This week’s photograph was taken by Bill Shaw, featuring the silhouette of women photographing the sunset overlooking the Stray and Trinity Church.

Bill Shaw
Photo of the Week celebrates the Harrogate district. It could be anything from family life to capturing the district’s beauty. We are interested in amateur and professional photographs, in a landscape format.
Send your photographs to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk for a chance to be featured next week, we reserve the right to adjust and crop images to fit into our format.
This week’s photograph was taken by Helen Smith, featuring a striking double rainbow over Ripon Marketplace.

Helen Smith
Photo of the Week celebrates the Harrogate district. It could be anything from family life to capturing the district’s beauty. We are interested in amateur and professional photographs, in a landscape format.
Send your photographs to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk for a chance to be featured next week, we reserve the right to adjust and crop images to fit into our format.
This week’s photograph was taken by Alistair Hay while out walking his dog Indi, capturing the sunset from the Follifoot dismantled Railway.

Alistair Hay
Photo of the Week celebrates the Harrogate district. It could be anything from family life to capturing the district’s beauty. We are interested in amateur and professional photographs, in a landscape format.
Send your photographs to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk for a chance to be featured next week, we reserve the right to adjust and crop images to fit into our format.
Gallery: Stunning photos of Nidderdale in winterWith its reservoirs, hills and villages, there are few more beautiful places than Nidderdale. And it has rarely looked better than in recent days, when ice and light snow added to its allure.
Talented local photographers, who posted a series of images on the We Love Nidderdale UK Facebook page, have agreed to share some of them with us.
Several are by Dave Benson, who lives in Summerbridge and gets to see Nidderdale through his jobs as a self-employed gardener and newspaper deliverer.
We have also included images by Heather Middleton, Matt Bibbings and Jamie Clark.
If you have stunning images of the Harrogate district, please send them to contact@thestrayferret.co.uk.

The view from Wath. Pic: David Benson

Sunrise over Brimham Rocks. Pic: David Benson

A wet Lofthouse. Pic by David Benson

Brimham Rocks: Pic by Helen Middleton

A cloud inversion: Pic by Matt Bibbings

Hoar frost on Top Wath Road: Pic by Jamie Clark

Gouthwaite reservoir. Pic by David Benson
This week’s photograph was taken by John Chadwick, featuring his wife Julie walking Captain the Lakeland Terrier across the Stray in this week’s mist.

John Chadwick
Photo of the Week celebrates the Harrogate district. It could be anything from family life to capturing the district’s beauty. We are interested in amateur and professional photographs, in a landscape format.
Send your photographs to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk for a chance to be featured next week, we reserve the right to adjust and crop images to fit into our format.

Photo of The Week celebrates the Harrogate district. It could be anything from family life to capturing the district’s beauty. We are interested in amateur and professional photographs, in a landscape format.
Send your photographs to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk for a chance to be featured next week, we reserve the right to adjust and crop images to fit into our format.
The Stray Ferret has launched our new Photo of the Week feature to highlight the beauty of the Harrogate district captured by talented local photographers.
Send your photos to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk for a chance to feature here. We are interested in amateur and professional pictures.
This week we have a fantastic photograph taken by Paul Bunton, who has excellently captured an autumnal tree breaking through the mist at Brimham Rocks.

The Stray Ferret has launched our new Photo of the Week feature to highlight the beauty of the Harrogate district captured by talented local photographers.
Send your photos to letters@thestrayferret.co.uk for a chance to feature here. We are interested in amateur and professional pictures.

Photographers Stacey Evans and Sarah Warne, who raised £7,500 taking portraits of people on their doorsteps during covid, are to set up a studio in the centre of Harrogate.
The pair, who raised the money for Harrogate District Hospital, became firm friends in the process. Both have three young children — Stacey has three girls, Sarah has three boys.
Their new company is called The Studio with Stacey and Sarah and will be based on Station Parade:
Stacey told the Stray Ferret:
“We saw a property become available on Station Parade, the one that had the fire opposite the bus station.
We went to see it and it is perfect. It is very accessible and a great space. It’s been refurbished and feels like new so it’s great. We are getting ready for launch in the next three weeks.”
Stacey has been working out of a studio in the garage at her home and said demand has been so high for her photography she had been turning down work.
She told the Stray Ferret that they had thought hard about whether this was the right time to start a business with the economic climate looking bleak and because they are young mums, but the landlord made it possible.
“The offer from the landlord was fantastic. He completely understood where we were coming from and we got a great agreement from him.
“The fact is I’ve been turning away so much work. It feels like people are cherishing the moment now more than ever after covid.
“We want to focus on mums — so often it is the mums who are left out of the photos as they’re taking them.. We try to keep it so that mums feel comfortable and encourage them to have photos with their children. I would have loved to have more photos of my mum. I think giving mums the opportunity to have a lovely photo and talk to us as mums is important.
“We want to give bonding moments and special memories.”

An example of Sarah and Stacey’s work.
Harrogate Photographic Society to show historic photos
Harrogate Photographic Society has announced plans for its 100th anniversary, which include showcasing historic images of the town as well as photos from the early days of Ukraine’s independence.
The society was founded on October 23, 1922 and was originally based at a shop on King’s Road.
Mike Hudson, the society’s president for its centenary year, said:
“There were seven members originally but that rapidly expanded… and it took off big time from then.”
Read more:
- Amazing aerial photos of Harrogate, Ripon and Knaresborough from 100 years ago
- Drone photo shows Harrogate’s first Lidl taking shape
A team from the society has gone through the image archives at Harrogate Library and North Yorkshire County Council to find pictures from that time.
Many images have been lost but the ones which remain are set to be digitised and displayed to the public in the near future.
Mr Hudson said they were hoping to preserve elements of Harrogate’s history. He added:
“When someone passes away, the sons, daughters and relatives… [put photos] in the bin or in the skip and they’re lost forever. We’re very lucky to have just a few photographs and prints that have survived.”
There are also plans for a special presentation alongside local jewellers Ogden of Harrogate about the discovery of Tutankhamun’s tomb in Egypt in 1922.
JR Ogden was tasked with advising archaeologist Howard Carter on the jewels and gold found within the tomb.
The covid pandemic was a challenge for the group, Mr Hudson admitted, with its meetings having to be held online.
However, he hoped that people would now be encouraged to return and meet the photographers in-person.

Some of the society members’ photos (photos: Harrogate Photographic Society)
Photos from Ukraine
Following the look at Harrogate’s past, the society will hear from globally renowned photographers including Tim Smith and Paul Haley.
Mr Smith will discuss his time spent in Ukraine and Russia in 1991, when Ukraine voted to declare independence from the Soviet Union.
Mr Haley, a war photographer, will be sharing his photos for the Falklands War, the 40th anniversary of which was this year.
Mike Hudson believed that each photographer brought something different in terms of their work. He said:
“Each photographer has something special to say themselves. They each excel in the genres of photography they take.”