Your R System Images - May 2026

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Phil Moore
Service Announcement: Don’t Panic! Please note we are now away until Mid-May (Welsh Frank-Fest) so this thread has been started earlier than usual. We will be unable to provide any feedback until after we return (and dry out!). The existing April thread remains open and available for image posts and comments... :)

Your R System Images - May 2026

We hope you enjoy creating fantastic images this month!

Have fun - but stay safe and well…

Phil and Karen 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁥󠁮󠁧󠁿

——

Any R System images can be posted. If you would like to say something about the subject, settings, or processing, that will be very welcome.

Remember, you don't have to only post things you took this month - sometimes people don't get around to processing/ editing images straight away. (Think of it more as an ‘images I’d like to post here this month’ sort of thing). Images taken with non-R System lenses are also very welcome as this adds to the interest.

Images posted on this thread will also be available to view in the dedicated Monthly R System Images Gallery.

Commenting on people’s posts is encouraged, as it keeps everyone interested and coming back. (Please try to be considerate, thoughtful and constructive).

Note we will be away until mid-May-ish and are also busy with ‘life stuff’. The lack of a comment from us is not a sign of disfavour!

Finally, please post in accordance with the RF Shooters Community Guidelines.

Thank you!
 
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Images from my recent visit to Bodiam Castle, Robertsbridge, East Sussex, England.

(Shot raw and processed using: DxO PL Elite/ Viewpoint, Adobe LrC/ PS with Tony Kuyper Panels and Topaz Labs Studio. Karen was working up in nearby-ish Maidstone to gather a little ca$h, so these images are mine).

Importantly, Bodiam appears in the 1975 film ‘Monty Python and the Holy Grail’, serving as the exterior establishing shot for ‘Swamp Castle’ and also in the 'Tale of Sir Lancelot' sequence, where the castle's moated exterior is shown. (One of the guides told me Mr John Cleese had trodden these very ramparts!).

You can find out more about Bodiam Castle by clicking Here.

Phil (missing Karen)


1. Bodiam Castle was built around 1385 by Sir Edward Dallingridge. It was constructed amid fears of French invasion during the Hundred Years’ War (1337-1453) and stood as a powerful symbol of social status and personal ambition.

RF-S--1.jpg
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2. Sir Edward Dallingridge (c.1346-1393/94) was a soldier, landowner and politician. His marriage to Elizabeth Wardieu (c. 1346- after 1383), daughter and heiress of John Wardieu of Bodiam, expanded his estates. It was on her inherited land that he built Bodiam Castle.

RF-S--2.jpg
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3. In 1385 he received royal permission from King Richard II to fortify his manor: ‘That he may strengthen with a wall of stone and lime, and crenellate and may construct and make into a castle his manor house of Bodiam, near the sea, in the County of Sussex, for the defence of the adjacent country, and the resistance to our enemies'.

RF-S--3.jpg
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4. After Sir Edward Dalyngrigge’s death, Bodiam Castle passed by marriage into the Lewknor family and subsequently through various owners. By the early modern period it had begun to fall into decline. In 1723 the estate was bought by Sir Thomas Webster (1676 -1751), owner of Battle Abbey. The Websters kept Bodiam for more than a century. During this time the castle became well known as a picturesque ruin visited by artists and travellers, including J. M. W. Turner.

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5. By the early nineteenth century Bodiam Castle was admired as a romantic ruin but remained in a fragile state. In 1829 it was purchased by John ‘Mad Jack’ Fuller (1757 -1834) of Brightling, a Sussex squire and Member of Parliament known for his eccentric interests.

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6. A major new phase of conservation began in 1917, when Bodiam Castle was bought by George Nathaniel Curzon (1859-1925), 1st Marquess Curzon of Kedleston and former Viceroy of India. Curzon left Bodiam Castle to the National Trust on his death in 1925.

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(Source: National Trust).
 
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Thanks for the fine photos and history lesson. I’ve taken another vacation while sitting here in my easy chair.

P.S. what’s with the plastic ducks?
 
Thanks for the fine photos and history lesson. I’ve taken another vacation while sitting here in my easy chair.

P.S. what’s with the plastic ducks?
Hi Dale,

I visited during the extended Easter break - and they'd set up some fun surprises for visiting families to discover.

(I managed to stay just ahead of the maddening crowds who were hot on my heels - by the end of my lap of the castle it was chaos unlimited... :) ).

Phil
 
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Images from my recent visit to Bodiam Castle, Robertsbridge, East Sussex, England.

