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The Ludlow Victorian who 150 years before Photoshop altered images in Leamington

The Ludlow Victorian who 150 years before Photoshop altered images in Leamington

BBC News10-05-2025

A photographer who pioneered techniques to create detailed images by combining multiple negatives is being celebrated 170 years after he set up his first studioHenry Peach Robinson was one of the most famous characters of his age, said photographic historian Michael Pritchard, with his work winning awards and selling widely. "He really showed photographers at that time that photography could be art," he added. Born in Ludlow, Shropshire, in 1830, Robinson studied drawing and painting while working in a bookshop in Leamington Spa, Warwickshire and he opened his first portrait studio in the town in 1855.
He is being remembered by the town's photographic society, with his story also highlighted in a book by a local history group."By 1857 he was winning medals and awards for his art photography and that carried on right the way through to the 1890s", explained Mr Pritchard, a former chief executive of the Royal Photographic Society.
Robinson used "combination printing," he said, creating a single image from multiple negatives. Using this technique allowed independent control of different parts of the scenes in the finished images.
"It's something we do today in Photoshop relatively easily but in the late 1850s and mid-19th Century it was a pretty groundbreaking technique," said Mr Pritchard."He became an absolute master of it and this was how he was able to create absolutely groundbreaking and stunning pictures".
In one of the earliest examples of his "pictorial" photography, Fading Away, Robinson combined five separate negatives to produce a scene showing a dying girl surrounded by her family. The image became incredibly popular despite Robinson's technique and subject matter, which was considered too morbid by some. "As ever with that sort of genre photography of the time, there's a deeper story around it and you know all sorts of issues around how the Victorians pictured death," Mr Pritchard said. The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York holds a copy of the image and they said on their website that the photo appealed to Prince Albert, husband of Queen Victoria, who bought a print and issued a standing order for every major composite photograph Robinson would make.
The photographer was also a founding member of the Birmingham Photographic Society and produced a number of books. "In terms of his importance for photography, I think he's probably a little bit forgotten these days but at the time he was still seen as a very influential figure and someone that had made a massive impact on photography", added Mr Pritchard.
In 1864, when he was 34, Robinson was forced to give up his Leamington studio due to ill health from being exposed to the toxic chemicals used at the time in photography.He moved to London and continued to work until his death in 1901 in Tunbridge Wells, Kent."He was one of life's interesting characters," said Peter Chappell, the outgoing chair of the Leamington Photographic Society. "He was entrepreneurial, he was commercial but at the same time he was artistic and he was promoting photography as an art form," he added. The society recently marked the 170-year anniversary by inviting celebrity photographer Rankin to the town for an event, which attracted more than 150 people. "That link about the world's top portrait photographer of the 1800s living and working in Leamington Spa and we got the world's top portrait photographer of current times actually coming to the town - that binds the whole story together," added the outgoing vice chair Mark Godfrey.
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Cricket WAG Emma Lyon wears thousands of dollars worth of jewels and accessories as she shows off her cleavage during date with husband Nathan in London
Cricket WAG Emma Lyon wears thousands of dollars worth of jewels and accessories as she shows off her cleavage during date with husband Nathan in London

Daily Mail​

timean hour ago

  • Daily Mail​

Cricket WAG Emma Lyon wears thousands of dollars worth of jewels and accessories as she shows off her cleavage during date with husband Nathan in London

