London

A Summer Gone Too Fast

I had a roll of film developed that had been in my camera for the last 3 months.

Kodacolor 200 film – Nikon F3 – 50mm f1.8

A reminder of summer.. and England’s somewhat dire performance in the World Cup.

A snapshot of classy Croydon:

Surely the world’s busiest shop aka Primani aka Primark on Oxford Street, taken from a bus:

I cannot go into this place without instantly feeling claustrophobic.

Queen. The world’s friendliest pit-bull.

East London

No – I haven’t seen Banksy although I’ve seen a lot of wannabes ; )

Spitalfields in East London always has something going on, whether it’s quirky markets, or musicians performing, or in this case, people dancing to a jazz band.

A great way to spam for free – simply write it across the wall:

BBBBand.. I checked out their myspace page and their music isn’t as bad as their graffiti, but that doesn’t mean it’s great either.

@jimeh:

He took this shot of me, in all my photographic glory:

The most incredibly random jumble sale:

You get given a plastic bag and you can fill it up with as many items for a tenner!

Switching back to the easy, auto comfort of digital!

Brick Lane – definitely the most featured street on this site.  I should create a new category for it!

Someone clearly doesn’t appreciate dubstep pioneer Skream (who is fab I’d like to point out, if you’re into that kind of music):

Superman/boy reappears!

The moose head is a nice touch:

A great piece as usual by Jef Aerosol:

I don’t know why,  but I like the focusing on this:

A part of East London I had never seen before:

It was pretty much a derelict area surrounded by housing estates – literally the kind of place you’d see on documentaries about run-down parts of the city.

Jim had fun with the random pile of tyres we stumbled across under a bridge.  It’d be a great location for a shoot – if anyone ever discovered it!

East London really is random.

A kid who started shouting at us for some reason..

.. so I took his picture, as one does.  As we started to walk away more of them appeared and began shouting so we decided to walk a bit faster and leave as quick as possible! It’s quite sad when you end up fearing a bunch of 10 year olds.

More of East London to follow on another roll of film, which will hopefully take less than 3 months to complete : )

On a completely different topic – my book on India is almost finished! Quick ‘preview’:

I didn’t realise shortlisting my own images would be such a difficult task. Watch this space for more details..

Protests Against The Pope

18th September, 2010 – Anti-Pope Protests, London

Joseph Ratzinger aka Pope Benedict XVI visited the UK, and with it came inevitable protests featuring a lot of blown-up condoms.  The biggest demonstration was in London, organised by “Protest the Pope” – http://www.protest-the-pope.org.uk/

I was actually quite surprised at just how much anti-Pope feelings there were.  It was clear that some demonstrators were incredibly passionate about this, with many people around me having their own personal stories and reasons.

A whole range of activists turned up – Women’s rights,abortion, gay rights, child abuse were just some of the issues people were demonstrating about.

I have a lot of images of placards which are worth full-viewing in my opinion.  This must be the only protest I have been to where there has been so much variety in terms of banners and placards.  Most of them were ‘home-made’ and these are always interesting to read. In fact, I took a whole bunch more but haven’t posted them all.

Condom umbrella. Now there’s a first:

Notice the guy on the left above – Pastafarian.

Some supporters of the Pope – slightly outnumbered in this instance:

This wouldn’t personally be my first-choice hoodie to wear but hey, each to their own:

Richard Dawkins was one of the guest speakers at the rally, which started at Hyde Park and ended at Downing Street.

He was soon surrounded by a crowd of people all keen to speak to him.  I’d imagine he would be a very interesting person to have a conversation with.

Notice the guy on the left with the flourescent jacket:

I did indeed Google Hollie Greig – I’m not sure how it’s relevant to the Pope (yes, it’s about child abuse but I don’t think this relates to the Church in any way?) but in any case it’s shocking..

Horribly out of focus:

Turnout was much larger than expected with an estimated 12,000 people marching to Downing Street.  Of course, this number is dwarfed by the hundreds of thousands of people who came out to see the Pope, but these demonstrators have definitely made their thoughts heard.  Unfortunately, I didn’t get any images of the Pope himself, although I would have quite liked to.

Religion is a funny thing. That is the only opinion on religion I’m going to include in this post before I end up typing an essay, and well, this meant to be a *photo*blog of sorts.  Well OK – one more thing – I know a number of people here who would consider themselves to be religious church-going Catholics who didn’t line the streets to see the Pope because they could not be bothered with the crowds. Hm.. I really have to say I find that incredible.  If you have that much faith surely you *would* make the effort to see the man who represents your faith, which could be the only chance in your lifetime? Oh, and one more thing – you don’t need religion in order to be a good, moral person – something I think a lot of people tend to forget. That is all.

——-

On a completely different note, leaving the protest, I came across this:

He was being filmed pogo-ing as part of an advert for KangaROOS.

Very cool and random.

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