
Ham Photos is a growing archive of photos of Ham (at the meeting of Richmond upon Thames and Kingston upon Thames in south-west London), where I have lived since 1996. It captures the small changes that are easily missed and delights in the unusual, the unexpected and the unnoticed.
31 December 2008
Roof in Hazel Lane

Avenue Lodge
30 December 2008
St Michael's Convent

29 December 2008
KS2 Results
28 December 2008
Brick wall in Ham Street
27 December 2008
Brown ducks
Rear of Rutland Lodge
26 December 2008
Neglected plot
Sub-station
24 December 2008
Christmas decorations
23 December 2008
Coat of Arms
19 December 2008
EF05 OKT on the pavement
18 December 2008
17 December 2008
16 December 2008
St Andrew's church
15 December 2008
Trees by Ham House
14 December 2008
Small extension
13 December 2008
Path in Petersham Lodge Woods
12 December 2008
Brown ferns
11 December 2008
New House on Church Road
9 December 2008
8 December 2008
Flowers for Peter Vahl
7 December 2008
Ormeley Lodge in December
6 December 2008
Still working on Latchmere Lodge
5 December 2008
4 December 2008
Ham Common in December
3 December 2008
2 December 2008
Looking across Ham Common Woods
1 December 2008
Gated path
29 November 2008
Empty flats
26 November 2008
Rustic fence
25 November 2008
Determined leaves

24 November 2008
Bell-pull at Rutland Lodge
23 November 2008
Trimmed tree in Ham Common Woods
21 November 2008
Too wide

20 November 2008
Clearing the trees

In the foreground we have the section of Ham Common Woods that lies between Ham Farm Road and Church Road and beyond that we have the main section on the woods that lies between Church Road and Ham Gate Avenue.
Now that several trees have been removed from the first section it no longer looks like the rest of the woods and a little bit of Ham is less wild, less mysterious and less interesting.
19 November 2008
New look for "Tommy Steele Corner"

It is some years since Tommy Steele moved away from Montrose House in Petersham but most locals still refer to the sharp bend on the Petersham Road by his former house as Tommy Steele Corner. Until recently views of the rear garden were protected from the gaze of curious people on the upper deck of the 65 bus by a border of high trees but now they have all gone.