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Malcolm Dunnett

Malcolm Dunnett 2  Crosti-boilered 2-10-0 N. 92022 pauses for water at Huddersfield on July 8, 1967.
Malcolm Dunnett - Malcolm Dunnett 2

 

Malcolm Dunnett 3  Class J27 0-6-0 No. 65811 passes Ryhope Colliery with coal empties from Sunderland to Silksworth on July 28, 1967.
Malcolm Dunnett - Malcolm Dunnett 3

 

Nuovo! Malcolm Dunnett 4  Thank Engines Front Ends. Spanish narrow gauge veterans at Carcagente on September 16, 1967.
Malcolm Dunnett - Malcolm Dunnett 4

 

Nuovo! Malcolm Dunnett 5  NCB 0-60PT No. 42 near Derwent-haugh Coke Works, Co. Durham.
Malcolm Dunnett - Malcolm Dunnett 5

 

Nuovo! Malcolm Dunnett 6  Vale of Rheidol 2-6-2T No. 7.
Malcolm Dunnett - Malcolm Dunnett 6

 

Malcolm Dunnett 7  Stanier 2-6-4T No. 42616 arrives at Halifax with the Saturday 9.06 Bradford-Poole on June 24, 1967.
Malcolm Dunnett - Malcolm Dunnett 7

 

Malcolm Dunnett 8  NCB 0-6-0STs at Philadelphia, Co. Durham, on December 1, 1965.
Malcolm Dunnett - Malcolm Dunnett 8

 

Malcolm Dunnett 9  Class K1 2-6-0 No. 62060 climbs out of Pelton with a train of steel components for Consett in March 1963.
Malcolm Dunnett - Malcolm Dunnett 9

 

Ian Krause

Preface.  

Steam Porfolio

lan Krause

KENTON
MIDDLESEX

I started railway photography in 1959 at the tender age of 11; however it was not until 1961 that I began to take a serious interest in the subject, and obtained a cheap Japanese 35mm camera. However, I was not satisfied by the limitations of the negative format and bought instead a secondhand Agfa Isolette in 1963. Schoolwork naturally tended to curb my activities, but I managed to cover a great deal of the country during these years. By 1966 the Agfa was beginning to show signs of age so I moved on to a Rolleicord VA, which has given trouble-free service and excellent definition. I have also used a Praktica Nova with 105mm and 300mm lenses which supplement the Rollei, providing a different aspect for many shots.

At present I am on a three-year full time course at the Harrow School of Photography, which has brought a wider knowledge of camera and processing techniques; this in turn has led me to take a wider look at the field of railway photography. I prefer the industrial scene - Tyneside, the West Riding, and Lancashire for example - but I am equally happy sunning myself in the Lune Gorge (not on the Shap Wells mound) or on the Continent. But, above all, I find the most enjoyable part is the social life which the "after hours" work brings - the Newcastle Brown Ale at the Ribblehead Inn or the Old George in Newcastle, conferences in the street, at Plymouth or Leeds, at 5 in the morning, refreshment at Charnock Richard on the burn-up on the M6, and, most of all, the personalities who bring the laughs to railway photography.


 

Ian Krause 1  Privately-preserved LNER Class A3 Pacific No. 4472 climbs away from Kings Cross on the 40th anniversary special non-stop run to Edinburgh on May 1, 1968.
Ian Krause - Ian Krause 1

 

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