Emma Lyon flaunted her wealth on Tuesday as she enjoyed a loved-up lunch in London with her sports star husband Nathan while decked out in jewels. The WAG, who wed the Aussie cricketer back in 2022, has been active on social media recently, documenting her first-class flight to London with her family and cheering on her husband from the sidelines at the World Test Championship. Adding to her London bucket list, Emma enjoyed a romantic lunch date with Nathan, posting pictures to Instagram of the couple cosied up at glamorous Mayfair eatery Cecconis. The London restaurant is known to be a celebrity hot spot and is frequented by the likes of Stella McCartney, Madonna and Prince Andrew. In the snaps, the couple gleamed for the camera at their sun-drenched marble table, starting with some bread and a glass of rosé - all while dripping in luxury accessories. From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the DailyMail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. For the intimate meal, Emma poured out of a lowcut denim top that showed off her ample cleavage. She accessorised the laid-back ensemble with a black Chanel bag worth a jaw-dropping $19,230. She wore layers of jewels around her neck, including a solid-gold heart pendant and a diamond encrusted tennis necklace by couture brand Cerrone. She also wore diamond studs in her ears, worth nearly $4,000. Nathan wore a more paired-back fit, wearing a grey tee, black hat and sunnies as he went incognito at the star-frequented restaurant. 'A little Italian in London,' Emma captioned the post, alongside a pasta emoji. Last week, Emma turned heads in a stunning designer outfit worth at least $17,800 as she watched her husband Nathan try to steer Australia to victory in the World Test Championship. The mum-of-one, who shares a one-year-old daughter with the spin bowler, was in the good seats at London's famous Lord's stadium after sparing no expense on her flight over to the UK. Emma was dressed in an Integrated Fluid Silk Skirt from Dutch fashion house Róhe, which would have set her back about $1200 She treated her Instagram followers to photos of her standing on a balcony at the 'home of cricket', cradling her baby daughter and looking like she could've just done a photo shoot for Vogue. Daily Mail Australia has tracked down the various piece of her ensemble, which is far out of the average Aussie cricket fan's price range. Emma was dressed in an Integrated Fluid Silk Skirt from Dutch fashion house Róhe, which would have set her back about $1200. She paired that with another piece from the designer, a matching Sleeveless Gliet-Jacket worth $1100. Emma's jewellery puts those items into the shade in terms of cost, however: she's wearing what appears to be a Cartier Love Bracelet worth $9,050 as well as another piece from the famed luxury company, a Juste Un clou bracelet priced at $6,450.

28 Years Later review: Zombie-apocalypse horror is a 'never-dull' monster mash-up
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time3 hours ago

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28 Years Later review: Zombie-apocalypse horror is a 'never-dull' monster mash-up

Alex Garland and Danny Boyle have reunited for a follow-up to their 2002 classic. It has visual flair, terrifying adversaries and a scene-stealing performance from Ralph Fiennes. 28 Years Later is part zombie-apocalypse horror, part medieval world-building, part sentimental family story and – most effectively – part Heart of Darkness in its journey toward a madman in the woods. That mashup is not necessarily a bad thing, since most of those parts work so well in this follow-up to the great 2002 film 28 Days Later, about a virus that decimates London. The new film is one of the year's most anticipated largely because it comes from the original's creators, director Danny Boyle and screenwriter Alex Garland. It glows with Boyle's visual flair, Garland's ambitious screenplay and a towering performance from Ralph Fiennes, whose character enters halfway through the film and unexpectedly becomes its fraught soul. 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Bay City Rollers star reveals ‘harrowing' sex abuse by band's ‘bully, predator' manager who ‘plied stars with drugs'
Bay City Rollers star reveals ‘harrowing' sex abuse by band's ‘bully, predator' manager who ‘plied stars with drugs'

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Bay City Rollers star reveals ‘harrowing' sex abuse by band's ‘bully, predator' manager who ‘plied stars with drugs'