(Shot raw and processed using: DxO PL Elite/ Viewpoint, Adobe LrC/ PS with Tony Kuyper Panels and Topaz Labs Studio. Karen was working up in nearby-ish Maidstone to gather a little ca$h, so these images are mine).

Importantly, Bodiam appears in the 1975 film ‘Monty Python and the Holy Grail’, serving as the exterior establishing shot for ‘Swamp Castle’ and also in the 'Tale of Sir Lancelot' sequence, where the castle's moated exterior is shown. (One of the guides told me Mr John Cleese had trodden these very ramparts!).

You can find out more about Bodiam Castle by clicking Here.

Phil (missing Karen)


1. Bodiam Castle was built around 1385 by Sir Edward Dallingridge. It was constructed amid fears of French invasion during the Hundred Years’ War (1337-1453) and stood as a powerful symbol of social status and personal ambition.

View attachment 45322

2. Sir Edward Dallingridge (c.1346-1393/94) was a soldier, landowner and politician. His marriage to Elizabeth Wardieu (c. 1346- after 1383), daughter and heiress of John Wardieu of Bodiam, expanded his estates. It was on her inherited land that he built Bodiam Castle.

View attachment 45323

3. In 1385 he received royal permission from King Richard II to fortify his manor: ‘That he may strengthen with a wall of stone and lime, and crenellate and may construct and make into a castle his manor house of Bodiam, near the sea, in the County of Sussex, for the defence of the adjacent country, and the resistance to our enemies'.

View attachment 45324

4. After Sir Edward Dalyngrigge’s death, Bodiam Castle passed by marriage into the Lewknor family and subsequently through various owners. By the early modern period it had begun to fall into decline. In 1723 the estate was bought by Sir Thomas Webster (1676 -1751), owner of Battle Abbey. The Websters kept Bodiam for more than a century. During this time the castle became well known as a picturesque ruin visited by artists and travellers, including J. M. W. Turner.

View attachment 45325

5. By the early nineteenth century Bodiam Castle was admired as a romantic ruin but remained in a fragile state. In 1829 it was purchased by John ‘Mad Jack’ Fuller (1757 -1834) of Brightling, a Sussex squire and Member of Parliament known for his eccentric interests.

View attachment 45326

6. A major new phase of conservation began in 1917, when Bodiam Castle was bought by George Nathaniel Curzon (1859-1925), 1st Marquess Curzon of Kedleston and former Viceroy of India. Curzon left Bodiam Castle to the National Trust on his death in 1925.

View attachment 45327

(Source: National Trust).
Love the history and images, like having a personal tour guide!
 
Yesterday afternoon I got a text from my 16 year old granddaughter, "Papa, tonight's is the first play off game for our girl's lacrosse team. Do you think you could come and take pictures?" She also noted that the game started at 6:30 pm and sunset wasn't until 7:45! The girl knows I try to avoid night games under the fairly weak field lights. So, how could I refuse?

I'm still trying to figure out lacrosse. It's fast moving and the ball changes sides and player's sticks (as they are called) quickly. It sort of reminds me of Quidditch in the Harry Potter movies. Quite often as I follow a play with my camera I'm like, "where the hell is the ball?"

It was a good game with lots of action but sadly, her home team lost by one point with a final score of 12-13 so t hey are eliminated from further games in this final series.

I shot with the R7 and the RF 100-500mm. I am always impressed with the sharpness that lens produces. The camera is ok, rolling shutter was evident on many images in a rapid burst but the sensor had good resolution. I did some tight crops on some images and they were still plenty sharp. Mostly used Topaz Photo AI for sharpening and noise reduction on the shots taken once the sun went down, typical ISO was around 5000.


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Love the history and images, like having a personal tour guide!
Hi Chris,

Cheers - appreciated! :)

Some interesting venues are waiting in the pipeline and - hopefully - a few more will be added during our forthcoming Frank-Fest to Wales.

(Our waterproofs are loaded... 😂 😂 😂 ).

Phil
 
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Chris,
Excellent photos of some very serious young women. Those ladies are intense.

There are several sports that I have no idea what's going on. Being raised down here in the south, we don't know what ice or snow is, so no hockey. Apparently, the hockey players skate around until somebody gets mad and they start a fight. I think lacrosse is the same, but without the ice and probably not as many fights because they all have sticks. Soccer looks like you kicked an ant bed over, with folks running around all over the place until one of them decides to rip his shirt off. I have no clue about rugby. :)

Baseball and good bourbon is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy.

Clueless in Savannah,
Dale
 

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