Sparse, very painterly watercolour showing a wide flat landscape dotted with winter elms and ploughed fields dusted with snow
Ladybird Artists Advent Calendar, window 16
โFirst Snowโ
Artist: Rowland Hilder
@robertweedon.bsky.social
Website editor, television dabbler
Sparse, very painterly watercolour showing a wide flat landscape dotted with winter elms and ploughed fields dusted with snow
Ladybird Artists Advent Calendar, window 16
โFirst Snowโ
Artist: Rowland Hilder
The early winter light over snow has created and almost apricot coloured sky. The country Lane is probably in Kent and we see a small farm yard with oast houses
Ladybird Artists Advent Calendar, window 6
โLane in Winterโ
Artist: Rowland Hilder
I thought I'd take the opportunity to put together a website representation of these new Rail Clocks which launched yesterday.
railclock.davwheat.dev
Source code (MIT): github.com/davwheat/rai...
And, don't worry, it does have the special flourish every 12 hours!
A shot from the studio rehearsal of Doctor Who: The Daleks' Master Plan episode 'Volcano', showing several actors ont he TARDIS set, with various video cameras around the scene.
The death of multi-camera TV: a thread. I know most of you will know the technical parts of this (and may have read it in the other place) but bear with me. 1/ ๐งต
12.10.2025 18:38 โ ๐ 431 ๐ 187 ๐ฌ 15 ๐ 55Black and white photograph of Reverend Spooner in 19th century ecclesiastical garb, reading a book
โAnd now on BBC One, "Kong and Kinkererโ
26.08.2025 21:29 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 0 ๐ 0Trouble is, I canโt listen to this bit of the Rite of Spring without saying โJOHN Fashanuโ
13.08.2025 20:12 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 0 ๐ 0(Michael Hordern, reading inscription:)
โVengabusโฆ advenitโฆ?โ
(Tentatively, toots whistle.)
Anyway, thatโs probably enough speculation - despite my best efforts, weโll probably never know exactly what Eric Ravilious saw going over the bridge - it may have been a loco from one of the other LNER constituent companies, or even a composite of various engines - but any ideas welcome!
15.07.2025 16:11 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 0 ๐ 0Or possibly the amusingly proportioned G45 / F7, known by crews as โCrystal Palacesโ on account of their huge cabs. www.lner.info/locos/F/f7.php - when seen from the side they definitely fit the profile of Raviliousโs mystery loco.
15.07.2025 16:09 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0More likely seems that it would have been something like one of these F5 tank engines (note the Cambridge locomotive with the side window, tall chimney and dome) - and it doesnโt have a tender! www.holdenf5.co.uk/the-history-...
14.07.2025 19:37 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0J15 photograph from โLocomotives of British Railwaysโ with a note saying it had an additional side window for the Colne Valley line
Or perhaps one of the ubiquitous 0-6-0 J15s (this book even notes this side window was added for use on the Colne Valley line)
13.07.2025 22:17 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0A GER T26 steam locomotive in a museum, it has a 2-4-0 wheel arrangement and open cab design
If Ravilious was using artistic licence with his engine, it does mean he might have omitted a tender to make the locomotive closer to the carriages, but that does open up other candidates - could it have been a lovely T26 โIntermediateโ, as preserved at Bressingham? Note the open cab
13.07.2025 22:11 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0There is also a 4-4-0 rebuild of an older T19 engine called a D13, which has a similar appearance but importantly has the single cab window and had been relegated to secondary duties by 1935 (most were scrapped though) www.gersociety.org.uk/index.php/lo...
13.07.2025 22:03 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0A black and white photograph of a Claud Hamilton steam locomotive in original GER livery in as built condition with small tender, decorative splashers and smaller boiler
If you say Great Eastern 4-4-0, the main contender would be one of the beautiful Claud Hamilton locosโฆbut despite the wheel arrangement being correct, the rest isnโt quite right - it has a tender and these engines were also probably a bit too much of an express to be on a secondary branch line
13.07.2025 21:51 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0No. Apparently the LNER took one look at them and they were scrapped soon after grouping, so ten years before Raviliousโs painting. So, assuming they were local engines still, it must have been an ex-Great Eastern locomotive?
