Tom Booth Woodger

Designer, publisher & photographer based in London, UK.

More information here.



Contact

tom.booth.woodger@gmail.com
@tomboothwoodger


Photographs

Index
Kicking up Dust
In a matter of seconds, & minutes
Little White Butterflies


Objects

Portfolio Boxes
Posters

Websites

Bluecoat Press
Photo Editions
Tami Aftab
Alison McCauley


Book Design

Reverie - Martin Amis
The Killing Ditch - Damnien Wootten Assent - Michael Alberry Shuttles, Steam & Soot - Daniel Meadows Young People's Prompts for Looking at Portraits by Anthony Luvera
The Magic Money Tree - Kirsty MacKay One Year! Photographs from the Miners’ Strike 1984-1985
The Lake - Ian Ruhter
Backdrop - One Rainy Day
ATLCA (3rd Edition) - Matt Stuart
Reconstructed Nature - Luke & Nik
Need Not Greed - Alan Hardman
This Was Then - Mike Abrahams
Vulcan’s Forge - Janine Wiedel
Shimmers - Alison McCauley
One Night Only - Bruce Gilden
Black Cat Kingdom - Sari Soininen
The Rice is on the Hob - Tami Aftab
Book of the Road - Daniel Meadows
Children - Marketa Luskacova
Folly - Jamie Murray
Closed - Martin Amis
Portlanders - Nick Gervin
Modern Paradox - Joshua K. Jackson
Hidden - Elena Subach
This Golden Mile - Kavi Pujara
The Island - Robert Darch
Who We Are 200
Gesture Workshop
Black Country - Bruce Gilden
Silent Coast - Rob Ball
Anywhere but here - Alison McCauley
Birdmen - Dod Miller
Memory Lane - Martin Salter
Every Cross - Michael Alberry
Keywork - Chris Hoare
Murmurations - Billy Barraclough
This Land - Martin Amis
c.1950 - Jake Michaels
Breakfast - Niall McDairmid
ATLCA (2nd Edition) - Matt Stuart
Into the Fire - Matt Staurt

















































































One Night Only by Bruce Gilden

An extract from Mick Brown's article Rough Diamonds:
“For an hour you could feel the tension winding up in the hall like tape on a spool, fuelled by lager and bravado, and at eight o’clock, when the lights went down, it was as if someone had hit the pause button. Plunged into momentary darkness, the hall held its collective breath.

‘Fighting’ Brian McCue, a small man in baggy shorts, the upper half of his body covered in tattoos, removed the gown embroidered with the words ‘Charlie’s Bar’, and rested against the ropes as if in a trance, while a little man in a black trilby hat jabbered kill-him stuff in his ear.

McCue had travelled down from Blackpool that morning in a rented Ford Orion witli four friends. He is 32 years old, 5ft 4in, and was once, he tells you with some pride, the smallest professional heavyweight in Britain.

This is in the past tense, not because anybody smaller has come along in the meantime, but because Brian is no longer professional. Nowadays he works as a nightclub doorman. in Blackpool. The money he will earn tonight is something extra. His opponent, Michael Taylor, 35, from Woolwich, south London, is a nightclub doorman too. He is also a scrap metal merchant, and sometime professional strip-o-gram (policemen and ‘Chippendales’ a speciality), who says he will fight ‘anyone, anywhere’ for the money. Michael is dead straight about this. ‘I ain’t that good a fighter, but I make it hard for those that are.’”

Year: 2024
Pubisher: Setanta Books
Printer: MAS Matbaa
Printing: Duotone
Binding: Quarter Bound (Circle) Hardcover with foil
Size: 260x200mm
Pages: 72
Images: 36
Paper: Arctic Volume Ivory, Holmen TRND 2.0
Font: Bodoni Moda

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