Norwich Cathedral limited edition art print on giclee
Norwich cathedral image taken with a home made beer can pinhole camera. Black and white, printed on high quality giclee art paper.
Available in A3 only, the print will have a white border around the image. Supplied unframed. Limited edition of 20 prints.
During 2020 when we were all gifted time to sit and contemplate our place in the world, I turned to alternative photographic processes. Pinhole photography was something new to me, having been in professional (digital) photography for almost 20 years by then.
Pinhole photography brought back the magic in the art of photography for me. I love making, so making the cameras themselves was great fun. Secondly, you have no viewfinder, no lens, no idea exactly what's in frame and how long to expose for. This image of Norwich Cathedral was one of my earliest, taken in March 2020.
Norwich cathedral image taken with a home made beer can pinhole camera. Black and white, printed on high quality giclee art paper.
Available in A3 only, the print will have a white border around the image. Supplied unframed. Limited edition of 20 prints.
During 2020 when we were all gifted time to sit and contemplate our place in the world, I turned to alternative photographic processes. Pinhole photography was something new to me, having been in professional (digital) photography for almost 20 years by then.
Pinhole photography brought back the magic in the art of photography for me. I love making, so making the cameras themselves was great fun. Secondly, you have no viewfinder, no lens, no idea exactly what's in frame and how long to expose for. This image of Norwich Cathedral was one of my earliest, taken in March 2020.
Norwich cathedral image taken with a home made beer can pinhole camera. Black and white, printed on high quality giclee art paper.
Available in A3 only, the print will have a white border around the image. Supplied unframed. Limited edition of 20 prints.
During 2020 when we were all gifted time to sit and contemplate our place in the world, I turned to alternative photographic processes. Pinhole photography was something new to me, having been in professional (digital) photography for almost 20 years by then.
Pinhole photography brought back the magic in the art of photography for me. I love making, so making the cameras themselves was great fun. Secondly, you have no viewfinder, no lens, no idea exactly what's in frame and how long to expose for. This image of Norwich Cathedral was one of my earliest, taken in March 2020.