Project Development

Exeter College Chapel – Evensong


My work commitments saw me singing evensong at Exeter College Chapel today, which provided the opportunity to carry out a quick planning visit and make some tentative arrangements with the chaplain.  While a truly stunning building, capturing a single window or single light is going to prove hugely demanding.  The chapel is exceptionally tall, with the windows reaching right up into the vaulted roof.  The suspended lighting masks partially several of the lights, although there is a very small organ loft at the west end that might afford a preferable view of the two lights that face directly east.

So stunning is this chapel that when eventually I photograph the stained glass, I will also attempt a ‘portrait’ of the chapel.

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Dominic Price (2019)  Exeter College Chapel east end stained glass

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Dominic Price (2019)  Exeter College Chapel

Project Development

Exeter College Chapel


University vacation can simplify access to the college chapels.  With the weather conditions looking perfect this morning (bright but with uniform cloud cover) and groundwork already in place for a visit at a ‘mutually convenient time’, it took no more than a brief email to the Head Porter for me to be granted access to Exeter College Chapel.  Pleasingly I had the chapel to myself for the two hours before its 11am opening to the tourists and was given the keys to the organ loft which my preliminary had visit suggested.

Access to the organ loft was via narrow stone spiral staircase and the organ loft could have been more appropriately termed an organ shelf: there was room for little more than an organist to sit at the organ.  Notwithstanding, thanks to some clever tripod usage I was able to take several series of photographs both of the stained glass and the chapel itself.

Exeter College - The Crucifixion (low res)

Dominic Price (2019) The Crucifixion [Clayton & Bell, 1859 – Exeter College Chapel]

The enormous height of the lancet windows was such that I opted to photograph the facing window within the apse in two parts, requiring 28 photographs to be taken.  With the lighting conditions just right, it seemed sensible to grab some additional lights at higher resolution, so I turned my focus to the tracery lights just below the vaulted ceiling.

With Easter soon upon us I also decided to capture a batch of one panel of the east window depicting The Crucifixion for me to use as an Easter card.  This necessitated a batch of 15 photographs,  taken at 400 mm using the Canon EF 100-400 mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II USM lens, at an aperture of f/8.0 and exposure times ranging from 1.6 s to 1/10 s: significantly longer exposures than those required when photographing the Cathedral’s windows in the brilliant sunshine.

I will return to edit the full height lights at a later date.  These I am likely to leave with saddle bars intact as the window comprises two lancet lights of thirteen saddle bars each.

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Dominic Price (2019) Tracery lights of the East Window [Clayton & Bell, 1859 – Exeter College Chapel]

DCP_0113 (black) ce lr - flowerMy original intention with the tracery lights was to concern myself only with the small rose (not least because this lends itself so well to posting on Instagram).  However, invisible to the casual observer and only evident during editing is the smallest stained glass light I have ever seen, located just below the base of the rose.  As a result, this led me to crop the image to include this tiny blue flower – something I may well review as it leaves the composition looking very unbalanced.

Project Development

Chapel interiors


In listening to friends, colleagues and others, on their review of my work, I have decided to renege upon my original plans to present the stained glass window images in isolation.  The location is such an integral part to their story that it makes far better sense to contextualise them within their environment.  To that end the publication will have a two-page spread for each location that will include an east end view (or similar).

This revision will also make easier the decision to include those chapels not adjourned with stained glass.  They can feature as individual pages that also include an east end view.

having finalised the two page spread for my book, there was the need to revisit some sites in order to capture an interior shot of each chapel.

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Price, D.C. (2019) The Stained Glass & Chapels of Oxford – mock-up

On a hot day, I was pleased to be travelling without my camera bag or big lenses, using the Canon EF 17-40mm  f/4.0 L USM lens for each shot (although it remained necessary to use a tripod).  In order to present photographs that are true to my mission, I took a batch of ten exposure bracketed images of each interior and then used multiple exposure blending in order to create a dynamic range sufficient that the stained glass remains visible while the interiors are appropriately bright.

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Dominic Price (2019) The Chapel, St Edmund Hall

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Dominic Price (2019) The Chapel, Wycliffe Hall

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Dominic Price (2019) The Chapel, Somerville

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Dominic Price (2019) The ‘new’ College Chapel, Exeter College

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Dominic Price (2019) The Chapel of John the Baptist, St John’s College