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Monday, 31 May 2010
Grey Heron

Labels:
bird,
river,
Saltaire,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
Sunday, 30 May 2010
A glimpse of wisteria

Labels:
flower,
garden,
Saltaire,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
Saturday, 29 May 2010
At work

Labels:
Saltaire,
Salts Mill,
workman,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
Friday, 28 May 2010
Jim Laker

Another great cricketer, Sir Learie Constantine, wrote: “Some of the loveliest grounds I have played on are Perth in Western Australia, Todmorden (Lancashire League) and Saltaire”. It is indeed a most attractive ground, set alongside the river Aire and with views of Saltaire in the background (see my post of July 5 for a photo taken in that direction). Since the restoration of the park and the Half Moon Café, which is run by the cricket club, it has become an even nicer place to relax with a drink to watch a match. I intend to do a bit of that, if this summer continues to be a good one.
Labels:
Roberts Park,
Saltaire,
sport,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
Thursday, 27 May 2010
Alice and The Mad Hatter

Labels:
event,
Roberts Park,
Saltaire,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
Wednesday, 26 May 2010
The littlest dancer

Labels:
dance,
event,
Roberts Park,
Saltaire,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
Tuesday, 25 May 2010
Rainbow Morris

I was discussing it with a friend and we agreed that one of the things that made it all seem especially good was how kind of 'wholesome' it was. Families were out picnicking, all generations were present from tiny new-borns (lots of them! Was there a power cut nine months ago?) to great-grannies. No commercialism (not even an ice-cream van on site, though the volunteer-run café was reported to be out of ices by the end of the day), nothing tacky at all. Just lots of fun, family-orientated activities, good quality entertainment - music, dancing, drama, comedy, cricket - and a real 'local community' feel to it. There was plenty for everyone to enjoy - though the glorious weather was the star attraction. All rather old-fashioned really... Sir Titus would have been delighted.
Labels:
dance,
event,
Roberts Park,
Saltaire,
weather,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
Monday, 24 May 2010
The band plays ...

The sunshine happened to coincide with the grand opening of the restored Roberts Park in Saltaire on Saturday, providing a grand day out for hundreds of people. Most visitors were local - I bumped into lots of my friends and at least half of my church congregation! Many people took picnics and the newly refurbished Half Moon Café was thronged and doing a roaring trade in drinks, ice creams and BBQ food - well done Wendy and Hazel!
The official opening was performed by the Lord Mayor of Bradford, Councillor John D Godward. Afterwards The Hammonds Saltaire Band (see my blog of 28 December) christened the new bandstand, which replaces the original Victorian one that was demolished long ago. They played a specially commissioned fanfare, composed and conducted by Bradford composer Jonathan Brigg, before moving on to a lively selection of more traditional brass band pieces. (Oh, I do love a bit of brass band music!)
Labels:
event,
Roberts Park,
Saltaire,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
Sunday, 23 May 2010
Boatmen's cabin

Interestingly, to illustrate just how hard it was to get agreement (between Lancastrians and Yorkshiremen!) about the building of the canal, the locks from Liverpool to Wigan are longer than those from Wigan to Leeds so that there were long boats (70') and short boats (60'). The barges could carry 40-50 tons and originally they were pulled by horses. Gradually steam engines took over (from 1871) and then diesel - and the last working horse retired in 1961.
Saturday, 22 May 2010
Leo

The narrowboat Leo, in my photo, does regular short trips up the Springs Branch and back to the canal basin - for £3 you can spend a very pleasant half hour watching the world drift past. The boatman is a neighbour of my friends - cue for a certain amount of waving and banter as the boat slid by!
Labels:
boat,
castle,
Leeds-Liverpool canal,
Skipton,
Yorkshire
Friday, 21 May 2010
Living next door to Alice

Thursday, 20 May 2010
Blue sky and blossom
I like the way the gentle spring light softens the stone of Salts Mill - and the counterpoint of the delicate blossom against the chiselled architecture.
Labels:
flower,
Saltaire,
Salts Mill,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
Wednesday, 19 May 2010
Spring garden

