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Asian Wedding photographers | Asha and Justin. Surrey

July 16th, 2010 No comments

Asian Wedding photographer London Last Weekend Asha and Justin were married at Asha’s parents beautiful home in Surrey. The wedding lasted all weekend and typically with Asian weddings the guest list was enormous with friends and relatives arriving and departing during the weekend. Both Asha and Justin come from large families and this week the couple will travel to India where they will repeat the ceremony for their Indian relatives.

Asha and Justin have asked me to come to India to photograph the Indian celebrations but unfortunately I am committed to work this weekend in the UK. For more wedding information go to my wedding site http://www.weddingphotographerslondon.uk.com/portfolio/

Asha and Justin will be exhausted I’m sure by the end of this weekend and they will be pleased to have a well deserved break when they Honeymoon in India next week.

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Event photographer

June 8th, 2010 No comments

Many thanks to Solly in New Zealand for reworking our Event and Party photography site. It just came online today and replaces the site that I built in iweb. I had fun building the original but the new one I think makes my iweb effort look a bit amateurish.
The new site is a wordpress site and so there will be lots of blogging, useful information and news about recent events we’ve photographed. I’m afraid the first blog has not yet been replaced by the latin mumbo-jumbo but it will be as soon as Solly has explained to me how I can make it work.
You can find Solly at solly@dieloot.com

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Bank holiday weekend opening

May 30th, 2010 No comments

I should have written this post on Thursday. The stall on Northcote Road was open on Friday and yesterday but we won’t be open on Sunday (today) or Bank holiday Monday.
You can order online for collection next weekend or give me a call.
Have a good weekend.

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Professional photographer Magazine Interview

May 18th, 2010 No comments

The following is a transcript on an interview that Professional Photographer magazine will be publishing next month.

What’s your photographic background?
Like many photographers who eventually turn professional I was a very keen amateur. From about the age of about 11 or 12 when my Dad gave me my first camera, a rangefinder zeiss, I took rolls and rolls of black and white film. I made notes after each exposure in order to try to understand how on earth the camera worked.
I grew up up in New Zealand in the early 60’s and I had to wait for a week for my developed prints to come back to the local shop. Colour film was too expensive to mess around with then and my Dad only loaded colour film into his camera at Christmas!
At secondary school I joined the camera club and it was then I really began to understand how a camera worked, and how to make prints.
I set myself up as a stock photographer and left New Zealand for the UK in 1985 and travelled for four years around the world largely funded by stock photography sales. I took with me a Practica MTL3 35mm and a Bronica ETRsi. I still have the Bronica today and I traded in the Practica for a Canon AE1programe in 1988. I’ve used Canon gear ever since.

Can you provide us with some general info on your business please:
Tell me about your niche: events and parties (this is what we’d like to concentrate on).

I work with an assistant, two freelances, and a great local lab. It all hangs together at the seams most of the time but it’s exiting and I suppose I wouldn’t have it any other way.
At my studio in Battersea we also do lots of informal portraits of families, corporate headshots, and product photography. We also use this studio as the office where all the photography post production is done.
Most of our week is spent on photographing Events and Parties. We travel all over the world and work with mostly corporate customers photographing their events parties, launches, PR, and conferences.
I also have a large gallery of images from around the word built up over many years as a stock photographer. Framed prints are sold to businesses and private individuals in the UK and around the world. I also sell the London photographs from a new mobile exhibition unit in the Northcote Road Market in Battersea, South West London on Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays.

