether it's worth anything and whether it's art or kitsch. So here the word is used more for the latter, is it really art or is it kitsch. Then the word seems negative, but there are quite a few people who love kitsch. And anyway, it is subjective 🙃. Thanks for another fun video!
Really interesting that! Thanks a lot for sharing
Love this video, you can shoot anywhere and find some beauty. The images in this video would be great in a photo book. 'Morecambe: A Boring Town' 😎🔥
Henry, we were taking a break in Grange Over Sands a couple of years back, the guy in the cottage next door heard us talking about visiting Morecambe for the day and told us not to bother (bit of a dump according to him). I don't agree at all, it was a great place, sure it has its grubby bits, but every town has. The people were lovely, loads of photo opportunities, I got some great shots from inside the wonderful super cluttered bookshop, I asked first of course. Eric Morecambe, Tyson Fury, Graham Hicks and Henry Turner.....great little town!
Thank you for this video Henry. You've inspired me to go out in my area, which I'd stopped doing awhile ago because it was boring and I'd photographed everything. Well done!
Great to hear!
Great form Henry!
Hi Henry really enjoyed the video loved seeing the local area and I know what you mean about struggling to see good good compositions in your local area, I think it's time you revisited the idea about a exhibition of images from the local area that I think you talked about putting on before lockdown, keep up the good work.
Thanks 👍 good idea mate
I need to get out and do this! And nice to see a sunny day in Morecambe it’s been a bit rubbish today! Not far from my house up near the battery. Great vid Henry 👍
Thanks a lot mate! Yes a sunny day, what’s going on haha
Really enjoyed that thanks. I view my home town exactly the same (Southport). I will look at it differently and give it a go. Loved the post process results as well. Can you share the settings for the washed out look at some stage. Might even pop up the coast and give old Morecambe a go👍. There is so much on that coast if you apply what you have done here.
Ah class mate. Yea I will likely to something re the settings editing 👍🏼👍🏼
The ice cream van. I would have liked it better with the staggered shadow of the light pole as a double shadow feature excluding the light pole as seen @ 19:05 in your video and likely as a vertical again including the arc of the retaining wall and pavers in the foreground.
this video is bringing back some memories for me! I actually spent a large chunk of my childhood not too far from here, and we came to morecambe quite often. The last time I was there was maybe 10 years ago, so It's so cool to see places I recognise from my time there :D
My family were recently talking about it after my Grandma died and we found a picture we took of her with the Eric Morecambe statue.
Class!!
Going all James Popsys with those skies 😅
Very different for me actually yes haha. Love James’ work 🙏🏻
The minute you said Tacky I said Kitch and it's something I love - Vegas (at least before it became reasonably formulaic in the last 10 years) was the ultimate in kitch. My wife and I drove route 66 this year and the "kitch" elements were among the things I wanted to photograph more than anything. Wholeheartedly agree with the beauty in it!
Great video, thank you for sharing your approach to photographing something outside of what many would consider you to be known for!
That’s so interesting! that vintage Americana stuff would be so good to shoot too
I love your Kodachrome look to your shots like a 1970's holiday snap, on a Kodak instamatic. The place looks like North Shields about 1998, before money was thrown at the place, a bleak desert populated by sparse shiny things, like a funfair set up on a salt flat, with the rides separated by a quarter of a mile. I can think of many places in the UK like this, The Idler published a book called 'The Idler Book of Crap Towns.' My home town of Hull was number one, beating the truly awful Gateshead to the title, I think it won on smell personally. My pick is Grimsby and the co-joined twin of Cleethorpes, possibly followed by sunny Loftus on the Yorkshire coast.
Just goes to show, you don't need to travel very far or wait until you're on holiday to get out and take photos.
I can talk! I don't even do it myself!
But thanks Henry for the inspiration; totally different to what you normally do, and yes, very much like Roman Fox and James Popsys.
My wife, myself and our 2 dogs love Morecambe, Don't dis Morecambe, its lovely in the sunshine, and the light can be lovely. Having said that, I've been down there today in the pouring rain, took a monochrome only camera but the rain was so heavy I didn't bother getting it out of the bag! Will try again tomorrow.. P.S. Seen Tyson many a time out running on the prom, he's always been a gent and said hello!
