A triptych of Cilla from Portraits of Pride, a project I completed in support of inclusivity in rugby with the aim to offer players a voice of how they benefited from sport to help encourage others to take part. The project started with Manchester Village Spartans, the UK’s second gay and inclusive team whom I photographed in their old clubhouse, Sales Sports Club, before it was demolished to make way for a new building. It was an odd experience taking the photographs by the bar, which had clearly been the scene of both many a victory and also loss for the multiple local sports clubs in the area, knowing I would be one of the last people to make use of that location.Triptych of portraits of Manchester Village Spartans rugby player, in black and white, colour and also chromatic aberration by portrait photographer Andy Barnham

I thought I’d show the portrait of Cilla in colour, the black and white, and also in a frame where I played with the chromatic aberration (I adjusted the red, green and blue channels) which is why it appears somewhat fuzzy; this is caused by the various colour layers not being exactly aligned. nb I added a mask to make his jersey disappear into the backdrop; black being the base colour of his playing top I did not see a need to separate from the backdrop, rather I merged the two together. Oddly his cropped hair offers a slight halo effect which is the soft glow between his hair and the dark background. Usually a sign of over editing and something to be avoided, in this instance it is merely a result of Cilla’s short hair.

Having completed most of the project in black and white and revisiting ‘Cilla’ now (his real name is David but ‘Cilla’ as he’s a self confessed big softie off the pitch) I am loving the colour version as the timbre of his beard is glorious.


andybarnham

I am a portrait photographer based in Cheltenham, UK. Born in Hong Kong to a Chinese mum and British dad, I had an international upbringing while I educated in the UK. I started photography as a hobby while serving as an officer in the British Army.

After my service I turned this passion into a career and became immersed in London's sartorial scene. I am now focusing my camera on portraiture and using this eye for detail which was refined over ten years. As a former Royal Artillery officer it is only fitting I shoot with a Canon camera.

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