Showing posts with label Travel Nostalgia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Travel Nostalgia. Show all posts

Friday, 17 April 2026

The Salvage Archive: The Timeless Elegance of Westgate, A Journey Through Chichester’s Georgian Heart

 There is a specific kind of magic found in a 35mm slide. The colours have a saturated, organic warmth that modern digital sensors struggle to replicate—a soft glow on the brickwork and a depth to the shadows that makes the scene feel like a living memory. This particular slide captures one of the most beautiful thoroughfares in the South of England: Westgate, Chichester.

For those unfamiliar with this corner of West Sussex, Westgate is a masterclass in 18th-century urban design. Walking down this street today feels remarkably similar to the scene captured in your photograph, a testament to the city’s dedication to heritage conservation.

A street-level view of a narrow, curving road lined with historic multi-story buildings. In the foreground and mid-ground, several red-brick Georgian-style houses feature white-framed sash windows and ornate white door surrounds with classical columns. A prominent light blue house stands further down the street with a steep, clay-tiled roof and small dormer windows. The perspective recedes along the curve of the asphalt road toward a pale blue sky. A traditional black metal lantern hangs from a bracket on the right-hand wall, adding to the historic atmosphere of the English town.

A Palette of Brick and Sky

The architecture in your image showcases the transition from medieval timber frames to the "modern" Georgian style of the 1700s. In Chichester, this usually meant high-quality red brick, often laid in a Flemish Bond pattern (alternating long and short sides of the bricks).

The standout feature of this specific view is the powder-blue house. While many Georgian terraces adhered to strict brick or white stucco, this splash of colour has become a beloved part of the Westgate vista. It breaks the uniformity of the street, drawing the eye toward the gentle curve of the road as it heads toward the towering spire of Chichester Cathedral, just out of frame to the east.

Architectural Details to Note

If you look closely at the buildings in your collection's slide, several classic Georgian features emerge:

  • Sash Windows: Note the symmetrical placement of the windows. These are "six-over-six" or "nine-over-nine" panes, designed to let maximum light into the high-ceilinged rooms within.

  • The Doorcases: The red brick house in the foreground features a grand white doorcase with a pediment and columns, signalling the wealth of the original merchant or professional who lived there.

  • The Rooftops: The steep, tiled roofs with dormer windows suggest that even the "attic" spaces were utilized, often for servants' quarters or additional storage.

The Story of Westgate

Westgate sits just outside the original Roman city walls. In the medieval period, it was a bustling suburb, but it saw a significant "re-fronting" in the 1700s. During this era, Chichester was a wealthy market town, and the local elite competed to have the most fashionable "modern" house.

Today, most of these buildings are Grade II listed, meaning they are protected by law to ensure that the view you captured on your 35mm slide remains unchanged for another hundred years.

Why 35mm Slides Still Captivate Us

There is something deeply nostalgic about the grain and light in this photo. Before the era of instant smartphone uploads, a slide was a deliberate act of preservation. You had to wait for the film to be developed, then set up a projector in a darkened room to see the world "at scale."

This image isn't just a record of a street; it’s a record of a moment in time where the light hit the blue paint just right, and the Chichester bricks glowed with an orange warmth that only film can truly capture.

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Thursday, 30 October 2025

The Salvage Archive: A 1969 Snapshot of Aros Castle, Isle of Mull

There are some moments in my slide collection that just resonate with a deep sense of history and solitude, and this image of Aros Castle on the Isle of Mull, captured in 1969, is one of them. It's a striking portrait of rugged Scottish beauty, frozen in a time when travel to the islands felt like a genuine expedition.

The Castle on the Cliff

The photograph perfectly frames the romantic, jagged ruins of Aros Castle, perched atop a grassy cliff overlooking a wide body of water—the Sound of Mull. You can practically feel the history clinging to the stone.

  • A Medieval Sentinel: Aros Castle, also known as Heynish, has stood here since the 13th century. It was a strategic stronghold, controlling passage through the Sound of Mull, first for the powerful Clan MacDougall and later for the Lords of the Isles, the Clan MacDonald. Today, only two storeys of the main keep and some curtain wall fragments remain, their ruins telling a story of sieges, abandonments, and centuries of exposure to the Atlantic weather.

  • The Landscape: The castle sits against a backdrop of distant, hazy hills—likely the mainland of Morvern—giving the scene immense depth. The foreground is dominated by the water, which is clearly at a low tide, revealing a textured, reddish-brown foreshore covered in seaweed and mud. The shallow water here reflects the sky, creating a beautiful interplay of light and colour between the earth and the heavens.

The Spirit of 1969

The date 1969 gives this photograph a beautiful sense of its era:

  • The Road Less Travelled: Before widespread ferry links and modern tourism infrastructure, visiting the more remote Scottish islands, especially with camera equipment, felt more like an adventure. The scene is utterly devoid of modern clutter—no large car parks, visitor centres, or even other people visible. The focus is entirely on the untouched natural and historical beauty.

  • Vintage Colour: The rich, saturated greens of the grassy headland and the deep blue of the sky and water are typical of the slide film stock used in the late 1960s. This specific colour palette adds a nostalgic warmth that contemporary digital photography often struggles to replicate.

  • A Quiet Moment: The image captures a profound stillness. The water is calm, the clouds are high, and the ruined castle stands in silent watch. It evokes a feeling of peace and timelessness that defines the allure of the Scottish West Coast.

This slide is more than just a historical record; it is a precious memory of a quieter era on the Isle of Mull, where the history of the Highlands and Islands was easily accessible, standing proud and unpolished against the vast, beautiful wilderness. It reminds us that some views, like this one, are truly eternal.

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