Trophy Night 2013
Once again it was a pleasure to present the award winning members with the new Outlaws Trophies.
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Trophy Night 2013
Once again it was a pleasure to present the award winning members with the new Outlaws Trophies.
Another great news came through.
Ian Pinn has got 4 of his pictures accepted into 1st Cork International Salon of Photography.
Last Friday night many of NOPS members, old and new met at The Wheatsheaf in Burton Joyce for the club’s Christmas meal.
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Here we have a relatively new member of the NOPS family entering a competition held by a very large and well known company.
The competition, held on a monthly basis, declared this image the winner for December.
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As a kid I loved taking photos when on holiday with a Kodak film camera. When at college I got a Zenith E 35mm camera and started using the college darkroom to develop black and white. At that time the meadows area was being redeveloped and I tried to record some of the old buildings and the people around them before they disappeared. I also did a series of black and white shots of the RC Cathedral (fondly known as ‘Paddy’s Wigwam’) in my home town of Liverpool. I lost all of these prints and negs later on when we were flooded.
Like so many people, I left photography when I got married but took it up again in the 1980′s when we had kids and I bought a new 35mm camera. When digital cameras came along I got a Canon compact and soon after a Canon 350D SLR. I found I was far more successful with digital cameras and I enjoy messing around with Photoshop. I joined the Outlaws Photography Society a few years ago and this helped my photography to take off. I have upgraded to a Canon 7D and a bag full of lenses and other stuff, the main purpose of which seems to be to make the camera bag even heavier (back to those creaking knees again!).
I mostly do landscape work and have been encouraged by a few successes in club competitions. I have recently been attempting some arty processing such as my “Victorian Prospect”. I also enjoy challenging my photography by entering competitions with themes that I would not otherwise tackle. Without the challenge of club competition I would not have spent time filling party balloons with water, freezing them and creating pictures of “Ice Planets”. Portraits are always a challenge but I have learnt something from watching others in the club. The moral of this tale is come and join us, enjoy the company and let your photography grow!
John’s gallery: