Andy Hiseman’s Photo Blog

Holly Day Photos

Posted in Documentary, Portrait by Andy Hiseman on September 13, 2009

I was sitting peacefully in our back garden, reading a book in the sunshine, late afternoon on Friday 11th September, 2009 – our due date. A date which has other connotations these days, and other, blacker memories, but for us it will now always be the day that our first baby announced that she was ready to arrive.

I’m half way through The Caine Mutiny, for the umpteenth time, when at 4pm, Marie called out to me from inside the house in a curiously uncertain voice. “Andy, I think me waters have broken…”.

Just over twelve hours later, neither of us were uncertain about what had just happened:

hdhblog217

There she was, born at 04:36 on Saturday, 12th September 2009, our baby Holly Hiseman. I took the picture above just nine minutes after she was born…

We’d arrived at Peterborough Hospital’s maternity ward at around 21:30, after a few hours of tests and a short trip back home. Her mum Bev came with us, and her dad John stayed at our house with our 9yr old boy, Devon. By this time Marie’s contractions were pretty tough on her, but early on the trusty gas & air machine was all she needed:

hdhblog222

And so began the long night. An epidural joined the gas & air machine, which relaxed Marie no end, but it was a gruelling few hours…:

hdhblog223

When the final stage came, Marie gave birth astonishingly fast. The final push lasted just eleven minutes. For 45 years I’ve heard people rate their great life experiences against the moment their first child was born, and I now understand why nothing can ever top it. Miraculous, overwhelming, unreal, and brilliant beyond words.

For a long time afterwards, we – and Holly – were quiet, simply murmuring to each other, lost in the size of the occasion:

hdhblog219

And through the next twelve hours of tests, examinations, form-filling and waiting around, Marie and Holly stayed almost supernaturally patient, quietly getting to know each other while the world around them went about its business:

hdhblog220

Mid-afternoon it all changed, and the volume levels increased, when Holly’s big brother Devon got to meet his new sister for the first time ever:

hdhblog221

Now, a day later, we’re all happily getting used to each other. We love little Holly May Hiseman to bits, and we’re looking forward to showing her off to all of our loved ones:

hdhblog218

She’s beautiful.

A Bit Of Everything

Posted in Abstract and Still Life, Documentary, Pets & Wildlife, Portrait, Urban by Andy Hiseman on August 29, 2009

What with a baby on the way, hospital trips to sort Devon out, oh and a bit of work, it’s not been a photo blog summer. So I’m just going to put up a sequence of one-off photos which have absolutely nothing to do with each other at all, except that they were taken by me. So let’s kick off with an experiment I did one summer’s evening:

hdhblog211

Nikon D300, Sigma 10-20mm EX lens at 10mm, 20 secs at f 4.5, ISO 200, on a tripod no flash. This was a long-exposure test I did one evening after watching the farmer cut the big field behind our house. It was a lovely peaceful evening and I decided to play around with some of our garden lights.

And now for some mugs:

hdhblog206

Nikon D300, Nikon 24-70mm f 2.8 lens at 50mm, 1/320 at f 2.8, ISO 200, hand held no flash.

And here’s Marie’s bump, 8 months in, August 2009:

hdhblog212

Nikon D300, Nikon 24-70mm f 2.8 lens at 52mm, 1/20 at f 2.8, ISO 1600, hand held no flash. Practising low-light, slow-shutter handheld photography with my best lens, the hefty Nikon 24-70mm 2.8, ready for when the baby’s born.

This is a shiny Mini on a wet early evening stroll around Stamford:

hdhblog204

Nikon D300, Sigma 10-20mm EX lens at 10mm, 1/30 at f 9, ISO 800, hand held no flash.

Here’s our future ASBO trying to look tough:

hdblogh162

Nikon D300, Nikon 18-200mm VR lens at 95mm, 1/13 at f 5.3, ISO 250, hand held no flash.

