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A Village Lost And Found
[shop]
An Annotated Tour Of The 1850's Series Of
Stereo Photographs "Scenes In Our Village" By T. R.
Williams
"A Village Lost And Found" was published on 22 October
2009, and was written by Brian May and Elena Vidal.
The book is a study of the work of T. R. Williams, a 19th century
photographer and pioneer of stereoscopic photography, which
involves taking two photographs at the same time from slightly
different angles to give a three dimensional image. He took
numerous photographs of a then unknown village, which in 2004 was
revealed as Hinton Waldrist in Oxfordshire, after an appeal on
Brian's website.
The book features 239 pages and contains the original stereo
photographs, alongside some modern day equivalents, the majority
taken by Brian. The book also comes with a fold-out stereoscope
known as 'The Owl', which enhances the ability to view the
photographs correctly. The stereoscope was designed by Brian
himself.
Brian and Elena promoted the book by hosting a series of
lectures, talks, and book signings in the UK.
The following is taken from the back of the book itself:
This book is the perfect antidote to the stress of life in the
21st Century. It portrays the idyll of life in an 1850's village,
'far from the sound of the train's whistle'.
The identity of the village was lost to the world for 150 years,
and only by a miracle does this magical set of stereoscopic views
survive, brought together for the very first time by Brian May
and his co-author, photo historian Elena Vidal. Their research is
amazingly in-depth, but the book is utterly readable, and the
pictures truly leap into life, viewed with the new focussing
stereoscope that May has designed and produced, which then folds
neatly back into the slip-case of the book.
'A Village Lose And Found' brings master pioneering stereographer
T. R. Williams's passionate life-work 'Scenes In Our Village' to
a new audience - in glorious 3D - as never before.
Brian May, CBE, PhD, FRAS is a founding member of Queen, a world
renowned guitarist, songwriter, producer and performer. Brian had
to postpone a career in astronomy when Queen's popularity first
exploded, but, after an incendiary 30 years as a rock musician,
was able to return to astrophysics in 2006, when he completed his
PhD, and co-authored his first book, 'Bang! The Complete History
Of The Universe', with Patrick Moore and Chris Lintott.
Stereoscopy has been a life-long passion for Brian. To enjoy
updates on his work and his thoughts on various topics, visit his
website at www.brianmay.com.
Elena Vidal is an experienced conservator and photo historian.
She has worked as a conservator of paintings in Florence, Spain
and the UK. She graduated as an MA in Photographic Conservation
at the Camberwell School of Arts, and has subsequently
specialised in the history of stereoscopic photography. Since
meeting Brian May in 1997, Elena has collaborated with him on a
long-term study of Thomas Richard Williams, and has published a
number of articles.
Outer Slipcase.....
.....Book.....
.....and Pop-Up 'Owl' Stereoscope
Note: some images can be clicked for hi-definition images
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