Clapton Football Club 1890
Clapton Football Club and Essex County Cricket Club circa (late) 1890’s
Photo repairs performed in July 2008
Opportunities like this don’t come around too often. I had the honour to repair and restore historic images from the late 1890’s of both these prestigious teams. Clapton Football Club were one of, if not the best team in the country at the time these photos were taken. A select 11 were chosen to represent the club for the posed photo. There were 3 main photos posed for the camera. Two of the team shot in their strip and one in suits. Mounted on heavy card and printed on fibre based paper and processed using silver based chemicals, the quality of these photos was superb! It isn’t until I have worked on photos like these do realise just how well the photographers did their job back then. The photographers couldn’t just set the camera to a high ISO and snap away, they had to wait for good light and work with the subjects to keep them calm and still whilst they set up the camera and prepared for the shot.
The Clapton Football Club photo was posed with the team in their strip, which appeared to be black and white broad striped tops, which is in fact red and white. Notably in the photo there are only 11 men in stripes and today their team photo has 17 men ready and waiting along with goalies and many others. Their shirts were tucked into their shorts which were high up the waist in line with the elbow and fastened with a cloth rope or webbing belt. Shorts vary in length with some longer than the knee, others above the knee. The ball was heavy leather and made of around 10 leather panels wrapping from top to bottom and sewn into a ball shape. Shin pads were heavy duty and worn outside the socks. With the socks themselves a little un-coordinated, seemingly whatever was thick and dark and long would do.
The Essex Cricket Team shot was posed outside the clubhouse with hanging baskets dangling from the thatched roof, some children had jostled for places in the background so they could get in the picture, with one who snuck to a window as the shutter was pressed. Heavy white woollen sweaters and thick white shirts with a dark cloth cap with cricket clubs emblem on the front was the attire. Once again trousers were held up with silk scarves or cloth strips and their white trousers were turned up a couple of inches at the shoe. Of the twelve men wearing whites, only one did not have a full bushy moustache and he held a pipe, all other figures who were not children were men and wore suits and bowler hats.
The photo repair that was needed was to improve the contrast, remove the mildew spots that are a tell tale sign of an old photo and to clean them of scratches and dust and grime that had built up over the last 120 years.
There is something to be said for this type of posed photo, it wasn’t mass produced, they were not taken with cheap throw away cameras like today, they taken with care and attention and were shot and printed using the best techniques of the period. As a result they have stood the tests of time. I feel that in the throwaway society we live in today photographs can be taken without the slightest thought and just mound up on hard drives and data storage devices, images without real meaning or value. Think hard when you take a photo, make it worthwhile and limit your shots, perhaps you will make sure you take that one shot that sums up what a week’s worth of happy snaps could never do.
NOTE: Apologies, but due to copyright restrictions I am unable to post any images here.
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