Showing posts with label Album. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Album. Show all posts

Sunday, 8 January 2017

Fartown Rugby and Cricket Grounds, Huddersfield.

A view across a green grass field towards rugby posts under a cloudy sky. Trees line the background.

Fartown, originally known as St John's Ground, has a rich sporting history that spans from cricket to rugby league. It's story begins in 1868, hosting cricket matches. In 1875 a pivotal merger took place, uniting Huddersfield St John's Cricket Club with Huddersfield Athletic Club, which had already established a rugby club in 1866. This union laid the groundwork for Fartown's future as a rugby stronghold. By the 2nd November 1878, the ground had been sufficiently developed to host it's first rugby match, a contest against Manchester Rangers Rugby Club.

Fartown's significance in rugby history was further cemented in 1895 when the sport underwent a major split. Huddersfield joined the Northern Rugby Football Union, the breakaway faction that eventually evolved into the modern game of rugby league. Fartown became their home ground, a relationship that would last almost a century.

For almost a hundred years, Fartown echoed with the roar of the crowd and the clash of tackles. It's most glorious moment likely came in 1947 when it hosted a Challenge Cup Semi-Final, Leeds RLFC beating Wakefield Trinity RLFC 21-0 in front of a crowd of 35,136 - a testament to the ground's capacity and the passion then for rugby league in Huddersfield.

However. the club and stadium's fortunes began to decline, and by the 1980's, Fartown was a shadow of it's illustrious past. In 1992 the then Huddersfield RLFC, having recently ditched the Barracudas name moved to Leeds Road to share with the local football team Huddersfield Town, marking the end of an era. Shortly after, Fartown was demolished, erasing much of the physical presence. Today only floodlights, perimeter fencing, pitch and an overgrown terrace thar resembles a woodland remain as silent witnesses to the stadium's vibrant past, a reminder of the thousands of fans and the countless sporting memories forged within it's boundaries. Fartown's story, though it's stands may be gone, continues to resonate within the history of Huddersfield and the story of Rugby League.

I took these pictures on the 18th June 2015 with a Polaroid is2132 camera.
A daytime photograph of the Fartown Clock Tower, a tall, brick-built structure, located in Huddersfield. It is surrounded by green grass and bushes, with a soccer field and distant buildings in the background. A decorative clock face is located near the top, surmounted by a weather vane. Below the clock are commemorative plaques with text. The sky above is cloudy.
The Cricket Memorial, it used to feature a clock that has been removed.

An elevated, panoramic view of Fartown Ground, a rugby league pitch in Huddersfield, England. The image shows the large, green oval playing surface under a cloudy sky. From a grassy hillside, the viewer looks across the pitch, which is enclosed by traditional white H-shaped goal posts at both ends. Surrounding the ground are rows of terraced houses, mature trees, and a distinctive church steeple in the distance, typical of a West Yorkshire industrial town. The overall perspective captures the integration of the ground into the surrounding urban landscape.
The former cricket ground, now playing host to amateur Rugby League.

A ground-level photograph of the Fartown rugby ground in Huddersfield on an overcast day. In the foreground, there's a low, weather-beaten yellow-painted metal fence and overgrown tall green grass. To the right, a large bush with vibrant green leaves dominates the frame. Looking over the fence, the central focus is a set of tall, white H-shaped rugby goalposts standing on a large, well-maintained green grass pitch. Further across the field, near the background tree line, a smaller, less distinct set of goalposts is visible. Buildings of the Huddersfield townscape are visible to the left in the distance under a grey, cloudy sky. A white border frames the entire image.
Taken from the Scoreboard terrace at the ground.

A wide-angle landscape photograph of the Fartown Ground, Huddersfield. The image captures an expansive, vibrant green rugby field under a mostly overcast, cloudy grey sky. The background is defined by a dense, dark green treeline of mixed deciduous trees lining the far edge of the pitch. Prominently in the left-midground stands a tall, white rugby goalpost. Several other metal lattice floodlight towers are visible along the perimeter of the field, stretching towards the right. The grass has subtle variations in color, suggesting texture and wear from sport. The overall perspective is a wide shot looking across the pitch towards the woods, conveying a quiet, empty ground before a match.
The very overgrown northern terrace.

