Photographic Products

The Flying Scotsman Jigsaw Puzzle

Brand New Jigsaw Puzzle Design of The Flying Scotsman Locomotive Train.

Over the past few days I’ve been getting lots of messages from customers that know about my jigsaw puzzle making, that all knew of The Flying Scotsman and that it would be traveling through Hinckley, my home town.

They all told me about it and probably was secretly hoping that I would go and get a photograph to make in to a Jigsaw Puzzle.
How could I refuse such a unique opportunity?
Of course, I couldn’t and now I have a great photograph that i will make in to a jigsaw puzzle of The Flying Scotsman!

Yes it’s exciting isn’t it?
I know!

Here it is…..

The Flying Scotsman passing through Hinckley Railway Station in Leicestershire.

So the plan is to now get stuck in to creating a new design for the packaging over the Christmas period and create a point of sale for you to place your orders.
Once again I’ll be offering pre-orders at a discounted rate while the puzzle is in production.

So make sure you sign up for my emails to stay in touch and find out when it’s ready should you wish to get one for yourself or a loved one.

Here’s a little bit of information around how I made it…

After receiving lots of tip offs, I dropped my daughter at school on the Wednesday morning of the 13th of December 2023 and headed to my studio to sort out my equipment and then drove to Hinckley Railway Station. Upon arrival I sat in my van because I was about 10 minutes early. I wanted to stay in the warm because it was a bit chilly and sat scrolling through my Facebook feed and to my horror, I came across a post that said The Flying Scotsman had made a flying stop at Humberstone Gate in Leicester and was therefore going to go through Hinckley station 10 minutes early. I grabbed my camera and ran to the station to find there was already approximately a hundred people on the bridge and lining both platforms.
I made my way to the end of the platform because I knew it would work best if I went to the back and zoomed in to the composition I wanted so it would compress the image and include more details in the frame, which always works well for a jigsaw puzzle.

I took my position and then looked around and spotted some of the other professional photographers that I knew on the other side of the platform, to which we had some banter across the tracks. It did actually raise a concern to me over whether I’d picked the right side of the platform though.
I wanted to have the station visible in the background and get the people on the bridge.

Then an Intercity came whizzing through and I noted the speed, considering that The Flying Scotsman would emulate that speed as it wasn’t stopping. This meant to me that I would have to increase the shutter speed to make sure I could have a sharp image.
The settings I used was 1/800th of a second at f6.3 with an ISO of 3200.

In post production I performed a post crop to 7:5 in order to be the right size for a jigsaw puzzle. I altered the exposure to look as it did when I was there, sharpened it a little and had to do Denoise because of the amount of ISO I had to use to get the fast shutter speed.

I then prefocused the shot on the station and when she came flying through I just kept hitting the shutter button and managed about 6 photographs to get to choose this single one.

That’s how I made this photograph, so if you would now like to express an interest in buying this puzzle when it’s ready, please enter your email address below and I’ll be in touch when it’s ready.

Mixing your artform with a business.

Earning a living from selling my artwork is nothing short of amazing!

Since taking photography more seriously in 2012, I’ve spent all of that time making work for my own personal projects with no thought of making money from those photographs. Not because I didn’t want to, I just wasn’t ready and I tried, so many times and failed quickly. I taught myself that the only way I can sell my photographs as art, would be through selling prints and I did sell two prints once to the college that taught me and again to De Montfort University, who taught me my degree.

So I’m not sure if they really count?

Sileby Marina

Sileby Marina

What changed?

An incredible amount of variables led to me selling my artwork. I think the main thing was I’d collected a following on social media and with an audience, I wanted to entertain them with my artwork. I was building something that I had no clue about, I was collecting photographs that had a commercial value and I hadn’t realised it. All of it was unintentional and it steered itself with whatever exploits I got myself in to and I didn’t even know what I was doing as I took baby steps towards doing this with no agenda.
In 2019 I contacted another photographer that I know called Justin Minns, who was making really nice calendars and I felt it could be a way for me to sell my artwork.
That was one of the single most important steps I’d taken in my life because it has led to working for myself.

