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Trinity and Clare Backs
by Adam James NallOr 'Mr Macro goes flower-picking'
A good way to walk off breakfast. From Sidney Sussex up Green Street and down through the side door of Trinity. Across the backs and through Clare College, past the front of Caius, Senate House and back to Sidney. Phew!
Some experiments in macro on all the lovely flowers in Trinity and Clare. They really are fantastic!
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More Cambridge photos here:
http://adamnall.cantabphotos.com/photographers/adam_nall/070530200228/
Date taken: 21/04/08
Categories:
Cambridge Colleges
Cambridge Views
Flowers
Landscapes
Wildlife
Nice Monaco
by Richard SkidmoreA few photos from a recent trip to Nice and Monaco.
Date added: 24th Mar 2008Date taken: 16/02/2008 - 23/02/2008
Categories:
Flowers
People
Performance
Travel
Cold Cambridge
by Richard SkidmoreA few photos taken around Cambridge this Easter.
Date added: 24th Mar 2008Date taken: 23/03/2008
Categories:
Cambridge Colleges
Cambridge Life
Cambridge Views
Flowers
Landscapes
Wildlife
Pfigliano 5
by Adam James NallSidney Sussex College's own Close-Harmony singers are:
Jamal Sutton,
Nicholas Morrell,
Paul Kilbey,
James Freeman
and Duncan Hewitt
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The Pfigliano 5 were formed in a drunken haze in late 2006 by a lecherous American tenor and his entourage of besotted undergrads. Though the line-up has changed, the spirit remains and they have already performed many times this year, including a very well-received interlude at the 1596 Foundation Feast at Sidney Sussex College and a regular set with the Sidney Sussex College Music Society (SSCMS). Their repertoire covers all corners of the cheese-spectrum, from classic barbershop numbers to Disney arrangements to quaint, mildly xenophobic music-hall songs from the 1920s.
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For bookings, concert dates and more information visit the SSCMS website:
http://www.srcf.ucam.org/sscms/
and hear some recordings on:
http://www.myspace.com/pfigliano5
Date taken: March 14th 2008
Categories:
Cambridge Colleges
Cambridge Life
Cambridge Views
Flowers
People
Performance
Flora
by Greg DickensA collection of the my best plant shots, up to the beginning of 2008. Some are quite scientific, some are quite arty.
Date added: 21st Feb 2008Date taken: Multifple Dates (2007)
Categories:
Flowers
Agra
by Adam James NallA wonder of the world:
The last of my India photography taken on an absolutely amazing day in Agra. The Taj Mahal and the increadible yet under-appreciated Agra Fort.
I have selected my favourites in the 'best photo' sample section. Please look at all the rest for a wider view of these two modern wonders of the world! Further details to follow. Enjoy.
Date taken: September 2007
Categories:
Flowers
Landscapes
People
Travel
Wildlife
Detail...
by Richard SkidmoreClose-up photography rocks. Just waiting for the day I can get my hands on a proper macro lens!
Date added: 14th Nov 2007Categories:
Flowers
Wildlife
McLeod Ganj
by Adam James NallA selection of photographs (from so so many) taken during a six week teaching placement in McLeod Ganj, Himachal Pradesh, North India. The residence of the Dalai Lama and the Tibetan Government in exile, McLeod has become a haven for Tibetan refugees, Buddhist pilgrims and the ever-present kitsch tourist 'Children of the World' who take to playing flutes out of cafe windows and not wearing any shoes. Regardless of that annoyance McLeod is wonderful. The smell of damp pine needles and incense drift across on the breeze with the thick mist - as pervasive, even, as the hippies during the monsoon season - lending to everything a surreal (and, annoyingly for photography, a harsh white glare and slightly blurred) edge. The distance, though rarely visible, occasionally broke through after a good air-clearing storm to reveal the fantastic views into the valley below and up to the Himalaya proper. A marvelous, magical monk-filled place. For anyone going there to shoot I suggest comprehensive camera insurance and the acceptance that nothing, in the second wettest place in India, in monsoon season, at that altitude, will ever, ever truly be what we the British consider 'dry'...
Album updated! More photos of Tsechokling Monestary, bird photos, and now features photos taken from our trek to Triund (9325ft), including a few shots from an impromtu cricket game we had with a few locals at about 5000ft. The crease was situated either side of a very steep slope, one of which we'd just spent the last two or so hours getting up. Needless to say I was glad to not be fielding...
Date taken: August 2007
Categories:
Flowers
Landscapes
People
Sport
Travel
Wildlife