I didn’t mind your shots in this video, Henry, but found the whites a little muddied. Have you tried a ¼ black mist filter for the middle of day shots? I find I’m using one a lot on my OM5. Seems to bring out the highlights, yet subdue them at the same time. Great for contrasty shots. I seem to be stuck to my local area these days, and find more intimate nature shots of more interest than landscapes. The word, Kitsch, is German.
Hi Henry, really enjoyed as always 👏🏻
Always motivational 💪🏻
You’ve got my arse out the door with my camera so many times 📷 💫
Cheers 👍🏻
Class mate. Thanks for watching!
If I didn't know better I'd have thought from your photos I was watching a James Popsys video. Which I will be right after I finish this great video.
Hello Henry! Well done you! Something I've mentioned before and as well posted to Thomas Heaton, among others I can't remember, Nigel Danson and Ian Worth and Gavin Hardcastle perhaps, is this: After 50 years doing this I always go back to an exercise my father always did when he'd move from wide open spaces (landscapes let's say) to an urban setting, especially one's home town that as you say we're so familiar with that we take it for granted, give yourself a task of photographing in a limited area. This forces you to look in a more focused and intimate way, smaller and seeking graphic motifs. Some of your photographs in this video are quite fine, and some would be better if you moved in closer and focused on the graphic. Nonetheless, what you're doing is something I always do when I come in from wide open spaces or if I need a kick in the ASS, I'll begin looking for tiny little moments and compositions and that always refocuses my seeing. Bravo Mr. Turner, you're the real deal and I gladdens my heart to see you exploring the discipline in this way. A very normal exercise but not at all insignificant in how it focuses the eye. 🙏
So glad Lees Games and AJs Famous Double Burgers is still there. Makes me miss Morecambe.
Class is Lee’s Games haha
@@HenryTurnerphoto and so good to see Pier Books is still there
😂 even in switzerland we use “kitschig”, “kitsch”😂.
Oh interesting mate! Thanks for sharing!!
Struggling in my hometown as well, as the centre is very small, and over the years I have probably done every building at all angles., I can think of.
But I try to have a camera , even if its just my phone, in my hand every time I venture down there. Becaouse some times it gets very photogenic if the light or the clouds are right.
My town makes your town look like Paris (France). I would definitely have enjoyed photographing your city. Nice job and thanks for the video.
I get your point and I love your images. I don't know that I'd have seen any or all of them to be honest. But let me tell you about OUR boring town. We have two traffic lights and the only water we're near is the kids splash pad in the "town square" on the main street. Our tallest building is two stories and the only architectural interest is a restaurant with a glass arc over the entrance. Oddly enough, our local photography club left us with a summer theme challenge, and I finally landed on "Welcome to Stellarton." I'm trying for 15 - 20 images to show, but WOW - what a boring town we have! 🙂
Haha well, you may have outdone me on the boring scale after all haha 😂. Thanks for watching as always!
😃
Hi Henry this is one of my all time favourite videos, I live in Seaham Harbour and much like you I have walked around bored stupid even though I love it. We have good parts, bad parts and bloody awful parts. I know I am not seeing things in my home coastal town as my mates come very regular for photos.
Thanks mate that means a lot!!
Great vid, I think there’s something very tacky about the British seaside and that’s the charm of it. 👍🏻
It's kinda like time travel in a way, you have all those Victorian, Edwardian and art deco buildings, and they have modern 20th century architecture stuffed in them or retrofitted which is slowly falling apart, the best example is where army surplus shop is the is missing and the shop are board it up but see the beauty of the thing.
Good stuff Henry. Not sure Morecambe qualifies as boring though. Then again, i enjoy photographing Swindon! 😂
have a look at Craig Roberts (E6) photography, He deliberately shoots the boring stuff and gets some really unusual images yet vvery interesting moreso than the usual . Good to see you doing something different. That 12-40 is a great lens
Henry, enjoyed every second of this video. It's not always the grand landscape is it? I'm not sure if you really know how good you are at this style. I would love a collaboration with James Popsys somewhere. Can you tee that up maybe? You have a photo book right here, with these images. Can't praise you enough.