Dickens day over, and it was really fun.
Goodnight.
Neil, you should wear this beard all the time.
Dickens day over, and it was really fun.
Goodnight.
Neil, you should wear this beard all the time.
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#reblogged #photo #neil gaimanperhaps some will disagree, but i think the world got worse when we changed the colour of the night
To be clear, THIS is how nights of the future should be lit
This is bat friendly street lighting, which not only looks sick as fuck but allows bats to pass through without disturbance, as they cannot see red.
orange and especially white lights deter bats and prevent them from reaching feeding grounds at nighttime. Please if you can, write to your local council and encourage red street lights!!!!

I’m now into my 39th trip around the sun. A bit balder, a bit greyer at the temples and in the beard (I’m starting to look as though I’ve eaten a badger and left the tail hanging out). A bit wiser? Maybe. One thing that I’ve definitely noticed over the last couple of years is that I’m less willing to tolerate having my time wasted (though I’m still perfectly happy to waste it myself).
At the start of the year I was embarking on a new endeavour: an MA in Photography with Falmouth University. I thought that it would help me find direction that I felt I’d lost, and maybe give me some of the drive to finish things that I’ve often struggled with.
Truth was, though, that the course wasn’t a good fit, and just last week I withdrew as a student. For one thing, it didn’t fit my learning style. I last studied for a postgraduate qualification back in 2002-3, and that was a very intensive course — one week of 9-5 studying, a week off for self-directed work, then another week of studying. This was a much more relaxed course and, being distance learning, I felt really disconnected from it.
I’m not the person that I was twenty years ago, and having studied photography on my own time and dime so much over the last ten years I figured that this whole distance learning approach would work for me. Turns out that I still need that intensity, taking in a lot in a short space of time, in order to be able to learn and want to learn more.
So, I’m the shortest-term MA dropout in the history of ever, possibly. I’m happy enough with that.
So what’s next? April’s already here, kids, there’s no time to wait around.
In short, personal work, personal work, personal work. I’ve got notebooks full of the stuff that needs to get realised. Some of it is vastly different from what I’ve attempted before, some of it is projects that need to be finished lest they languish forever on a hard-drive somewhere.
All of that in between the regular work: headshots, fashion portraits, and music promo.
It’s 2019, I’m Graham, and I still have no idea where the hell I’m going. Welcome to the ride.
Piazza di San Giovani, Firenze, Toscana, Italia http://bit.ly/2EZN9uM
Firenze, Toscana, Italia http://bit.ly/2EWjCB9
Piazza Santa Croce, Firenze, Toscana, Italia http://bit.ly/2SsRYQ8
Ponte Vecchio, Firenze, Toscana, Italia http://bit.ly/2LGqIek
Firenze, Toscana, Italia http://bit.ly/2AeW1IQ
For the first time in a little while, I’ve had time to shoot some #FifteenMinutePortraits again. Thoroughly enjoying playing with light again.
“Don’t compare yourself to others. That’s when you start to lose confidence in yourself.”
— Will Smith
Things one wishes one would actually learn, for a change.
Still relevant.
1. Cultivate self-acceptance. That means you accept yourself for who you are right now. It means you don’t say things like “I would accept myself if … or … I’ll accept myself when.”
2. Stop going over all things you’ve done wrong, the mistakes you’ve made, and your (perceived) inadequacies.
3. Where there’s something in your past that you feel bad about say: “This is what I learned from that situation … And that was THEN and this is NOW.”
4. Don’t compare yourself to others . Instead notice the areas where you’ve grown and changed. Deliberately praise and focus on those positive changes.
5. Don’t fall into the trap of judging others – as that will often lead to being self-critical.
