It works well. Make sure you use a small aperture for exposure. If you have a good enough magnifier to check focus at the small aperture you are golden If not then do your best to focus at the center of the image then close the aperture up. Get a small carpenter square to make sure your lines are straight as you get rid of the convergence too. A bright magnifier and a square helped me a lot. The high vantage point, distance and longer lens is your best bet for not having to do it in the darkroom.
Then again, it was the tallest building in the world and the convergence can be used creatively.
@Peltigera Excellent. Nothing like local knowledge!
@lantau I'd be reluctant to try something entirely new to me without time for a bit of experimentation beforehand. I would not expect my shots to stray into reciprocity failure territory in any case (but who knows until I get there).
I would suggest you call the cathedral and see if they allow tripods to be used inside.
No they don't. Well that was the last time I visited some 9 years ago. If anything, the churches have even clamped down more. Durham Cathedral does not even allow hand held photography. I can understand it to some degree because it is a place of peace and quiet there are people who visit there for personal inner peace, possibly after a bereavment and they don't need to be disturbed by clicking cameras.
to really correct it in the darkroom, ideally you need to be able to tilt on all 3 stages: film, lens, and paper. Such enlargers were called Rectifying enlargers, and were used a lot by the military for this kind of work using film from surveillance photography.
I e-malied them and they said:
Dear Dr.Perry
Thank you for your enquiry. We are pleased to know that you will be visiting here next week and are happy to assure you that you may take photos using your tripod as the photos are for your personal use.
We trust you will have a very interesting visit.
Yours sincerely
Janet Arden
Well that has changed. Did they mention the charge? 9 years ago it was I seem to remember £5.
Both York Minster and Lincoln have the disadvantage of being close to roads and traffic so a complete picture of the building is difficult to obtain without unwanted intrusions. Durham Cathedral is on it's own pedestal, high above the city on a rocky promontory, created by a curve in the River Wear. There are few cars allowed onto the green in front of the main entrance and apart from a few occasions during the year, the number of pedestrians getting in the way are also few, you can almost always get an uninterrupted view. Possibly an even better view, certainly when it is flood lit, is from the railway station on the opposite side of the valley and at roughly the same level as both the Castle and Cathedral.
Great image Svenedin. Stunning example of medieval cathedral architecture. I am a fan of these structures.
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