Capturing the world with Photography, Painting and Drawing

kilkenny photography

Mrs Maura Hennessy – Making Bread

Mrs Maura Hennessy  03
Making the Bread – Maura Hennessy
Portrait photography : Nigel Borrington

I took these images of Mrs Hennessy, from West St,Callan Back in 2007 for a photography exhibition in the town.

She was a big friend of Joe my brother in law, who runs a local shop. We asked if she would let us take these pictures and I think she truly enjoyed them being taken.

The images played a big part in the exhibition and she came to the opening evening.

Sadly she passed away a little time ago, the local news paper published the following comments Callan Mourns . The family placed one of the photo’s on her coffin during the funeral service.

So here’s to you Mrs Hennessy, I hope your still busy making bread, at rest but most probably still busy !!!

Mrs Maura Hennessy  02

Mrs Maura Hennessy  07

Mrs Maura Hennessy  04

Mrs Maura Hennessy  05

Mrs Maura Hennessy  06


The Steppes Bar, Monday morning in Callan

The Steppes Callan
Fujifilm X100
The Steppes bar, Callan County Kilkenny
Irish Photography : Nigel Borrington

Nineteen bear barrels for collection, 6am Monday morning and the weekend is clearly over!


Sunrise in the Park

Sunrise Fair Green Callan 1
Sunrise ay Callan’s Fair green
Kilkenny Landscape Photography : Nigel Borrington

This morning’s sunrise was just as wonderful as the sunset yesterday, I took Molly our ten year old Golden Retriever out for a walk on the local green, the sight of the rising sun through the trees was a great start to the day.

Sunrise Fair Green Callan 5

Sunrise Fair Green Callan 2

Sunrise Fair Green Callan 3

Sunrise Fair Green Callan 4


Comeragh Mountains – Wild cotton grass fields

bog cotton fields 2
All images using a Sigma SD15, 15-30mm lens, iso 50
Comeragh Mountains, co.Waterford – Wild cotton grass fields
Landscape Photography : Nigel Borrington

Wild Cotton grass, Comeragh mountains, county Waterford

Last evening we went for a long walk with our dog through the comeragh mountains and came across an area of Bog cotton, it covered the entire hill side and valley in front of us as we walked through it.

So I just wanted to share this wonderful view and I hope get across just how amazing a view this offers on the hill sides of these mountains in the middle of a very warm July.

Common Grass Cotton

As its other common name, Bog Cotton, might suggest, this is a plant of very damp peaty ground. Its leaves mostly arise from the base of the plant, often being tinged with red or brown. It has tiny insignificant little brown flowers in April and May but it is really when it is in fruit that this becomes a most eye-catching and attractive plant. Borne on 30-50cm high, cylindrical stems, the little seeds are held in fluffy, downy, white tufts which quiver and shake in the wind, a most effective dispersal method. This is a native pant belonging to the family Cyperaceae.

Wild Cotton grass – Gallery

bog cotton fields 3

bog cotton fields 7

bog cotton fields 4

bog cotton fields 6

bog cotton fields 5


An evening in County Kilkenny, through its trees

Kilkenny through the tress 7
All images using – Nikon D200, Mamiya sekor n 45mm f2.8 lens, iso 100
County kilkenny, through its trees
Landscape photography : Nigel Borrington

A sense of Kilkenny

Getting out and about in county Kilkenny on these summer days is just wonderful, this Gallery of images was from an evenings walk through some local country lanes. I hope they get across a sense of the county and its wonderful landscape on an evening in July.

Nigel

Kilkenny through its trees – A Gallery

Kilkenny through the tress 5

Kilkenny through the tress 1

Kilkenny through the tress 2

Kilkenny through the tress 3

Kilkenny through the tress 4

Kilkenny through the tress 6

Kilkenny through the tress 8


Kilkenny photography – a farming gallery

Images from the fields 3
All images using a Nikon D7000, 35mm focus length, iso 200
Images of framing in county Kilkenny
Landscape photography : Nigel Borrington

By far the biggest industry in county Kilkenny is farming, The main land use is grassland, dairy farming and tillage farming especially around Kilkenny City and in the fertile central plain of the Nore Valley. Conifer forests are found on the upland areas.

