
I`m a little bit fanatical when it comes to my hobbies , I always set my sights quite high on a particular challenge and then use that as a target to focus on. I set off at 15 years old when I took up the martial arts, obviously gaining a black belt was my goal and once I’d reached it the challenge was over. I followed the Karate with photography when I was 19-20 yrs old and bought myself a Canon A1. My goal this time was to see one of my photos on the front of a magazine in WH Smiths, it only took me a couple of submissions to magazine editors and a few months later my photo appeared on the front cover of Airgun world and a double page glamour shoot in Amateur photographer magazine. That was the photography hobby finished. I then took up rock climbing, trained for a winter indoors then straight out on the Cumbrian lakeland rock faces and tackled an "E grade" (extreme) climb...hobby finished again.
I settled into family life , got married had children and went out for a fantastic meal to Sharrow Bay country house hotel in the lakes , it was one of the best restaurants in the country at the time....I was bowled over with Michelin standard food , how anyone could cook to this standard was beyond me...I was hooked. I went back out through the restaurant gates that night a different person.....and my goal for my newly discovered passion was to be able to cook food to the standard of a Michelin starred chef. Next day I went into WH smiths and bought my first cookery book "Raymond Blanc’s Recipes from Le Manoir" and went from there.

Long story short , I studied the book , taught myself to cook from both the book and television cookery programmes, contacted the top chefs at the time `Anton Mosimann` , Michel roux ,
Raymond Blanc and spent days working with them in their kitchens in London. This led on to Masterchef 1992 , Richard and Judy , taking on the channel 4 challenge of running a Michelin starred restaurant for the night in "chef for a night" with Roy Ackerman and various other TV programmes and also winning `family cook of the year`.
...challenge over.
In August 2010 I took up food photography and eating out in nice restaurants again. I bought a point n shoot ( fuji finepix S9600 ) and took some photos during a 30 course meal in a restaurant called
Lenclume in Cartmel. Chef loved the pics and added a couple to his website
www.lenclume.co.uk I then went up to Edinburgh , done the same in a restaurant called the Witchery
www.thewitchery.com They also loved the pics, used them for their website and then invited me back up to shoot the pics for their 3 other restaurants.....and my price.... "a pics for food deal" , they feed me and put me up for the night and I take pics from a diners perspective ( what the punter is actually going to get on their plates).I`ve also started to shoot the food photos for a 180 page hardback cookbook....Could this be a very short end to my new hobby ? Surely not....I like this one.
For food photos at home I purchased sheets of glossy white and black acetate (perspex) off eBay for my bases and backgrounds. Some large pieces of Cumbrian slate which I can oil to make nice textured bases for the food.

Window light is fantastic for food shots but i also bought a couple of cheap soft boxes (£120 ) off eBay to balance out the shadows. I`ve been getting tips from the top from the high ranking food photographers , Dominic Davis ( he shot
Heston Blumenthal's award winning cookbook ) He’s been keeping me right as I’ve been going along. I used his pics as my benchmark and something to head for. When he shot Heston’s cookbook he actually shot it in Heston’s dusty old garage and with mirrors and white card from B&Q and a couple of Dedo lights...and that’s it....and that was his little secret. Everyone expected him to use a huge studio set up but didn’t realise that