How did you come to shoot events?
Many years ago I supplied a set of framed photographs to a large international bank in the city. It was December and the photographer they had booked for the Christmas party wasn’t able come for whatever reason so I lied ‘no problem I can do this in my sleep” and got the job. I promised them I would do everything the other guy had undertaken to do; walk in photographers studio, real time slideshow, prints on the night for guests to take away, the whole works. All I owned was my trusty Canon and the Bronica, I needed to somehow lay my hands on lights and backgrounds, some means of printing, a projector, two digital cameras, a laptop, another photographer (preferably no less experienced than me). There was also no money up front and it was beginning to look like I would have to make the same call the other photographer had made a few days earlier. I was able to lend a Canon 10D and a D60, these came with their owner Richard who still works with me occasionally today. His girlfriend ‘borrowed” a mac clamshell laptop and printer from her work and goodness knows where the projector and screen came from. I rented the lights with money borrowed from my aunt.
Luckily everyone who attended the function had plenty to drink and didn’t notice our inexperience but it was a success. Since then I have photographed most of their events in the UK and around the world.

There’s a real lack of decent events photographers – why do you think that is?
There isn’t lack of good photographers, in fact quite the reverse. I think there is more talent around than ever before. The current economic situation has squeezed many photographers in business and those starting out to an extent that many will do anything to get work. In high end event photography reputation counts for everything, and many clients are not willing to take a chance on someone new despite the fact that they are probably quite able to handle the job.

How long have you been doing this for?
How did you get started?

I didn’t ever plan to make my living as a photographer.
I was happy as a keen amateur making a little money here and there doing the odd wedding, and taking stock photographs.
I don’t really know that there was a day that I woke up and pronounced to the world that ‘today is the day’ but I guess when I worked briefly as a paparazzi photographer, that Friday evening in August 1988, after being chased across Leicester Square by one of Peter Stringfellow’s bouncers might have been that ‘seminal moment’.

How hard have you had to work to make your business a success?
I’ve had to work very hard to make my business a success. However it took me a long time early on to realise that it doesn’t matter what industry you are in the same principles of building a profitable enterprise applies to mostly all sorts of businesses. As photographers we all get a bit precious about our style and our creativity, and although that is what sets us apart from our competitors we still need to find new customers, keep existing customers hiring us, and above all we need them to pay their invoices on time.
I look at my business in the same way as somebody who sells widgets does. If you give the customer exactly what they want, and exceed their expectations then they’ll book you again. If you don’t give them what they want they won’t book you again and they’ll also tell their friends and colleagues not to book you either.
It’s very expensive to attract new customers but if you can keep your current customers happy repeat bookings will keep flowing in.

Has being so niche helped you set up a successful business?
There are a number of parts to my business but each part of the business is treated as niche. The various things that we do are divided up and promoted in such a way that most of my clients think that what we do for them is all we do. For example Event and Party photography has it’s own website and separate domain name. Portraits, products, Interiors and Art for Offices are also treated separately.

How much competition do you face?
Competition is fierce. If you type in ‘Event photographer London’ into Google there are over 5 million listings. Most prospective clients don’t look beyond the first page and the choice is bewildering. Just about all of our work comes by way of recommendation or is work from an existing client. I do rely on new customers finding my details from an internet search and I spend a lot time on SEO.

What services do you offer?
I offer all the usual services you’d expect a small studio like mine to have available, ie portraits, product photography, architectural and interiors work, and these all link in nicely with the events and party work. The workload can be spread relatively evenly across the week. Many events and mostly all parties run into the evening so we are able to fit the post production in amongst the other work that’s done during the day.

How do you make your money (selling prints etc). Please cover all aspects, we want to know all about your photography business.
Having almost lost everything in the last economic downturn I’ve tried to protect myself in this recession by spreading the risk across all of the things that I do. For example from the end of 2008 we noticed a significant drop in sales of framed prints and photography services to private individuals, luckily the corporate work we were doing then was still strong. And in the first half of 2009 the corporate event work almost stopped completely, but luckily a large hotel group had placed an order for framed photographs which kept us busy. The corporate work and the event and party bookings came back as quickly as they went away and things seem to be on the mend.
The Event and party photography we do accounts for about half of the turnover, particularly during the summer months and in the run up to Christmas. The sale of framed prints to offices and to private individuals accounts for about a quarter of the turnover, and portrait, architectural and product photography accounts for about a quarter. Christmas is a really busy time for us and a third of the year’s turnover is achieved between the beginning of November and Christmas eve from events and the sale of gallery prints.