Last year I set out to produce a collection of farming images and have worked with some of the counties Farmers on this. The images below are just some of the pictures so far, its a pleasure to be working out in the fields and watches the work being carried out.

Images from the farm – Gallery

Images from the fields 1

Images from the fields 4

Images from the fields 5

Images from the fields 2

Images from the fields 6


I walked through an ancient path, woodland poems

In wild woodlands 2
Fujifilm x100, 35mm focus length, iso 800
Kilkenny woodlands
Landscape photography : Nigel Borrington

A woodland walk

I walked through ancient paths,
where hidden mysteries lay
beneath our feet
and a choir of birds sing out loud,
with jewels dancing in the air.

In wild woodlands 3

Scrunching feet walk along
the twisting paths which
zigzag their way through
tall giants. Giants who
stand next to us.

While stepping on the
bones of the past,
sweet smells turn orange to red.
The giants form a roof with windows.

Sheltering the emerald flowers that
dapple the green carpet.
Spider webs shimmer like silver silk
as they whisper their secrets.
I walked those ancient paths.

………………………

A Woodland Walk

I took a walk today,
where the trees like giants,
held up the sky.
The breeze tickled the leaves

In wild woodlands 4

Many people have walked
on these ancient paths,
Discovering hidden secrets,
Foxes hiding in the shadows,
birds calling from the tree tops.

I took a walk today
and passed a trickling stream,
Where leaves crunched underfoot.
Water ran over boulders,
as it tumbled down the bank.

In the dappled shade,
jewel like light hits the ground.
Flies hang in the air, dancing.
What a wonderful walk!

More woodland Poems


Kilkenny Slate Quarries

Kilkenny slate quaries 1
All images using a Sigma SD15, 15-30mm f3.5-4.5 lens, iso 100
Victorian Slate quarries, County Kilkenny
Landscape Photography : Nigel Borrington

I can remember the first time I came across the Slate quarries near Windgap, County Kilkenny, there are about four or five of these sites in the area all of the now disused and flooded, How long they have existed varies but all of them go back to the Victorian period.

The quarry in these images is located near Ahenny, Co.Kilkenny and the reason I find it more interesting than the others is that it still has remains of some cottages that the workers would have lived in during the period that the quarry was in operation.

Quarry lake

Kilkenny slate quaries 2

Kilkenny slate quaries 3

Kilkenny slate quaries 4
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I don’t know how deep the lake is, I have been swimming in it many times and it feels deep very deep, the miners would have had to blast most of the slate out and the sides of the lake go strait down below the water. If you swim underneath the water and down the sides a little you still cannot see the bottom of the quarry, many would feel a little unhappy swimming here.

Workers Cottage’s

Kilkenny slate quaries 5

Kilkenny slate quaries 6
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There are some ten cottages in this row, its just around the corner from the lake, which when the quarry was in operation would have been a very dangerous location, with blasting and all the machinery in very close proximity to the cottages it cannot have been great living condition. This as-well the fact that the location is miles away from any village, the conditions for the worker must have been very poor.

The Quarries Today

Kilkenny slate quaries 7

Kilkenny slate quaries 8
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Today these quarries have become a wildlife and natural reserve, slate lies everywhere but this has provided a haven for plant life and wildlife, Herons hunt in the rive below the quarry and the lake is full of fish. The area covers about 2 square miles.

Kilkenny slate quaries 9
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When some of the local streams run dry in the summer you can see jut how much slate was left in the area after the mining finished, it covers the entire area.

I will come back to these quarries over the next weeks as they are wonderful places to post about and I love being around these quarries very much.


Images from a dog show

Images from a Dog show 2
Nikon D7000, 18-200mm Vr2 lens
Kilkenny dog show
Nigel Borrington

Each year we have a local dog show and for me its one of the best events held local.

I just love watching the dog as they show off their abilities, through different stages of the afternoon, here are just some images that I wanted to share.

