Categories
Journal Re-enactments

Not The Festival Of History – History Live! Kelmarsh Hall, July 2013

So, a change of name for this showpiece event in the English Heritage calendar, no longer the “Festival of History”, now “History Live!”.  On the face of it, that was just about the only change of note to this excellent event.  It was, to this paying customer at least, the same Festival of History as in previous years, just with a different name.  One other change I did notice, there was no First World War trench display this year although I am told this will return in 2014 as one of many events planned to mark the centenary of the start of the Great War.

What a difference a year makes.  This time last year I remember blogging about how this event, along with many others, had been cancelled due to the wettest summer for a hundred years.    Fast forward twelve months and the UK is enjoying (if that’s the right expression…) a heat wave such as we haven’t seen for many years.  Here in Northamptonshire we have hardly seen a drop of rain for almost four weeks and with clear blue skies and temperatures in the mid to high 20s Celsius every day for the past three weeks the ground is starting to look quite parched and brown in many places.

In the event, the weekend weather turned out to be not the clear blue skies and souring temperatures of the previous few days but much cooler, cloudier and quite overcast at times.  I can imagine this would a great relief to the re-enactors in their uniforms, many of which include both chain mail and/or heavy armour, not to mention helmets, weapons and various other pieces of kit which required to represent the chosen period with authenticity.

Regular readers of this blog will know that “cloudy bright” is my very favourite lighting for outdoor people photography, the clouds forming a massive diffuser to spread the light evenly over the subject without creating harsh shadows or highlights.  In particular, photographing people wearing hats can be especially problematic in strong sunlight due to the harsh shadows created under the brim.  In these conditions I usually resort to fill-flash (which is so easy with modern cameras) to avoid hard shadows obscurring the eyes.

On the Saturday, the light was actually rather poor for much of the day.  I shoot Aperture Priority (Av on Canon DSLRs) almost all of the time so I have full control over depth of field.  However, I had to constantly keep an eye on my shutter speed and subsequently adjust the ISO upwards if it started to fall below 1/320 second (I was using my trusty EF 80-200mm MDP lens for the event and 1/250 is absolutely the slowest shutter speed I want to go with this lens unless deliberately panning).  I also took the Canon 40mm “pancake” lens for the wider shots.  It’s a great little lens with surprising performance for something so tiny.

Below is a small selection of the photos I took on the day, including the Hawker Hurricane flypast.  I have just started uploading some of my other photos from this event to my website here.