13.07.2025 21:38 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0So initially I was wondering if it was one of the weird and wonderful locos that the CV&HR owned, they had six engines over their existence, and pictures of them can be seen on Transports of Delight - could it be one of their odd little tank engines? transportsofdelight.smugmug.com/RAILWAYS/LOC...
13.07.2025 21:36 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0The Colne Valley and Halstead Railway was a bit of a curiosity in that it was an independent railway right up until the โgroupingโ of 1923 when it became part of London & North Eastern Railway (LNER) - so was never part of the Great Eastern Railway (although apparently they were on good terms)
13.07.2025 21:31 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0Anyway, back to the locomotive - well, it appears to be a 4-4-0 (ie four little wheels at the front and four bigger driving wheels behind). It also doesnโt have a coal/water tender behind so must be a tank engine of some sortโฆ
13.07.2025 21:26 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0Alan Powers suggests that Ravilious may have been inspired by a 1920 watercolour called โThe Trainโ by Norfolk artist Claughton Pellew he would have seen exhibited in the 1920s (according to the Trunch history site, the railway location is Overstrand) trunchhistory.weebly.com/artists.html
13.07.2025 21:23 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0Iโve seen it described as โtoy-likeโ, and Alan Powers describes it as a moment of โboyish excitementโฆwith machinery for once active rather than cast onto a backyard limboโ (Eric Ravilious, Artist and Designer, 2013)
13.07.2025 21:14 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0Now itโs worth saying that, much as I love Raviliousโs paintings, even I have to say this isnโt the most realistic train Iโve ever seen - itโs very much an *impression* of a train, so itโs probably rather futile trying to identify the locomotive class etc - but whereโs the fun in that?
13.07.2025 21:11 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0A close up of Raviliousโs locomotive from Train Going Over a Bridge at Night
Which brings me on to my next question - we know the โwhereโ now, but what about the โwhat locomotive is it going over the bridge (at night)โ?
13.07.2025 21:06 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0Card version of Raviliousโs train going over a bridge, seen on a bookshelf surrounded by ghostly books
In the meantime Iโll have to look at the card version from @rathergoodart Helen got me for
my birthday, which was kind of what prompted this thread.
As for the โwhereโ in terms of โwhere can I see the painting?โ Iโm not quite sure! Various books say itโs in a private collection on loan to the Towner art gallery in Eastbourne - theyโre currently making a new Ravilious gallery to open in September so hopefully itโll be in there.
13.07.2025 20:46 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0View from the signal box at the Colne Valley Railway looking towards the former Sible and Castle Hedingham station building
Interior of the station building with old posters on the walls, a large mahogany table, a railway clock and a green and cream colour scheme
Happily, the old station building from Sible and Castle
Hedingham was relocated brick-by-brick to the lovely Colne Valley heritage railway just down the road.
Footpath sign as depicted by Ravilious
Concrete footpath sign in 2025
I wonder if this concrete footpath sign is the same as 1935 though?
13.07.2025 20:31 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0Overgrown railway abutment
Remaining brickwork of the old railway bridge - somewhat overgrown
The former railway embankment - overgrown with vegetation
But what of the railway? Well, predictably the Colne Valley and Halstead Railway branch line closed in 1965 and the track lifted shortly after that - I donโt know when the bridge was removed, but you can still see the abutments and embankment either side of the road - itโs the red hue he depicts
13.07.2025 20:27 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0The railing and road looking towards Sible Hedingham
Train going over a bridge at night by Eric Ravilious
And here it is, the closest matching position I could get for where Ravilious was looking - the railing is still there, and note that concrete footpath sign on the right! Wonder if that small tree is the larger specimen too?
13.07.2025 20:21 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0Smaller bump in the road as seen in 2025
But it turns out that discernible hump in the road in the painting isnโt the large humpback bridge over the River Colne - but a much smaller bump in the road just beyond the bridge, so the descriptions that he painted it *from* the bridge turn out to be correct
13.07.2025 20:16 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0A humpback bridge with roadworks on
Hereโs the humpback bridge on Queen Street between the two villages is- I was initially a bit worried as it looks nothing like the painting, and also had some fairly major looking roadworksโฆ
13.07.2025 20:10 โ ๐ 0 ๐ 0 ๐ฌ 1 ๐ 0