And a wall somewhere in deepest Rutland, lovely high resolution shot that I got about right:

hdblogh168

Nikon D300, Nikon 24-70mm f 2.8 lens at 24mm, 1/160 at f 9, ISO 200, hand held no flash.

This is our beloved stray cat Lucy, moments after she first appeared in our lives – sitting atop our secret garden (pre-decking), half-chewed ear, crying out for food (which we gave her):

hdhblog207

Nikon D300, Nikon 18-200mm VR lens at 200mm, 1/4000 at f 5.6, ISO 400, hand held no flash.

And to finish, here’s Marie and her family, on Grandma Anne’s birthday a couple of years ago, in a reet good carvery somewhere in West Yorkshire:

hdblogh177

Nikon D300, Sigma 10-20mm EX lens at 10mm, 1/60 at f 4, ISO 200, hand held with flash.

Mum’s Birthday Fly-Past

Posted in Documentary by Andy Hiseman on August 1, 2009

Each July we try and get together for my Mum’s birthday. This year I went alone (Marie headed north to see her brother Craig, whose birthday is on the same day as Mum’s – July 26th), looking forward to a day with a bit of variety, with a few different photographic challenges. Mum’s 76 this year (2009), and in mid morning I arrived at the house which big brother Mark shares with Tracey. More of the house later – it’s a bit special – but here, we see (from left) Tracey’s Mum Iris, the birthday girl, Mark and Tracey in M&T’s rather nice ’second living room’. If this was the 19th century, or if we were posh, it would be called the drawing room. Think of it as a living room without a TV in it: 

hdhblog198

Nikon D300, Sigma 10-20mm lens at 10mm, 1/80 at f 4.0, ISO 400, hand held with flash. I added a bit of vignette in Lightroom to embellish what was already rather a warm, painterly scene. Lovely colours in this one, it took me several gos and different settings before I got this scene right. Luckily we had time: we’d all just been fed, and Mum was opening her prezzies before we headed off to where Mark and Tracey work, BAE Systems in Rochester, Kent. They were holding an open day there, and for the first time we were going to have a look at where they’ve been working for years, creating mysterious war machines under the official secrets act.

And above Rochester, soon after we got there, one of the very best war machines ever made was being thrown around in the sky: 

hdhblog202

Nikon D300, Nikon 70-300mm VR lens at 110mm, 1/2000 at f 4.5, ISO 400, hand held no flash. This is the mighty Lancaster bomber, ‘City Of Lincoln’, one of only two left flying. For ten minutes it made a series of thunderous (it makes a magnificent noise) low passes above the airfield at BAE Systems, while we all cricked our necks in awe. When one of these things flies directly overhead, with its four engines hammering away and that big twin-fin tail, for many true Brits it’s a lump in the throat moment. It’s 66 years since the immortal ‘Dambusters’ raid, one of the defining moments in our country’s modern history, and the Lancaster represents so many important things to those of us who care about where we came from: bravery, ingenuity, craftsmanship, defiance, and glory. What a sight.

I had the Nikon set on Continuous High mode, and rattled off 135 frames, having no clue what the results would be. Rarely for me I used Manual mode to freeze it in flight: I guessed a few settings, pointed the long 70-300mm VR lens at the sky, and hoped for the best. The shot above caught the steely light just right, and again I added a wee vignette in Lightroom, and tweaked it a bit until I got the above effect. I think it’s one of the best action pictures I have ever taken.

Here’s a more classic in-flight shot:

hdhblog201

Nikon D300, Nikon 70-300mm VR lens at 110mm, 1/2500 at f 4.5, ISO 400, hand held no flash. Exactly the same settings as the picture before, taken just three seconds beforehand. This was the Lancaster’s very first fly-past, and I got the two best pictures within the first three seconds… Overall they were mostly right on the money, in fact.