Many of the properties in this locality have beautiful spacious gardens (whereas our homes in Saltaire just have pocket-sized plots). I am fascinated to see other people's gardens, from all over the world, pictured on the many blogs I follow - so I thought I would share this wonderful back garden, pictured above, which belongs to some friends of mine. Rising steeply to woodland, it has a little (man-made) stream and pool, and terraces that are filled with colour and interest all year round. It's a delight and testimony to their many hours of hard work, as well as their vision. Having not a green finger on me, I can only marvel - and enjoy visiting the beauty they've created. I think the blue painted wall is a lovely touch and somehow gives it a Mediterranean feel.
Tuesday, 18 May 2010
Interior, 1875

On a recent visit to Bradford's Industrial Museum, I had a look into the row of Victorian back-to-back houses that were moved from their original position in Bradford and rebuilt on the Museum site. Back-to-back houses are literally that... two houses built back to back, each having one entrance, one downstairs room and two bedrooms upstairs. There are none like that in Saltaire - its houses are terraced and have a front and back entrance, so they are bigger than the ones at the Museum. Nevertheless, this picture will give you some idea of what the inside of a millworker's house looked like around 1875.
The houses were lit by gaslight, oil lamps and candles. You can see the black coal-fired range that was used for cooking - it has an integral tank for heating water to use for washing and bathing (in a tin bath). The scullery would have had running water from a cold tap. If you click the pic to enlarge it you can also see, resting by the fire, two 'flat irons' that were heated in the fire to iron clothes, a pottery hot-water bottle and the very necessary bellows used to get the fire roaring. Although spartan by modern standards, Saltaire's cottages would have been cosy and luxurious compared with the prevailing living conditions in the city at the time. Most of Saltaire's Victorian residents worked in the mill or had other jobs in the locality so most would have been able to afford reasonable food and furnishings.
Monday, 17 May 2010
Overlooker's cottage

The 1871 census lists this house as being occupied by 32 yr old John Lambert, a mechanic, his wife Jane and their one year old son Joe. It doesn't say if John worked in Salts Mill - but with all that machinery they would surely have needed mechanics?
A new book has been published about Saltaire: " Saltaire - The Making of a Model Town" by Neil Jackson, Jo Lintonbon & Bryony Staples. I have not read it yet but I am told it explores the design and construction of Saltaire through its different phases. Apparently the authors' research leads them to argue that the different sizes and styles of housing have more to do with the architects' design processes and decisions than with the social structure of the village. If that's true, it would present a fundamental shift in understanding of the history of Saltaire.
Labels:
house,
Saltaire,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
Sunday, 16 May 2010
Inside out

Meanwhile, I have been doing a bit of demolition work on it myself... experimenting with merging some images of the church. This idea is, I have to confess, not original to me. I have seen several examples of photographs of buildings that use this 'cut-away' technique to suggest the interior view. I've just learned how to do it, on my photography course, and there's nothing like a bit of practice to help to understand and embed the principles! The interior of the Grade 1 listed church is as breathtaking - in its inimitable Victorian way - as the exterior, and I think it's rather intriguing to see both at the same time.
The church was built in 1859 by Sir Titus Salt, as part of the 'model' village he had constructed round his vast mill complex to house his mill workers. A staunch Christian himself, Sir Titus saw it as his duty to ensure the spiritual wellbeing of his villagers. Later, he decided to add an extension to act as the Salt family mausoleum and he and several other members of his family are interred there. Designed by the architects Lockwood and Mawson, the church is in the ornate Italianate style that characterises Salts Mill and the World Heritage Site village of Saltaire.
For more detailed photos of the interior see my blog 22 June 2009, 24 October and 26 October.
Labels:
church,
Saltaire,
Saltaire URC,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
Saturday, 15 May 2010
Appetiser

The county town of Yorkshire (of course), York is a walled city with some ancient streets and the wonderful York Minster (cathedral). You can see the twin towers of the Minster and part of the Walls on this photo. (Click the pic to view it larger.)
Friday, 14 May 2010
Leeds station