Who are your clients?
We have a good mix of regular clients, mostly blue chip corporates and PR companies. We do lots of celebrity parties and events too, and often we don’t get told who they are until we turn up at the event.

How do you supply work to your clients?
Do you sell prints? And, if so, how and where do you get prints done?
Most clients these days want their finished images in the form of digital files and often start the process again if they want prints.
We also supply prints at events that may be either paid for by the client or bought on the night by the guest. Sometimes supplying prints on the night can be hugely popular with the guests but we have also photographed events where the sale of prints has been quite low. I’ve always steered clear of actively selling prints to guests on the night unless the client specifically asks for it, most clients don’t like their guests hassled into parting with their cash having already paid a fee to attend.
We use a great local lab in South West London. Often we produce sets of prints in stages throughout an event, we’ll send a DVD by courier to the lab and they’ll send the finished prints back by courier a couple of hours later.

What other services / genres to you shoot commercially?
We shoot Interiors and Properties for a large Property developer based in North London. They recently redeveloped a derelict church and turned the building into seven luxury flats, stained glass windows in the loo, that sort of thing. Photographing Interiors and Architecture is a much slower process unlike people photography where you work handheld and have to act quickly. Most of this sort of work is medium format using a tripod which involves thinking carefully about the image and taking your time. It’s also great to see your work published in a high end brochure.

How do you see your business developing?
It’s only on the rare occasion that I go on holiday that I think about how my business should be developing. The photography industry is moving at such a pace these days that keeping ahead of the curve is often difficult.
Photography is no longer the mystery that it used to be, clients know exactly what is and isn’t possible as they all own digital cameras. Many photographers are giving away copyright free these days and supplying high res DVDs free of charge. I’ve never quite got to grips with giving images away for free as the potential to upsell images again after an event is lucrative. But you’ve got to give the client flexibility, it’s common them want to take control and produce media themselves, and so we build that into the package.
In the next year or two I would like to explore the possibility of selling our services from a gallery. I already do this to an extent from my mobile exhibition trailer I use in the Northcote Road market in South London.
But we live in uncertain times and paying for photography is often a discretionary purchase. It’s a sobering thought signing up to years of rent and business rates when one can do it all online a minimal cost.

What equipment do you use?
At my studio we use 3 canon 1dsMk11 and we are hoping to secure an order for 2 of the new Canon 1ds mk 1V. 580ex flash, 550ex flash, 380ex flash, 2 24-105mm L lenses, 17-40mm L lens, 14mm L lens, 70-200mm L lens, 28-135mm 3.5-5.6 lens, Bronica Etrsi, Quantum battery packs, 2 Elinchrom lights with brollys and soft box. A selection of backgrounds and stands, a bag of leads and bits, a stack of memory cards: mostly 2.0 GB, 2 x manfrotto tripods and heads, canon G9 compact camera, On site printing equipment, 1 projector, 1 powermac quad, 2 macbook pro 17” and an old powerbook G4. We don’t use windows pcs anymore, only mac computers.

Anything else you think we might find interesting?
There are two things that I’m working on at the moment that I’m finding really interesting.
The first is I’m working on a book. It’s a coffee table style book, and it’s set of fine art photography prints of London and life in the capital. It’s taken two years longer than I expected and although I said this last year I’m hoping to have if finished for Christmas.
The other thing I’ve found very interesting is learning about website optimisation. I’ve found it very frustrating paying for seo work and not being able to understand what it is I’m paying for. I now do all of the web promotion and seo work myself and I would recommend anyone reading this give it a try and it’s not as complicated as we are all led to believe.

Websites/links:
http//:www.eventphotographylondon.uk.com
http//:www.photoarte.co.uk

A Big Event Weekend

March 8th, 2010 No comments

We were busy again this weekend photographing special events.