Inside one of the BAE Systems buildings, all we really wanted to do was find the amazing helmet which Mark’s team have been working on for years. Here it is, held by Mark and his highly proud Mum: 

hdhblog197

Nikon D300, Nikon 18-200mm VR lens at 24mm, 1/100 at f 4.0, ISO 640, hand held no flash. This is the helmet worn by pilots in the new Eurofighter Typhoon. The plane cost the UK well over £20 billion to develop, against an initial budget of £7 bn. I like to think that Mark’s team contributed wholeheartedly to several billion of the overspend. Good work, bro. It’s a clever piece of kit, one of the better boy’s toys.

Here’s Tracey wearing one he made earlier:

hdhblog196

Nikon D300, Sigma 10-20mm lens at 10mm, 1/20 at f 4.0, ISO 3200, hand held no flash. Tracey is also a key part of the team at BAE Systems, and the two of them work just feet apart deep within one of Britain’s more secrets-laden buildings. They’re both pretty high up the chain of command, and are probably spies really. The above pic was taken in a very gloomy room, I didn’t want to use flash as it would’ve bounced off the helmet’s visor, so instead I pushed the ISO way up to 3200. Still a great result in near darkness, the D300 is a really top camera in low light. Once again the Sigma wide-angle lens showed how good it is under pressure, too.

Back out in the sunshine, after we’d toured the factory where they make the secret weapons, we headed back to the car. On the way, a man was parking a tank on a lorry. These things are very heavy, and if he’d slipped off that flatbed, I’d have been flattened. That wide, wide-angle Sigma lens lets you get VERY close…I could have reached out and touched this thing. On reflection, I was probably a bit too close, but it’s a striking picture: 

hdhblog195

Nikon D300, Sigma 10-20mm lens at 10mm, 1/1250 at f 5.6, ISO 200, hand held no flash. Really very, very close. Great colours (I usually have the D300 set two stops up from middle on Vibrant setting), and a litle darkening of the corners in Lightroom afterwards.

And now to Mark and Tracey’s house, which is frankly awesome. This is the River Medway, taken from the bottom of their garden: 

hdhblog199

Nikon D300, Sigma 10-20mm lens at 10mm, 1/160 at f 16, ISO 200, hand held no flash. What a thing to have at the end of the garden. If it was my place, I’d have built the jetty by now, and had a boat moored up there. M&T have left it wild, so you can’t really stand on the riverbank without ducking through the undergrowth. But when you do, it’s very pretty indeed.

Turn around, and look back up the immense garden to the house, and you get an idea of how big their plot of land is:  

hdhblog200

Nikon D300, Sigma 10-20mm lens at 10mm, 1/1600 at f 4.5, ISO 200, hand held no flash. They also have a great big veggie garden, and all sorts of other stuff there. It is without question the best building a Hiseman has owned in living memory. Mark and Tracey (who is a Jackson, still – none of us are sure why they haven’t got married yet) are solid gold ‘Dinkies’ (Dual Income, No Kids). With a couple of fine salaries, and no PlayStation habit to fund, they’re looking good…

Happy Birthday Mum, another year closer to a letter from the Queen. Good sunny, fresh air sort of day with the family, a great way to spend a Saturday.

‘Silence’ – Devon’s surprise prize-winning poem

Posted in Documentary by Andy Hiseman on July 25, 2009

We just opened the mail, and discovered – to our total surprise – that our little boy Devon has won a poetry competition, and is to have his poem published in a book.

To say we are proud – and moved – would be the understatement of the year. Here’s his sweet poem, called ‘Silence’:

hdhblog194

Words by Devon. Created as an image by his very proud Andy Dad. To be published by Young Writers in Poetry Explorers 2009 – Lincolnshire.

An Incredible Photo Blog

Posted in Documentary by Andy Hiseman on January 11, 2009

Now this is what I’m talking about:

http://www.boston.com/bigpicture/2008/12/the_year_2008_in_photographs_p.html

No one person could put together a blog like that, of course, but that doesn’t diminish Boston.com’s claim to have produced the greatest photo blog – ever.