The more you keep your eyes open for photos the more you find, sometimes in the most unpromising of places. I was passing through Leeds railway station on my way to York the other day, and as I was waiting for my train I noticed the strong graphic effect of the metal staircase on the opposite platform. I would have liked there to be fewer people in the picture but I had to take it quickly as there was a train coming in! Maybe one day I'll go back and try another improved shot of this. Though I have heard of a photographer who was summarily ejected from the station by the security guards for taking photos, so it could be hazardous. (I guess a middle-aged woman with a compact camera attracts less attention than a bloke with a massive DSLR and a long lens, unfair though that may be!)
I have converted this to black and white and 'posterized' it in Photoshop but it was almost a mono image anyway.
Thursday, 13 May 2010
Bluebells

Labels:
flower,
Hirst Woods,
Saltaire,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
Wednesday, 12 May 2010
Blue mood

To see more photos of the church, click the 'Saltaire URC' label.
And by the way, for those who asked to see more of my portfolio for my course, this is one I'm thinking of using.
Labels:
church,
Saltaire,
Saltaire URC,
weather,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
Tuesday, 11 May 2010
All Terrain Cycles

Labels:
Saltaire,
Salts Mill,
shops,
sport,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
Monday, 10 May 2010
Saltaire getting greener

At Leeds station they are going one better and building a Dutch-style Cycle Point with storage for 300 cycles, plus a shop and repair facility. Jolly good, I say!
Labels:
Leeds,
Saltaire,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
Sunday, 9 May 2010
Blue bicycle
(The company recently had a competition to win Pashley bikes. Since my daughter also has a pretty blue Pashley bike, it seems either she - or they - have caught the zeitgeist!)
Labels:
Saltaire,
Salts Mill,
shops,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
Saturday, 8 May 2010
Hello

My photograph is another of those apparently random exhibits in Salts Mill, Saltaire - this time a 1963 poster by the artist Roy Lichtenstein. It's titled "Cold Shoulder", and the original is in the collection of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art - but I imagine the print is hanging right here on the stairs at Salts Mill because it says 'hello' to welcome visitors. It makes a striking image against the painted wall. I have slightly cheated and swapped the actual cream wall for a white one, because I thought it had more impact.
Labels:
art,
interior,
Saltaire,
Salts Mill,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
Friday, 7 May 2010
I agree with Nick

By the time you read this, it may well be clear what the new shape of government in the UK is to be. As for me, I agree with Nick (well, he's the dishiest of the three anyway!) but unfortunately in this constituency that won't get me very far. Shipley is traditionally a Tory seat, though by no means as strongly so now as it used to be.
Whatever happens, I am just so grateful that I can potter along to vote in the local Methodist church hall (shown above) - a modest building, staffed by helpful and smiley people. The young Labour activist outside was courteous when he asked me for my registration number. There were no armed guards, no need for purple-inked fingertips, no suspicious packages or car bombs reported anywhere (as at 6pm Thursday anyway!). The UKIP leader was almost killed in a plane crash - but it seems to have been caused by a tangled banner rather than anything more sinister. I thank God that I live in a democracy like this, even if it does look a bit wonky sometimes.
Labels:
event,
Saltaire,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
Thursday, 6 May 2010
Windows & taxes
If you look closely, on the left you can see some scaffolding - proof that maintenance work and development of the building continues even now. Keeping such a huge building in good order must be a never-ending task. I wonder if anyone has ever counted the number of windows it has? And who cleans them all?
Salts Mill was opened in 1853. Was it pure coincidence that the Window Tax in England was repealed in 1851? The Window Tax was introduced by William III in 1696 (apparently under the 'Act of Making Good the Deficiency of the Clipped Money' - which must be the most fun title for an Act of Parliament ever dreamed up!) It was charged according to the number of windows your house had. There are still properties in some areas where you can see the bricked-up windows that were a way of avoiding the tax. I don't think the tax was imposed upon buildings other than dwellings - but I suppose by 1853 windows would have become very desirable again. I think the real reason for all the windows in the Mill was that the worsted-making processes demanded very good light. The quality of the light is very noticeable inside the building.
And, whilst this has largely been an 'election-free' blog, today is Polling Day, when things in UK might change - for better or worse. Though as Alan said recently on his brilliant 'News from Nowhere': "plus ça change, plus c'est la même chose". Whoever leads the country, I reckon they might need another 'Act of Making Good the Deficiency of the Clipped Money'!
Labels:
Saltaire,
Salts Mill,
window,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
Wednesday, 5 May 2010
Oops, sorry!