How it happened for me?

I began selecting photographs and designed my very first calendar and incidentally, it was the very first calendar my home town Hinckley has ever had. It went so well and it gave me a new lease of life for my photography. I was struggling with employment and wasn’t earning enough to support my family from self employment back then.

River Soar Weir

River Soar Weir

In the January of 2020 I did manage to secure myself several commissions for the year that gave me a great start and something to build on. While all this was happening, I’d got my eyes and ears on China with news of the Coronavirus coming from a bat in a wet market!!! I didn’t immediately fall for that and was suspicious from the beginning. A friend of mine was and is still living in China, teaching at a school and I stayed in contact with him during the outbreak to learn as much as I could.

Then I witnessed Covid 19 arriving in Britain and initially because of the incredible levels of fear based propaganda, I fell for it and was having panic attacks at the thought of bringing my daughter up in to this kind of world.

Lockdown was announced and many businesses closed their doors, leaving me with noone to work for. I had nothing to do, so I began working on a photography project to document what we were going through, which spilled out in to bringing community involvement in to it. I published a book with the project work in called ‘Locked Down’.

Then an opportunity to make my photographs in to 1,000 piece jigsaw puzzles came along and I thought I’d give it a go but wasn’t overly sure about it at first. I made 6 designs and they all sold out online before they arrived.
So I made some more and they kept on selling out really fast.

Hinckley DIsneyland

Hinckley DIsneyland

What I did to help it along.

It felt amazing because I’d simply fallen into this and it was never a concerted effort to make a business but I’d made a business using my artwork and people were buying my work.

It just happened!

I’ve never been one to miss out on an opportunity like this one, so I began making new photographs with purpose and with a puzzling design in my mind. It became an obsessive hobby / business and still to this day I find it really challenging to find a jigsaw puzzle worthy photograph.

I learned how to do ecommerce and installed it on my website, did everything that was needed to run a smooth operation and it all seems to work.

Now I’m approaching two years since I started with that first calendar and I’ve now got a range of products to share with everyone.

While it’s amazing to be mixing my artwork with a business, it’s a challenge to find the money to pay the rent on my office and meet the demands of running a business. It changes things and even puts more pressure on making good photographs, while shortening the time I can spend making new photographs.
It’s a balancing act and one that I’ve not gotten right in many circumstances but so far I’m afloat.

There’s something to celebrate there!


Visit my shop to see what I’m offering now.

Locked Down - Global Coronavirus Pandemic

Locked Down Coronavirus Window Portrait Project

The sub-project that has had me cycling all around Hinckley, Burbage and Earl Shilton is coming towards a closing point and the production of a Lockdown book begins now.

There are 36 stories accompanied with a portrait of the people on the other side of the glass and each story tells us how the families involved have survived and what they thought about the lockdown. The production of a book is about to commence in order to organise and contain these time capsules to secure them for our future generations to look back and discover more precisely about this monumental moment in history.


My intentions for the book are to show a sweeping snapshot of our experiences with urban landscapes of how the virus impacted our social cohesion along with the portraits and stories of the local residents that have taken part in this project.
I have no idea how long the production of this book will take, I’m organising the content now and then we move in to the prototype stage for editing.

I’ve been asked by some of the participants to produce some products with your photographs, like jigsaw puzzles, mugs, keyrings and prints etc.
So I’ve sourced a good local supplier and can now offer a small range of memorabilia and organised a point of sale on my website.

Whilst there was never any intention to earn any money from this project, I did lose all of my work that was booked in and I fell through the cracks of financial support from the Government, meaning, I’m not earning a single penny during lockdown and have no idea when I can start earning again. So I hope you don’t mind me offering these ideas?

Using your portrait photograph, you can now order the following memorabilia products:

If you have any questions about these products, then please get in touch with me asap