Tuesday, 17 September 2013

Your Photo Dreams on Holiday

In August 2013 YPD went taking photos on location  to France, Belgium and Holland


Here are a few of our favourite places


Here are a few of our favourite places






Monday, 5 August 2013

Vintage advertising (Steel signs)

Although first used in the manufacture of coloured metal panels for buildings, the process of fusing coloured glass to iron plates, known as vitreous enamelling, patented in England in the 1870s,

This was soon turned to the production of brilliantly coloured enamelled iron plates, advertising all manner of products, ranging from groceries, newspapers and tobacco, to bicycles and motor cars.

 By the start of the First World War, almost every small shop in Great Britain would have had a colourful display of permanent advertising signs on its external walls, with slogans proclaiming the properties of the goods they advertised, such as: 'Cadbury's Cocoa, Absolutely Pure, Therefore Best', 'Robin Starch, Does not Stick to the Iron', 'Stephens' Mucilage, Sticks Quickly', and 'Hudson's Soap, Powerful, Easy & Safe'.

The onset of the Second World War saw the decline of this advertising medium, as the primary need for steel was in industry supporting Britain's war effort

 This, together with the adoption of the less durable American style paper posters on hoardings, effectively marked the demise of the enamel advertising sign in Britain.



The signs shown on this blog were photographed at transport / industrial heritage sites 


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Friday, 26 July 2013

Steam Railways

A look at some of the steam railway heritage sites where we have been to visit in the Uk including

Chasewater Steam railway

Severn Valley Railway

Llangollen Railway

North Yorkshire Moors Railway


For photographs please
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Thursday, 25 July 2013

Delabole Quarry

 The Delabole slate quarry is one of the largest of its type in England and has run continuously since the 15th century making it the oldest working slate quarry in England.

 In the reign of Elizabeth I the five quarries on the site of the now larger pit assumed considerable importance delivering slate to Brittany and the Netherlands. In 1841 the five quarries combined to make the Old Delabole Slate Quarry.

The Old Delabole Slate Quarry Ltd was liquidated in 1977 by the company's bankers. It was run under receivership by Rio Tinto Zinc until 1999 when a local management team bought it out. In 2005, the majority shareholders bought out the entire share capital, creating a single family ownership, the first time since 1842.


Delabole Quarry was once the deepest man-made pit in the world, but this is no longer the case due to massive open cast mines and quarries in America and Australia.


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Sunday, 21 July 2013

A Visit To Charlecote Park


Charlecote Park  is a grand 16th century country house, surrounded by its own deer park, on the banks of the River Avon near Wellesbourne,

It has been adminstered by the National Trust since 1946 and is open to the public. It is a Grade I listed building

The Lucy family has owned the land since 1247. Charlecote Park was built in 1558 by Sir Thomas Lucy, and Queen Elizabeth I stayed in the room that is now the drawing room

. Although the general outline of the Elizabethan house remains, nowadays it is in fact mostly Victorian. Successive generations of the Lucy family had modified Charlecote Park over the centuries, but in 1823, George Hammond Lucy (High Sheriff of Warwickshire in 1831) inherited the house and set about recreating the house in its original style.




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Saturday, 20 July 2013

Silver Studded Blue Butterfly



This small butterfly is found mainly in heathland where the silvery-blue wings of the males provide a marvellous sight as 
they fly low over the heather. The females are brown and far less
conspicuous but, like the male, have distinct metallic spots on 
the hindwing. In late afternoon the adults often congregate to
roost on sheltered bushes or grass tussocks. The Silver-studded
Blue has a restricted distribution but occurs in large numbers 
in suitable heathland and coastal habitats. It has undergone 
a major decline through most of its range.


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Tuesday, 16 July 2013

Tutbury Castle

Tutbury Castle


A Brief History

Situated in the heart of England, Tutbury Castle sits on wooded slopes overlooking the winding River Dove, with spectacular views across the plain of the Dove to the beautiful Derbyshire hills. Its commanding view and natural defensive position makes this an obvious site for a castle.


Situated in the heart of England, Tutbury Castle sits on wooded slopes overlooking the winding River Dove, with spectacular views across the plain of the Dove to the beautiful Derbyshire hills. Its commanding view and natural defensive position makes this an obvious site for a castle.

Occupied since the Stone Age, the castle is first recorded in 1071, as one of the new castles built to stamp the authority of the Norman conquerors across the Midlands. Since then, the castle has played an important part in English history on many occasions, in warfare and in peace.

The castle is best known as one of the prisons of Mary Queen of Scots, who was held here on four occasions. It was here that she became involved in the plot that ultimately led to her bloody execution at Fotheringhay.

Seat of the de Ferrers family, and later of the earls and dukes of Lancaster, Tutbury was also one of the great centers of power in medieval England. It was visited by many English kings, and home to the great John of Gaunt, 2nd Duke of Lancaster, who established a great annual feast. This tradition lasted for hundreds of years.

It also had its bloodier side, as it was besieged, destroyed and rebuilt several times. It was destroyed for the last time by Act of Parliament in 1647-48, after holding out for Charles I in the Civil War. The destruction was incomplete, leaving the dramatic ruins that we see today, and the castle has never been completely abandoned.

Since 2000, the castle has taken on a new life, welcoming thousands of visitors every year. With historical re-enactment, archaeological excavation, an authentic Tudor garden and mediaeval herbery, the ‘haunted’ Great Hall and King’s Bedroom, and of course the tearoom, there’s something for everyone.

The modern interest in the castle is as a venue for the many re-enactments it hosts, and the opportunity's for the many photographers it attracts


A selection of some of my photographs taken there during one of their

1940s Days



For photographs please
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Friday, 12 July 2013

Private Car Registrations Plates

Here in Britain some of us love our own personality attached to our  cars for all to see

Here are a few I have spotted


For photographs please 
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Wednesday, 10 July 2013

A Day Out At Martin Mere with the "Your Photo Dreams" photographers










www.yourphotodreams.com      your_photos@outlook.com


Where is it?

WWT Martin Mere Wetland Centre
Fish Lane, Burscough, Lancashire, L40 0TA



For photographs please 


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Monday, 8 July 2013

Oakengates Fete


A visit to Oakengates by the Photo Dreams Team

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Who are "Your Photo Dreams"

This  is the showcase of the personal photos of

Your Photo Dreams



Run by a male and female photographic team
we provide a bespoke service for all your photographic needs


Please see our website

www.yourphotodreams.com

Or contact us at

your_photos@outlook.com


When we are not working with clients
We like nothing better than going out with a camera
Recording the ever-changing face of our area
And the interesting people we meet




A Day At Severn Valley Railway

(www.yourphotodreams.com-----your_photos@outlook.com)





     1940s day at Severn Valley Railway




A day well attended by all branches of the armed forces
As well as a few famous faces

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