Jacob Zuma, the President of South Africa has been in Europe for the last month travelling around with an enormous entourage pressing the flesh and visiting various European dignitaries including the Queen, and by all accounts he has had a very successful tour. A dinner at the Ritz Hotel in London was arranged by a friend of President Zuma’s and he booked us to cover the event. It was a fundraising dinner and there were a number of high profile guests in attendance.

On Saturday night I went to Lords Cricket Ground to photograph a retirement dinner. This was a black tie event to celebrate the retirement of Robin Butchard, the Practice Director of the law firm Zenith Chambers in Leeds.
Zenith Chambers have written this piece on Robs retirement:

Zenith Celebrates Rob’s Retirment in Style!!
(07-03-2010)

Those that know Rob know that he is an avid cricket fan: when he gave up playing the sport, he took up umpiring. Until 2009 he umpired for the Mid Yorkshire league, but on retiring will be heading south to be near to his family.He tells me he already has 45 umpiring fixtures in the diary for 2010, covering matches for the MCC and Cricket Society, as well as many schools both mid week and at weekends. There clearly couldn’t have been a more fitting setting for his retirement dinner!!!

An auspicious venue for an equally auspicious event with some very auspicious guests that included two of Rob’s former heads of chambers Alan Tyrrell QC and HHJ Patricia Deeley; as well as HH Trevor Kent Jones; HHJ Jeff Lewis; HHJ Angela Finnerty; DJ Simon Hickey; James Clappison MP; Andrew Campbell QC; Julian Goose QC; Clive Heaton QC; James Corbett QC; Timothy Lyons QC as well as most members of chambers and staff and their partners. Chambers also invited Rob’s two sons Matthew (1st Junior at Carmelite Chambers in London), their partners, other family members and quite a few close friends, including those whom Rob has met during his years as a clerk.

There was a buzz of excitement amongst the guests throughout the evening, and the meal was delicious. There was a reluctance to leave at the end, and guests were being shooed out of the door by the staff at Lords!!!

A night to remember for all who attended, especially those who are avid cricket fans, and most importantly Rob himself!

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Shutter speed, aperture, and ISO explained

March 3rd, 2010 2 comments

The key to understanding how a camera works is to understand the relationship between shutter speed, aperture and ISO.

One metaphor often used is to imagine your camera is like a window with shutters that open and close. Aperture is the size of the window. If it’s bigger more light gets through and the room is brighter. Shutter Speed is the amount of time that the shutters of the window are open. The longer you leave them open the more that comes in.
Now imagine that you’re inside the room and are wearing sunglasses, your eyes become desensitized to the light that comes in (it’s like a low ISO).There are a number of ways of increasing the amount of light in the room, or at least how much it seems that there is. You could increase the time that the shutters are open (decrease shutter speed), you could increase the size of the window (increase aperture) or you could take off your sunglasses (make the ISO larger).

How does your camera know what the perfect exposure is? Your camera is pre programmed by the manufacturer to let an exact amount of light in for the perfect exposure, which is 18% of the light reflected form a grey surface.

Shutter Speed:
Shutter speed is measured in seconds – or in most cases fractions of seconds. The bigger the denominator the faster the speed (ie1/1000 is much faster than 1/30).
In most cases you’ll probably be using shutter speeds of 1/60th of a second or faster. This is because anything slower than this is very difficult to use without getting camera shake. Camera shake is when your camera is moving while the shutter is open and results in blur in your photos.
If you’re using a slow shutter speed (anything slower than 1/60) you will need to either use a tripod or some some type of image stabilization (more and more cameras are coming with this built in).

Shutter speeds available to you on your camera will usually double (approximately) with each setting. As a result you’ll usually have the options for the following shutter speeds – 1/500, 1/250, 1/125, 1/60, 1/30, 1/15, 1/8 etc. This ‘doubling’ is handy to keep in mind as aperture settings also double the amount of light that is let in – as a result increasing shutter speed by one stop and decreasing aperture by one stop should give you similar exposure levels.

