Lack of cloud cover has been a problem
Several weeks of sunshine have been an absolute pleasure when working with children – my athletics squad have had uninterrupted track and field sessions that have resulted in a huge number of PB’s, fantastic results at their meetings and a record number qualifying to the National Championships. Taking fifty 13-year old boys on a five-day adventure activities trip to the edge of Dartmoor was a doddle compared with the more usual cold a mizzle of the high moorland. Sadly, it has not been very helpful where my project is concerned, but it has allowed me to consider other aspects of stained glass.
A look at the windows of the Chapel of St. Nicholas, bathed in glorious sunshine reveals a stunning richness to the colour palette. The combination of a warmer colour temperature and a more intense light give all colours a more vivid appearance, with the darker colours having greater depth and the more subtle skin tones having a healthy tan! This made me think that I have perhaps been missing a trick in photographing stained glass windows only during bright, cloudy days. Consequently I spent a morning photographing five of the windows. It was not until I viewed them on a computer screen that I realised the problem with this approach: every single glass panel had an obvious shadow created by the calmes (strips of lead H shaped to hold the pieces of glass together). While the palette is, perhaps, more attractive with the sunlight pouring through the left window, the dark shadow in the hair at the top of the head detracts from the image.
Unedited images taken in sunlight (left) and during cloud cover (right).
Waking to an overcast sky gave me the opportunity to re-shoot the windows, with the image to the right being the preferred skin tone of this particular batch of twenty image: providing a purer, perhaps more innocent face to the angel.





To the top right of the artwork is some almost invisible and hard to decipher text, partially obscured by cobwebs. Part of this text appears to be mirrored (although having flipped the image, it is no more clear). I have done my best to clarify the text in the image below, depicted as viewed from within the chapel, but it remains far from clear. I will need a second visit to the college chapel in order to better capture this fine detail and given time, will investigate further.
Maxfield Parrish (1902) – Its Walls were as of Jasper
A visit to the Baylie chapel, to the left of the chancel, within The Chapel of John the Baptist, St. John’s College, reveals a window with three main lights each depicting the coat of arms of significant figures from St. John’s history.
It should be noted that the photographs were originally taken on a bright, overcast day in late March, when the daylight colour temperature was less warm than today, as was the intensity of the light (with today being partially cloudy). However, since I had undersaturated some areas and oversaturated others, it was clear that the changes were not just as a result of weather or seasonal conditions. The changes see an increase in the saturation of the helmet, together with a recolouring towards orange/gold; The wooden staff and hands have been desaturated; and finally, the red background drape has had a increase in saturation as well as a recolouring towards ‘pure red’ – I am not convinced that I have yet made sufficient changes to the colour of the drape.
Courage – BJ 397 (Edward-Burne Jones, 1896) The Chapel of Harris Manchester College