Images from a Dog show 1
Nikon D7000, 18-200mm Vr2 lens
Kilkenny dog show
Nigel Borrington

Images from a Dog show 3
Nikon D7000, 18-200mm Vr2 lens
Kilkenny dog show
Nigel Borrington

Images from a Dog show 4
Nikon D7000, 18-200mm Vr2 lens
Kilkenny dog show
Nigel Borrington

Images from a Dog show 5
Nikon D7000, 18-200mm Vr2 lens
Kilkenny dog show
Nigel Borrington


Mid-summers day 2013

Pagan beliefs Air
Fuji film x100
Sunrise over kilkenny

Midsummer’s day 2013

Midsummer’s Eve/Litha/Feill-Sheathain/Alban Hefin/Gwyn Canol Haf

The Summer Solstice is the longest day of the year falling circa June 22 when the Sun enters Cancer (this year 20 June 2012 19:09 EDT). This is the time of celebrating the Earth’s bounty. The God is vibrant and at the peak of his power and the Goddess is fertile and pregnant. This reflects in our fertile gardens, brimming with life and and the fruits of our labor. The Sun is bright and strong. Animals in nature have established families they are showing off to the world. Midsummer is a celebration of the Earth and all she provides for us, also known as Litha after an ancient European fertility Goddess. This is also time sacred for the Fae and is one of the days one can see the them (keep a sprig of rue in your pocket so they don’t lead you away!!)…This is the time when the Oak King and Holly King battle for supremacy again, Holly King emerges triumphant this time around, they meet again at the Winter Solstice when the Oak King shall prevail.
Activities:

Midsummer is a good time to see the Fae folk; skip through your garden ensures fertility (not necessarily your own fertility) for the season; renew your vows/affirmations/bond with the God/Goddess; Stay up the entire night (old custom); harvest your herbs and other light garden work (weeding, etc.); have a bonfire (if you are oh, so lucky to have the place & clearance to do so!!); If you practice sex magic today is a powerful day to do so; ideas for family: spend a day at the beach, go birdwatching (be sure to bring a bird guide!), gather flowers and make Midsummer crowns or garlands for you hair and/or altar.

Incense: Wisteria, Rose, Mints
Decor: Suns, green plants, flowers, early garden bounty, herbs, bees, butterflies, birds, dragonflies,etc.
Herbs/Flowers: St. John’s Wort, Fennel, Vervain, Trefoil, Mugwort, Lavender, Rose, Fern, Daisy, Elder, Honeysuckle, Oak, Chamomile
Colors: Red, Yellow, Gold (represents the Sun God), various shades of green
Stones: Jade, Garnet, Lapis Lazuli=psychic awareness & fertility of mind & body (for more info on lapis visit http://www.earthbow.com/crystals/lapis.htm) ,diamonds

Knockroe, County Kilkenny

Knockroe passage tomb
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Each midsummers there is a meeting at knockroe passage grave, Co Kilkenny to mark the rising and setting of the mid summers sun.

Knockroe Markings


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We welcome in Mid summers day !


A car boot sale camera – sigma dp1

Sigma Dp1 front

I found this little camera at the kilkenny car boot sale a couple of weekends ago, it just looked up at me from one of the tables and had a price tag of €50 with the Voigtlander viewfinder.

Its the original 2009 sigma DP1 , (follow the link for details). The stall it was on was a charity stall collecting for Africa so I felt I just had to put my hand in my pockets and hand over the €50.

I had always wanted to try out one of these little cameras but when new they cost a good €800, the reviews never put it in great light but I always had a feeling that it was a little better then the reviewers reported them to be. The somewhat bad reviews have left the second hand prices low.

Sigma Dp1 back

Last week I put the camera in my bag along with some other of my kit and on the way home stopped off at a local tourist venue. The images below are three images from about fifty I took just as a test of this little camera. I have to say just like the reviews always said its a little old fashioned to use and the poor LCD screen ( in the sun ) makes you use the external viewfinder a lot but it still felt very good to use, a little like using a good film compact camera. The focus is good and the controls and functions are simple to find and quick to change if your use to any high end compact system.

Image quality

So what about the results, well the big reason I had to try this camera was for its sensor, ( A Foveon X3 sensor ) You can read all the details from the link, its the only sensor on the market that captures pure colour at each and everyone of its mega-pixels. All other sensors are monochrome only, with a filter that cuts out (Red, green and blue in turn) for each of a set of three mega-pixel locations in a row, repeated. Thus they do not record colour but only a signal that some colour has come through a filter to them.