A landscape photograph capturing a large green grass sports field under a cloudy grey sky. On the left side of the frame, there is a set of tall, H-shaped rugby goal posts. Several tall, metal lattice floodlight pylons are spaced across the far background. Along the field’s far edge, there's a perimeter of dense green trees, hedges, a red brick clubhouse building with a tiled roof, and a red shipping container, with a faint church spire and a town skyline visible on the horizon beyond the foliage. The foreground features patchy green grass with white clover and other ground cover, leading the eye towards the main pitch. The overall light is soft and diffused.

A view of the half-timbered cricket pavilion at Fartown Ground in Huddersfield. The black-and-white patterned building with a dark tiled roof, featuring the sign 'BAITUL TAUHID', sits on a grassy bank supported by a stone wall. The house is surrounded by lush green trees and shrubs, with a gravel path leading from the foreground. The sky is overcast and grey.
The rather sad looking former cricket pavilion.

A photograph taken from the perspective of an adjacent overgrown path showing a expansive, manicured green grass playing field that stretches towards a background of dense trees. On the far left of the pitch is a tall white metal H-post rugby goal. A dilapidated, rusty metal hoop-and-spear style fence runs along the right side of the pitch, dividing it from the overgrown grasses and thick bushes in the foreground. A row of wooden fence posts are visible behind the metal fence, and a utility pole is near the rugby goal. The sky is a bright, clear white, framed by the top border of the photo, which has a wide white border.
The scoreboard end, the stadiums metal fencing still in place.

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All the pictures remain the copyright of Colin Green.

Sunday, 2 October 2016

Technicolour Sunset in Brechin, Scotland.

A landscape view of a road lined with dark trees under a spectacular sunset. The sky transitions from a neon green at the horizon to brilliant orange and yellow ripples, topped with heavy, dark blue storm clouds.

There are moments when the world seems to shed its ordinary skin, trading the muted tones of the everyday for a palette that feels almost supernatural. We’ve all had those evenings—the ones where you’re mid-sentence, perhaps washing dishes or walking to your car, and a sudden shift in light pulls your gaze upward. For a few fleeting minutes, the atmosphere performs a symphony of color so loud it demands absolute silence from everyone below.

The images before us aren't just snapshots of a day ending; they are a masterclass in atmospheric drama. With clouds rippling like molten gold against a backdrop of deep, electric indigo, they serve as a vivid reminder that nature is the ultimate artist, and we are lucky enough to have a front-row seat.

The Science of the Spectacle

To understand the beauty of a "fire sky," we have to look at the physics of Rayleigh scattering. During the day, the sun’s light travels a relatively short distance through the atmosphere, scattering shorter blue wavelengths and giving us a bright blue sky. But as the sun dips toward the horizon, that light has to travel through much more of the Earth's atmosphere to reach our eyes.

The atmosphere acts as a filter, scattering away the violets and blues and leaving behind the long-wavelength heroes: the reds, oranges, and yellows. When you add a textured layer of altocumulus or cirrus clouds into the mix—like the ones seen in these photos—those clouds act as a canvas, catching the sun's low-angle rays from beneath. The result is a high-contrast, high-drama landscape that feels more like a painting than a photograph.

A high-contrast sunset featuring a dense layer of altocumulus clouds. The lower clouds are glowing bright yellow and orange, while the upper clouds are deep blue and gray, creating a dramatic, fiery canopy above a dark silhouette of a tree and building roof.

A Study in Contrast: Blue vs. Gold

In the first image, what strikes the viewer most is the tension between the colours. We often think of sunsets as "warm," but the most breathtaking ones are those that maintain a "cool" counterpoint. Here, the deep, bruised blues of the upper atmosphere haven't quite given way to the evening. They sit heavily above a layer of clouds that look like they’ve been dipped in liquid phosphorus.