Some cameras also give you the option for very slow shutter speeds that are not fractions of seconds but are measured in seconds (for example 1 second, 10 seconds, 30 seconds etc). These are used in very low light situations, when you’re going after special effects and/or when you’re trying to capture a lot of movement in a shot). Some cameras also give you the option to shoot in ‘B’ (or ‘Bulb’) mode. Bulb mode lets you keep the shutter open for as long as you hold it down.

When considering what shutter speed to use in an image you should always ask yourself whether anything in your scene is moving and how you’d like to capture that movement. If there is movement in your scene you have the choice of either freezing the movement (so it looks still) or letting the moving object intentionally blur (giving it a sense of movement).

To freeze movement in an image you’ll want to choose a fast shutter speed and to let the movement blur you’ll want to choose a slower shutter speed. The actual speeds you should choose will vary depending upon the speed of the subject in your shot and how much you want it to be blurred.

Use motion to your advantage. For example when you’re taking a photo of a waterfall and want to show how fast the water is flowing, or when you’re taking a shot of a racing car and want to give it a feeling of speed, or when you’re taking a shot of a star scape and want to show how the stars move over a longer period of time etc. In all of these instances choose a longer shutter speed. However in all of these cases you need to use a tripod or you’ll run the risk of ruining the shots by adding camera movement.
Focal Length and Shutter Speed – another thing to consider when choosing shutter speed is the focal length of the lens you’re using. Longer focal lengths will accentuate the amount of camera shake you have and so you’ll need to choose a faster shutter speed (unless you have image stabilization in your lens or camera). The ‘rule’ of thumb to use with focal length in non image stabilized situations is to choose a shutter speed with a denominator that is larger than the focal length of the lens. For example if you have a lens that is 50mm 1/60th is probably ok but if you have a 200mm lens you’ll probably want to shoot at around 1/250.

What is Aperture?
Put most simply – Aperture is ‘the size of the opening in the lens when a picture is taken.’
When you hit the shutter release button of your camera a hole opens up that allows your cameras image sensor to catch a glimpse of the scene you’re wanting to capture. The aperture that you set impacts the size of that hole. The larger the hole the more light that gets in – the smaller the hole the less light.

Aperture is measured in ‘f-stops’ for example f/2.8, f/4, f/5.6,f/8,f/22 etc. Moving from one f-stop to the next doubles or halves the size of the amount of opening in your lens (and the amount of light getting through). Keep in mind that a change in shutter speed from one stop to the next doubles or halves the amount of light that gets in also – this means if you increase one and decrease the other you let the same amount of light in – very handy to keep in mind).
One thing that causes a lot of new photographers confusion is that large apertures (where lots of light gets through) are given f/stop smaller numbers and smaller apertures (where less light gets through) have larger f-stop numbers. So f/2.8 is in fact a much larger aperture than f/22. It seems the wrong way around but you’ll get the hang of it.

Depth of Field and Aperture
Depth of Field (DOF) is that amount of your shot that will be in focus. Large depth of field means that most of your image will be in focus whether it’s close to your camera or far away.
Small (or shallow) depth of field means that only part of the image will be in focus and the rest will be fuzzy. Aperture has a big impact upon depth of field. Large aperture (remember it’s a smaller number) will decrease depth of field while small aperture (larger numbers) will give you larger depth of field.
It can be a little confusing at first but the way I remember it is that small numbers mean small DOF and large numbers mean large DOF.

The best way to get your head around aperture is to take lots of photos and experiment. Set up a shot outside and place some items near the camera as well as far away and take a series of shots with different aperture settings from the smallest setting to the largest. You’ll quickly see the impact that it can have and the usefulness of being able to control aperture.

The ‘Uncle Dave’ Effect

March 2nd, 2010 No comments

“Get Uncle Dave to take the photos, he’s a really good photographer and he’s got a really nice camera. He’ll take your wedding photos and you’ll save yourself loads of money”

I have a DVD sitting on my desk with 1000 photographs taken by a real uncle Dave at a wedding on December 12th last year. The couple whose wedding uncle Dave attended came to see me last July to talk about their wedding photography. They were on a tight budget which all couples have to grapple with and they were looking to make savings wherever they could.
They came to see me again last Friday with their set of photographs that uncle Dave had taken and they said that would would ‘pay whatever it cost’ to rescue their wedding photos. Having thought they would make a saving they will, in the end, pay about the same price as they would have for a professional photographer. They’ll be reminded of this everytime they look at their set of retouched rescued uncle Dave’s pics.