The sigma sensor however records pure colour in full and at the intensity at which it reaches the pixel point. This system is as close to film as it comes.

The images below show the results and I have to say I am very impressed, quality wise they are sharp and the colour is wonderful but it was when I did a colour conversion to black and white my eyes were truly opened, if you have done any black and white conversion from raw digital files you will know the work you need to do to get some true film like monochrome contrast back into your images. Not here. The images even at default setting are just wonderful.

I have started each of the below image pairs with the black and white conversion from the original colour image.

Sigma Dp1 sample 1 black and white
Sigma Dp1, iso50

The contrast is just wonderful here, yet nothing is lost between the black of the trees and the sun on the grass…

Sigma Dp1 sample 1
Sigma Dp1, iso50

The green in the sun-lit grass, along with its detail is fully retained, yet the sky behind the trees has retained a light blue colour and not just overexposed into white.

Sigma Dp1 sample 2 black and white
Sigma Dp1, iso50

Again just look at the contrast in this black and white image, the dynamic range is just amazing, the shadows have just the right detail for a good image, yet the bright areas are not over exposed. This was a very sunny and thus contrast filled day.

Sigma Dp1 sample 2
Sigma Dp1, iso50

Just look how the colours really pop out of the image, this is as good as landscape slide film was without any photoshop colour post processing. All I did was set what I felt to be the correct exposure in the camera itself. Again and unlike slide film none of the image detail is lost due to the high contrast of this sunny afternoon.

Sigma Dp1 sample 3 black and white
Sigma Dp1, iso50

Sigma Dp1 sample 3
Sigma Dp1, iso50

Again none of the detail is lost in the above two images and a full range of tones and colours has been recorded.

Image print size

One issue is the actual image size out of the camera, this only being some 5 mega-pixels, but as with many peoples comments on mega-pixel size, more does not equal good quality big prints if the sensor is not recording enough detail, this sensors pixels are recording both sharp images (with as much details that the lens holds) and full direct colour detail. I feel very confident that these images could be printed at least A3 in size and beyond, all you need to print landscape books or books that record a holiday or family event for example.

All in all not a bad find for €50, one I don’t think I will be finding every weekend 🙂


Weekly Photo Challenge: Culture

The Hurley Maker at work:

What is Hurling : wikipedia

Kilkenny hurling team : Kilkenny hurling

Hurley Maker 001

Hurley Maker 002

Hurley Maker 003

Hurley Maker 004

Hurley Maker 005


Kilkenny landscape photography

Mist on the kings river kilkenny

Nikon D7000, 50mm f1.4 lens, iso 400
Kings river, kilkenny landscape images
Nigel Borrington


Misty Morning on the Kings river…

The Kings River (Irish: Abhainn Rí), flows through South Tipperary and County Kilkenny. It is a tributary of the River Nore.

It has its source in the Slieveardagh Hills in South Tipperary.It has many tributaries of its own.There are three main tributaries that are not named but are the original sources.One started as a spring in the townsland of Ballyphilip.The two remaining tributaries rise in the townsland of Gurteen. It flows southeast from the hills and crosses into County Kilkenny. It is joined by the Munster River before passing through the town of Callan. It continues eastwards from Callan, past Kells and joins the River Nore west of Thomastown.

Last one for today…

I am about to start re-designing my http://www.studio63.ie web site, I need to start thinking about how to rebuild this and my business ideas, who knows what to do at the moment, but here goes anyway!!


Spring; The age of rebirth

Kilkenny Landscape

Fujifilm X100
Kilkenny Landscape photography
By, Nigel Borrington

“I think that no matter how old or infirm I may become, I will always plant a large garden in the spring. Who can resist the feelings of hope and joy that one gets from participating in nature’s rebirth?” ~Edward Giobbi


Kilkenny Landscape Photography

Kilkenny Photography by kilkenny photographer Nigel Borrington

Clear water, Kings river, Callan Co.Kilkenny : Nigel Borrington

An image of a pool of clear water collecting in the Kings river, Callan, Co.Kilkenny

Kilkenny Photographer : Nigel Borrington