This contrast represents the duality of our own lives. We often operate in the "blue"—the steady, predictable, and sometimes heavy routine of the day. But then, there are the "golden" moments: the flashes of inspiration, the sudden bursts of joy, and the unexpected beauty that breaks through the ceiling of the mundane. The beauty isn't just in the gold; it’s in how the gold looks against the blue.

The Industrial Silhouette: Finding Beauty in the Ordinary

The second image offers a different perspective. We see the silhouettes of an industrial building and a line of trees. Usually, these are things we ignore. A warehouse or a treeline by the side of a road is part of the "background noise" of our commutes.

However, under the influence of such a sky, these structures are transformed. They become sharp, dark anchors for the chaos above. It’s a poignant reminder that beauty doesn't require a pristine mountain range or a white-sand beach to manifest. It can happen over a parking lot. It can happen over a suburban roof.

There is a profound lesson here about presence. If we wait for the "perfect" setting to be inspired, we miss the daily miracles occurring right above our heads. The most industrial, gray corners of our lives are still capable of being illuminated if the light is right.

The Road Ahead: The Neon Horizon

The third image captures a rare phenomenon: a sliver of neon green-yellow light cutting through the horizon just as the sun disappears. It looks like a gateway to another world. The road below is dark, almost invisible, but the sky is a roadmap of fire.

In literature and film, the "road" is the ultimate symbol of the journey. To drive toward a sky like this is to drive toward the unknown with a sense of awe rather than fear. It’s an invitation to keep moving, even when the path immediately in front of us is shrouded in shadow. As long as there is light on the horizon—no matter how strange or electric it may look—there is a reason to keep the engine running.

Why We Stop and Stare

Why is it that, despite having seen thousands of sunsets in our lifetimes, we still pull out our phones to take a picture? Why do we still point them out to our partners or friends?

It’s because a sunset is a reminder of impermanence. Unlike a painting in a gallery or a digital file on a hard drive, the sky is a live performance. It will never look exactly like this again. The wind will shift the clouds, the Earth will continue its tilt, and within ten minutes, the fire will fade into a soft, dusty purple, eventually giving way to the velvet black of night.

In a world that demands we be "productive" every waking second, stopping to look at a sunset is a radical act of stillness. It is one of the few things we do that serves no purpose other than to appreciate being alive. You can’t "use" a sunset. You can’t sell it. You can only witness it.

Capturing the Moment: A Photographer’s Challenge

For those trying to capture these moments, as seen in these highly saturated, HDR-style images, the goal is often to translate the feeling of the light rather than the literal reality. Human eyes have a dynamic range that cameras often struggle to match. To get the details in the dark trees and the bright highlights of the clouds simultaneously requires a bit of digital magic.

These images lean into that drama. They aren't trying to be subtle. They are shouting. They use saturation and contrast to mimic the "retinal shock" we feel when we see something truly spectacular. They remind us that sometimes, reality is too big for a standard lens.

Final Thoughts: The Fire Within

As the sun sets on another day, take a look at these images and ask yourself: When was the last time I looked up?

We spend so much of our time looking down—at our phones, at the pavement, at our desks. But the sky is a constant, ever-changing gallery that belongs to everyone. It doesn't matter who you are or where you are; the "Electric Sky" is yours for the taking.

Tonight, if the clouds are right and the sun is low, step outside. Leave the phone on the counter for a moment. Watch the gold bleed into the blue. Watch the silhouettes of your neighbourhood turn into art. And remember: no matter how dark the road ahead might seem, there is always a fire waiting to be lit in the clouds.

A wide-angle view of a vibrant sunset over a low-profile industrial building and lush green trees. The sky is filled with swirling orange, gold, and blue clouds, with a bright turquoise light peeking through the centre of the cloud cover.

All the pictures remain the copyright of Colin Green.