STUART 'Woody' Wood told how he hid the trauma of his abuse by paedo manager Tam Paton for 50 years, saying: 'I chose not to let it shape my life.' The Bay City Rollers icon, 68, said he was determined not to let the sicko 'win' as he opened up for the first time about how he too was a victim of the beast. 4 4 4 4 Burly Paton bossed the band during the height of their 70s fame, when they had No1 hits including Saturday Night, Bye Bye Baby and Shang-A-Lang. He was later fired by the group before being jailed for three years in 1982 for gross indecency with teenage boys. In his autobiography Mania, released on Thursday, former pop-pin up Stuart brands the late fiend a 'true monster' and explains why he kept his own suffering a secret for five decades. Stuart wrote: 'I met Tam when I was 16 years old. He was intimidating and a bully, and all the disgusting things said about him are accurate. 'He was a predator. He abused me as he did others. 'It was a horrific and harrowing time. The drugs he plied us with were part of that control. I met Tam when I was 16 years old. He was intimidating and a bully, and all the disgusting things said about him are accurate 'My take is that to have a healthy mind, you have to let some things go, as much as it might pain you to do so. 'So, when Tam's squalid little life came to an end in 2009, I stopped thinking about him. 'He was a terrible human being, but the way I see it, he doesn't get to define me. 'Tam f******g Paton doesn't get to win.' Original lead singer of The Bay City Rollers returns 50 years after fall out In 2003, Paton was accused of attempting to rape Rollers guitarist Pat McGlynn in a hotel room in 1977. Police investigated but concluded there was insufficient evidence to take it to court. Depraved Paton claimed he was being targeted because he was gay. After the flabby perv's death from a heart attack in 2019 singer Les McKeown claimed the former manager had also raped him while on tour in America after drugging him. Les — who died at 65 in 2021 — said: 'I was given Quaaludes, a drug for lowering your inhibitions and making you horny. 'Afterwards I felt really used and abused. I never told anybody about it, not even the other guys in the band, because I was ashamed.' Original Rollers singer Nobby Clarke has also claimed the boys were encouraged by Paton to sleep with radio DJ Chris Denning, who jailed for child sex abuse in 2016. Meanwhile, founder Alan Longmuir revealed in 2018 how Paton had 'friends in low places' and warned 'his depravity ran deeper than we know.' However, Stuart maintains he did not talk about Paton's abuse with either Les or Alan, even when they reformed the Rollers together 10 years ago. Speaking from his home in Edinburgh, the songwriter, guitarist and producer said: 'We never discussed it - any of us - it just happened. 'We were all survivors, but with Les it felt like it hit him harder. 'It's not like I locked all those experiences away, stuffed down the bad memories, pretending they didn't happen. BAND'S TROUBLED PAST 1974: Stuart 'Woody' Wood joins group to form classic line-up with Alan and Derek Longmuir, Eric Faulkner and Les McKeown. 1975: Bye, Bye, Baby reaches No1. 1978: Les quits soon after being booted off stage by Woody during a gig in Tokyo. 1979: Manager Tam Paton is fired before Rollers split. 1982: Paton is jailed for three years for sexually abusing ten boys over three years. 2003: Cops decide there is not enough evidence to prosecute Paton over accusations he tried to rape former Rollers guitarist Pat McGlynn. 2004: The sicko is fined £200,000 for drug dealing after cannabis stash find at home. 2007: Ex-band members sue Arista Records over claims they are owed millions of pounds in unpaid royalties. 2009: Paton dies after a heart attack on the same night £1.5million in drugs and cash are stolen from his Edinburgh pad. 2016: Les McKeown says he was raped by Paton. 2016: Woody sensationally quits the group after a bust-up at T in the Park. 2018: Alan Longmuir passes away aged 70. 2021: Les dies of heart attack at 65. 2023: TV documentary details how Paton controlled and abused band. 2025: Woody releases tell-all autobiography Mania. 'I just choose to not let them shape my life.' Stuart is now the last member of the 'classic' Rollers line-up still performing, with a new single Rollers Forever released next month. A musical of the same name opens at Glasgow's Pavilion Theatre in August. However, the star describes his relationship with Paton as 'complicated' as he even invited his abuser to his wedding to artist Denise in 1997. He added: 'There's an old expression, 'Keep your enemies close'. "I think that was the case with Tam. There was another side of Tam that was funny. 'He could be a lovable rogue.'

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