And on Saturday a client brought me some black and white prints that he had printed by ‘a well known high street photo shop’ from an image that I had taken and supplied to him on disc. They were badly cropped, printed on colour paper so it had a green colourcast, there were also some watermarks on the paper which indicate sloppy printing. I have offered to reprint them myself free of charge despite the fact he offered to pay me to print them properly. I have to prove to my client that the product I have provided him was as high as he had expected. My high standards have been debased by another supplier in my industry. Uncle Dave is also employed by well known high street shops because professional image makers are expensive to employ.

My point in this blog is that in the last couple of years there seems to have been a significant shift towards cost playing a much larger part in the decision making process even if the risk is poor quality, poor service, and bland, dull, lacklustre work. The recession has a lot to with this and I suspect many industries other than photographers have found cost basis decision making a problem too.

I have never been busier and I know other photographers who are busy too, but there are now many in our industry, particularly in weddings, who have positioned themselves in order to take advantage of the unwary who are looking for photography done cheaply. For uncle Dave this is excellent news. He can join the mass of ‘weekend warriors’ shooting weddings without having to give up the day job. With his new gear, and little experience he can make some easy money taking advantage of couples on a tight budget.

And then yesterday I read an article in ‘The Professional photographer’ written by a fellow photographer, Allister Freeman. Allister is an established wedding photographer with a good reputation. The article talks about his opinons on the current state of wedding photography. He quotes ” ……An age where Joe Public beleives he can do a better job than you, poor perceptions, fuelled by a mass of similar styles and monotonous imagery already saturating the market have a deleterious effect on an already beleagured industry”. A lot of the mystery of photography has been taken away by digital and it’s understandable that Joe Public thinks that he could do a better job with his new gear, but a camera has always been a box with a hole in the front of it and it takes just as much skill and experience to make a good photograph as it always did.

Several years ago it was quite clear who knew what they were doing and who didn’t just by looking at their website, now it is possible to make a slick presentation online for little cost and pitch yourself against those who are good at what they do. At least established photographers can rely on their reputation and on word of mouth, but this is becoming a real problem for photographers who are just starting out and want to offer their customers good quality. And for the client it’s almost impossible to make an informed decision particulary in these days where price is very important.

When the recession has been and gone we’ll look back on ‘the uncle Dave days’ and perhaps simply put it all down to cost driven behaviour. There are uncle Daves in all industries but in this perfect storm where the importance of price meets rapid technology change a new breed of operator has emerged who is satisfying a new demand for cheap at all costs.

Twitter

February 15th, 2010 No comments

I’ve got lots of good ideas and interesting stuff to write about in the coming months, and I hope that you’ll find my blogs interesting. For example I’ll be writing about zoom lenses over the week or two, many cameras were received as presents at Christmas and two months on it’s time to look at lenses.
This small post is a piece just to let you know that I’m now on Twitter, so if you’d like to follow my blogs go to http://twitter.com/Mark_photoarte

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Northcote Road Poem

January 18th, 2010 No comments

On Friday I spoke to Sarah Clarke-Wareham. She has written Book of 24 different poems, and it is called Common Ground Anyone? Rhyme Time for SW Mums.
The following is one of the poems about Northcote Road, and for many who are familiar with the area it will make you smile.

