This page was last changed 12/08/09, 14/09/09

Some photos I took when dad and I were out together during his time in
the nursing home.
Some photos of the Castle in The Rocks (St. Mary's) Hastings &
others dad took
before his stroke.

Cactus - Opening shopping centre in Hastings 1997 - Unknown and Picton
John Harold
Lohmann - 1929-2002 ** biography
John Harold Lohmann
- 1929-2002 ** singing
in the rain
John Harold Lohmann
- 1929-2002 ** Funeral
notice
John Harold Lohmann
- 1929-2002 ** Order
of service on 16 Jan.
Some Picture dad took then processed and printed them in the 1970's to
teaching himself:

1)
When you are this small your legs having to work hard to climb up
the sandunes (Woolacomb North Devon). I thought I would not make it.
~1961 dad took this with
granny's old english two and a quater square formate portrate camera
she had lent him permernately. Dad said the lens was purposly slightly
soft so that it was kind to subject of the portrate.
2) Dad said Avril was very photogenic, and I had been when smaller.
3) This chinese guy would carry anything even soil for a dollar a day
in 1948/9
apparently.
4) Passport Photo of me.

My
sister Avril in 1970's. The camera may have been an Exa (light weight
Exactor) or Exactor (SLR), or his earlier Russian camera with coupled
range finder and intregal meter (not through the lens though). In about
1975 dad purchased his Cannon AE1, which is about the best camera I
have come accross, though I sometimes forget to set it
properly before taking photos. Dad specifically lent both of them, and
the
Yashicamata permernately to me. The Yashicamate which is two and a
quarter
inch square format takes slides so sharp, dad said, that you can step
into those pictures, but you should see the pictures he processed and
printed many are at least a meter high, and can not be said to be kind
to the subject (soft).
Singapore
or Penang? taken with dads two and a quarter
square format Muyama. I think dad said this camera was a cheap Chinese
copy of a German camera and at least as good.
North Devon in 1951.
I cruised to the West Indies in 1976 and 1978 with P&O. St Marten, Antigua, Barbados, Martinique - they are I understand different to US Grenada. Significantly Limo dancing was just amazing at 9" the dancers turn there head and sideways and cleared the ground and the bar by an inch. The music is so powerfully, and every where, that it pulls you on to your feet and makes you dance. Children dive in the harbour for pennies - Bee Wee (British West Indies dollar) cents. Smaller children are brought up with no sense of money and give pennies they are given to other people, whilst humming birds fly between flowers at the edge of the wonderful sandy beach, and brightly coloured fish swim at your feet in the beautiful clear blue sea.
The Rum punch, and food was wonderful, And I still have the Straw hat and the flower sack t-shirt.