Traffic is one of Saltaire's biggest problems. There are plans afoot to try to improve congestion at the junction of the two main roads at Saltaire roundabout, but I'm concerned that the measures there (traffic lights and blocking access to some roads) will only serve to make the minor roads through the village busier and more dangerous. There really ought to be traffic lights at this junction. It's a nightmare trying to pull out of the top of Victoria Road, waiting for a gap in the traffic. Vehicles on Saltaire road often drive far too fast (at least, when they aren't stuck in a traffic jam there!) So people do take risks, as possibly the driver of the cream car was trying to do. I'm sure that wasn't the way anyone wanted their day out to end....
Tuesday, 4 May 2010
History in stone
I'm having to do a portfolio of twelve photographs for my Photography coursework, demonstrating some of the Photoshop techniques we've been learning. I started this particular project with a very unpromising picture of Salts Mill chimney, taken with my compact camera, set - for some unaccountable reason - with the white balance to tungsten... I'm not the most technically minded person! Anyway, after much playing I ended up with this, which I do quite like. I'm not generally a fan of heavily doctored images but on occasion they can 'tell a story'. I think the backdrop of stone here and the sepia toning allude to Saltaire's history and character.
For more conventional photos of the chimney, see here and here.
For more conventional photos of the chimney, see here and here.
Labels:
art,
chimney,
Saltaire,
Salts Mill,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
Monday, 3 May 2010
Blossom bonanza

I do love this time of year, and always enjoy seeing this row of (I think) cherry trees in bloom. There are two sorts: dark pink and light pink, and the combination is very attractive. Their blossoming is usually a cue for a bout of wild and windy weather. In a week or two, the whole street will resemble the street of a thousand weddings, as all the petals drop to the ground like so much confetti.
Labels:
blossom,
flower,
Saltaire,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
Sunday, 2 May 2010
Skywatch Saltaire

Labels:
Saltaire,
weather,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
Saturday, 1 May 2010
BBC Antiques Roadshow in Saltaire

The BBC Antiques Roadshow came to Saltaire's Victoria Hall on Thursday, causing great excitement and long queues of people, clutching all manner of boxes and bags containing their treasures. The Roadshow has been running for 33 years on BBC TV and has become a much-loved treasure in itself. The format is that members of the public bring their family heirlooms to be appraised and valued by antiques experts, with the hope that every so often some real 'find' is unearthed or somebody realises they're richer than they thought. The programme is hosted now by the popular Fiona Bruce, and many of the experts have become household names through their appearances on the show.
As always, your intrepid reporter jennyfreckles was on the spot to record the event (with grateful thanks to Pamela and Julie for providing me with a pass that meant I didn't have to join the queue.) It was a fascinating day, and opened my eyes to the amount of work needed to arrange and record the programme - there were staff and stewards everywhere. What you'd describe as organised chaos!
Images from top left, clockwise: a fraction of the queue to get into Victoria Hall; ceramics expert Lars Tharp casts an experienced eye over a piece of a dinner service used by Titus Salt Jnr at Milner Field; Fiona Bruce discusses teddy bears with a young collector; Hilary Kay gets enthusiastic about a carriage; 'sshh' says the sound man; make-up; George Archdale (I think) values a poster - and in the centre, one of the big trucks parked beside the Victoria Hall.
For a different view of the event, the Telegraph & Argus local paper has some articles and video.
Labels:
art,
event,
Saltaire,
Victoria Hall,
World Heritage Site,
Yorkshire
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