On Northcote Road we dote

Armies have their HQ, while gangs feel safe on their turf
Sports teams have home grounds, or home breaks if you like to surf
Old men have their locals, city men have their clubs
Cool men have Shoreditch; our men have Youngs pubs
So it’s not surprising that SW Mums have somewhere to call their own
A place that we can be confident is filled with just our clones
Sanctity when we’re feeling down, a comforting, familiar abode
I couldn’t write this book without mentioning the glorious Northcote Rd

As a gaggle of mums we head to Crumpet, vying for buggy space
Oli is back on the road somehow, but Becky has given chase
Tommy has spied the fairy cakes; Molly is stuck on the loo
Amelia is Queen of the castle, Harry needs a poo
Ruby is eating sugar cubes, Marley is under the table
Josh has built a tower with blocks, although it’s not looking too stable
But it doesn’t matter you smile to each other, because you’re behind Crumpet doors
So you drink your coffee, have a chat, and pretend that they’re not yours

Another day and you’re there with just your kids; it’s time for a haircut
Sally’s booked up for the next 3 weeks, can’t even fit you in when you tut
So you head to Trotters, but struggle to drag them away from driving that car
Unfortunately the fish tank doesn’t do the trick, so you bribe them with a chocolate bar
While you’re there you can’t help having a little mooch around
Which is why husband says “How could 2 haircuts cost one hundred and twenty pounds?!”

Finally you have a morning to yourself, so you head to Questionnaire
You sail through Whistles, and Sweaty Betty, by Kew you just don’t care
By White Stuff you’re 25, by Fat Face you’re in your teens
A mixture of Neal’s Yard and Space NK gives you the necessary means
You stop for a Starbucks takeout latte, treat yourself to a blueberry muffin
A friend tells you she can’t find a thing, but you’re sure she must be bluffing
You walk past Jigsaw, Fat Face Kids, Jo-Jo’s and Petit Bateau
Today is me-time you tell yourself, only one place to spend your doe
But then you have a glass of wine or two (well, All Bar One is just so handy)
And you can’t keep away from those cute little dresses: to the baby, like candy

Saturday morning with nothing to do, there’s no better place to head
Don’t know why Boiled Egg & Soldiers closed down, but I think they probably fled
Toddlers throwing tantrums in the street, babies scream for food
Clapham Junction singles stay at home, they don’t dare intrude
Organic fruit and veg looks amazing, and is only twice the price
Fresh bread, muffins, pastries and pies means the bread stall is sure to entice
You spend a fortune on Mark Anderson photos; does London ever look that good?
If Northcote Rd committee took over City Hall, well, perhaps it would

You’ve shopped for your children and yourself, there’s only one place left to dress
But of course Northcote Rd knows you well, and so caters with equal finesse
There’s Cath Kidson for kitchenware or Rosie’s pink bedroom theme
Oliver Bonas for funky extras or Cuisinere for utensils that gleam
There’s Doves for your Sunday roasts, Salumeria Napoli for your Italian night
Fara for kids toys, Pretty Pregnant if you get that fright
One Small Step or Trotters means your children will always have shoes
And if you’re looking to sell your house? Well, there are a few estate agents to choose

But what is this? The sun is setting and suddenly things start to change
The haven of SW family life is looking a little strange
Buggies replaced with scooter man, lattes replaced with beer
Crying tantrums replaced with pumping music, and then that thing we fear
The thing that ensures we scurry home, why did we leave it so late?
The arrival en masse of twenty-somethings, with freedom in their gait

Photographer London

January 5th, 2010 No comments

Happy New Year!!!!
We had a very busy December and we were able to have some time off over Christmas and New Year.

We are back at work this week and the stall on Northcote Road will be open on Saturday and Sunday this weekend. We’ll then be open every Friday, Saturday and Sunday.
This year every couple of weeks I will be writing a piece in my blog that I think may be of interest to you, stuff like how to take seasonal photographs, tips and tricks using your camera and flash, and some photoshop tutorials using shortcuts and tricks the pros use.

But there are also a number of other things we do which you may find interesting too. They are:

T Shirt and garment printing: http://www.excellentprint.co.uk

Photography Courses: http://www.photoarte.co.uk/phototours/index.html

Art and Photography for Offices: http://www.artforoffices.uk.com/index.html

I hope this year is good for you, and I look forward to hearing from you again or seeing you again on Northcote Road.